Strategy to finish off an opponent in Heads-Up (1-on-1) Poker



You see, when you have a big chip lead in heads-up
action, the first secret
is YOU MUST ATTACK.



To get a perspective on this, think about how you
play when you’re the SHORT
STACK…



You’re prepared to go all-in as soon as possible,

right?


Well, you must use this to your ADVANTAGE when
you’re the
big stack, and PUT YOUR OPPONENT ALL-IN

right away… rather than the other
way around.



When you have a big chip lead, YOU must be the one
to
create “coin-toss” situations… and fast.



A coin-toss situation is when
both players have

virtually equal odds… and the winning hand is

determined by whatever the flop, turn, and river
cards are.


In
heads-up poker, any starting hand with a FACE

CARD is playable. Or any
pocket pair. It’s that

simple.


If you’ve got a big chip lead on your
opponent and

he CHECKS or LIMPS-IN (calls the blinds), then you
should
IMMEDIATELY put him all-in.



He wouldn’t be checking or limping-in if he
had

ANYTHING DECENT at all…


If he folds, you’ve stolen the blinds
from him,

which is crucial. If he calls, you’ve created a
“coin-toss”
situation.



Odds are you’ll win at least one out of every two
coin
toss situations. Or at the very least, you’ll

win one out of three.




Push or Fold:

Ax  Kx
Qx  Jx
T8  T7s
98s
22+

(103/169 = 60.95%)




Here’s a basic summary of the “rules” you should
follow when playing
heads-up poker with a huge

chip lead. When I say “huge”, I’m talking about

10 to 1 or more…


And that’s the exact moment when you MUST PULL THE
TRIGGER AND WIN THE GAME.


If you don’t, the chip stacks can quickly even out
again and you may lose
your chance forever.



Anyway… here are the RULES you should follow with a huge chip lead (10 to 1 or more):


1. Any starting hand with
a face card or any pocket

pair is good.


2. You should either FOLD or
go ALL-IN every time.

Nothing else.


3. Force COIN-TOSS situations…
In other words,

leverage the 50/50 ODDS as much as possible. Do
this two
or three times and you will almost always

win the match.


4. If you’re
playing against a tight player, it

will be even easier. Keep going all-in on
just

about every hand and let the blinds eat him to
death.


Read
and re-read those four principles and you’ll

be prepared the next time you
make it to a

heads-up match.




Push or Fold:


Ax  Kx
Qx  Jx
T8  T7s
98s
22+


(103/169 = 60.95%)




50/50 ODDS means:


Ax  Kx
Q5  Qxs
J7  J5s
T8  T7s
98s
22+


(91/169 = 53.85%)



> 50% odds are:


Ax  Kx
Q6  Q3s
J8   J6s
T9  T7s
98s
33+


(86/169 = 51% of hands)






http://www.cardschat.com/f11/how-beat-short-stack-heads-up-61283/
http://www.thepokerforum.com/joebenik8.htm

http://books.google.ca/books?id=ix4HeDVvgIYC&pg=PA73&lpg=PA73&dq=finish+a+short+stacked+opponent+in+heads+up&source=bl&ots=DMnInk7bxP&sig=WSx8q9SQBDv0GZsSn6FvbVNvtBs&hl=en&sa=X&ei=VnR-U-KRCOqH8AHhjoDABw&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=finish%20a%20short%20stacked%20opponent%20in%20heads%20up&f=false

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