Join Poker Community Forums! Interested in online poker or poker strategy? Login Now or Sign Up
Join our poker forum, and register today for quality discussions. PCF Members that play our home games on StockPoker earn leaderboard points towards the PCF leaderboard, and win real money prizes! PCF members gain access to private game passwords for freeroll passwords, and passwords to our home games.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly. You should upgrade or use an alternative browser.
I'm very cautious about defending the big blind. So, I defend about 50% of the time. I find that it minimizes losses and keeps opponents guessing when I defend aggressively.
Defending the big blind is a strategic part of poker, and several key factors influence how often you should do it:
Hand Strength: The strength of your hand is one of the primary considerations. Strong hands are worth defending more frequently, while weaker hands might be better off folding.
Opponent Tendencies: Pay attention to how often your opponents raise from late positions. If they're aggressive and frequently attempt to steal the blinds, you might need to defend more often to discourage them.
Position: Your position relative to the raiser matters. Defending from the big blind against a late-position raise can be different from defending against an early-position raise.
Stack Sizes: Your chip stack and your opponents' stack sizes can influence your decision. Larger stacks might provide more flexibility to defend, while shorter stacks may require more caution.
Table Dynamics: The overall table dynamic, including the playing styles of other players and the stage of the tournament, can impact your decision to defend.
Pot Odds and Equity: Consider the pot odds you're getting to call and the equity your hand has against the range of hands your opponent could have.
Adapting your strategy based on these factors can help you make more informed decisions and optimize your play from the big blind
so many variables and depends on other stacks mainly for me, i was terrible in this spot and would fold what felt like 80% just because i hated playing oop as id get outplayed far too often BECAUSE i was leading out (donk betting) trying to tell the raiser i had there holdings and not allowing them to tell me a story. the game changed once i stopped donk betting and learnt to defend properly which involves mixing checking/betting nuts and bluffs. i actually think i over defend at certain stack depths. try and improve hand reading skills by reading what the opponent has when your not involved in helps to construct ranges of the table, it is the hardest part of the game really since big blind is where the biggest pots are generally won