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 Originally Posted by Borax
Thanks alot for tips!
I think I have been too passive so far. I'll try to be aggressive, but with 7 2 or 5 3 it is tempting to give up even a large blind to get at least on last shot.
If he raised, fold these. If not, then you can decide how aggressive to be. A part of it is making the cards only a factor if he has you beat. If you can win all the pots except the ones where he knows he has you beat, you're golden. That said, yes, the above are bad hands. If you try to bluff and he re-raises or calls, give it up fairly quickly with these.
 Originally Posted by Borax
Questions in detail for heads up, blinds are big:
1) what about suited 9 10 if he raises and if he doesn't?
Is he aggressive - playing as described above raising on bluffs and such? If so, you might call a raise depending on how big it is and if he's likely to call you when you hit your straight or your flush. If he only raises when he has cards, fold this to a raise. To a check, I'd probably raise this my standard amount.
 Originally Posted by Borax
2) He's all in and I have A 2 not suited ?
How's your stack size compared to his? What does he raise on? If you have the chips to call and still be at least even AND he is capable of raising with poor hands, I'd probably call. If either of the above is not true, fold, especially if it's only going to be a blind (which you should be able to take back within a couple of hands)
 Originally Posted by Borax
3) I'm small blind, he is getting low on chips in big blind and I get pocket 2's , then what to do?
I'd raise at least 1/4 his stack. Possibly push him in. Pocket 2s are actually the only pocket pair that doesn't win over 50% heads up though, so it's iffy. On second thought, pushing him in is probably a bad idea here as well, since it's reasonable to think he'll end up beating you.
- Jeffrey
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