Playing Marginal Poker Hands
- By Curtis Steuber
- Published 03/19/2008
- Strategy
- Unrated
There are many different styles of
poker. Most beginning players either play very tight or loose. After playing a
few thousand hands of poker it is inevitable that your style of play will
evolve. No matter what your style is, there are always hands that can be tricky
to play. Marginal or speculative hands fit this mold nicely. Playing marginal
hands in no limit Hold’em poker can be incredibly profitable, knowing when and
how to play them can help make you a winner.
At a full ring table, playing a
marginal hand is a profitable play when there are a few factors at play. Hands
like suited connectors or suited gap cards hold up well when there are multiple
people in a pot and you have a good position on the poker table. If you see four or five people limp in
or call a small raise and you are on the button, playing eight nine or jack-ten
can be very powerful. You will have the power of position and depending on the
flop you can hit the flop or have multiple draws that could mathematically be a
favorite in the hand. With more people in the pot you will also have
greater odds to call.
If you play shorthanded marginal
hands are best used from middle position to late position. Raising with these
type of hands is not a terrible play. You can either take the pot uncontested,
and if you get a call from the blinds you will have bought position. If you get
re raised with a marginal hand in a shorthanded game you will likely be behind,
but again depending on what kind of raise and how many others enter the pot you
may still have odds to call.
In a poker tournament, setting marginal
hands are best played as if you are at a full ring table. Playing them out of
position is not ideal. If you are a big stack these hands however can be used
effectively to make standard raises and bully the blinds who may not want to
play anything but premium hands.
