SCOOP Day 5: Super Progressive Knock-Out

I’ve made a few attempts to study this game and talked it over with some intelligent people (most notably on Episode 58 of the podcast), but I’ll admit that I’m still not as certain as I’d like to be about the correct adaptations for this game. I mean, some of them are obvious, but as best I can tell there is no clear way to translate back and forth between bounties and chips with precision. For example, if blinds are 100/200 and you have 3000 chips while everyone else has 5000, doubling up is probably worth more than double your current equity, because it puts you in a place where you can win large bounties. However, how light should you then call a shove, considering that if you win you win a bounty, but if you lose you will no longer be able to win bounties?

I took two “gambles” in the $1000, putting the money in with hands I usually would not because of the bounties. The first seemed pretty straight-forward:

PokerStars – $500+$500+$50|50/100 Ante 10 NL – Holdem – 9 players
Hand converted by PokerTracker 4: http://www.pokertracker.com

SB: 151.59 BB (VPIP: 27.03, PFR: 18.92, 3Bet Preflop: 12.50, Hands: 37)
Hero (BB): 114.91 BB
UTG: 46.2 BB (VPIP: 27.27, PFR: 18.18, 3Bet Preflop: 0.00, Hands: 11)
UTG+1: 23.84 BB (VPIP: 40.00, PFR: 21.43, 3Bet Preflop: 9.68, Hands: 70)
MP: 184.24 BB (VPIP: 27.88, PFR: 12.12, 3Bet Preflop: 8.75, Hands: 165)
MP+1: 51.98 BB (VPIP: 13.58, PFR: 8.64, 3Bet Preflop: 1.33, Hands: 163)
MP+2: 36.25 BB (VPIP: 25.00, PFR: 25.00, 3Bet Preflop: 0.00, Hands: 8)
CO: 87.32 BB (VPIP: 27.66, PFR: 16.43, 3Bet Preflop: 3.23, Hands: 141)
BTN: 45.75 BB (VPIP: 25.00, PFR: 12.50, 3Bet Preflop: 0.00, Hands: 8)

9 players post ante of 0.1 BB, SB posts SB 0.5 BB, Hero posts BB 1 BB

Pre Flop: (pot: 2.4 BB) Hero has Td 9d
fold, fold, fold, fold, MP+2 raises to 2 BB, fold, fold, SB calls 1.5 BB, Hero raises to 8 BB, MP+2 raises to 36.15 BB and is all-in, fold, Hero calls 28.15 BB

Flop : (75.2 BB, 2 players) 2h 5d Qc

Turn : (75.2 BB, 2 players) 7s

River : (75.2 BB, 2 players) Qd

Hero shows Td 9d (One Pair, Queens)
(Pre 38%, Flop 27%, Turn 14%)

MP+2 shows As Js (One Pair, Queens)
(Pre 62%, Flop 73%, Turn 86%)

MP+2 wins 75.2 BB

The real question is whether to squeeze with the intention of calling in the first place. Once he shoves, calling needing just 37% equity even in the absence of the bounty is pretty trivial with a strong suited connector. Flatting pre-flop has some merit, and although I like having a shot at winning the pot immediately, my hand’s equity does hold up well in a multi-way pot, and I can also take a shot at Villain’s stack post-flop (as it happens, though, I may well have been bet off of a good bet of equity if I’d gone to the flop).

After the tournament, I took a walk and began to question this second call in my head. Then I crunched some numbers and it turns out to be a clear call:

PokerStars – $500+$500+$50|75/150 Ante 20 NL – Holdem – 9 players
Hand converted by PokerTracker 4: http://www.pokertracker.com

MP+1: 110.57 BB (VPIP: 27.06, PFR: 16.67, 3Bet Preflop: 13.33, Hands: 85)
Hero (MP+2): 38.44 BB
CO: 68.59 BB (VPIP: 11.11, PFR: 11.11, 3Bet Preflop: 0.00, Hands: 18)
BTN: 46.95 BB (VPIP: 32.20, PFR: 13.56, 3Bet Preflop: 5.45, Hands: 118)
SB: 149.75 BB (VPIP: 28.64, PFR: 13.15, 3Bet Preflop: 8.00, Hands: 213)
BB: 20.25 BB (VPIP: 12.86, PFR: 7.62, 3Bet Preflop: 1.03, Hands: 211)
UTG: 25.03 BB (VPIP: 23.33, PFR: 13.33, 3Bet Preflop: 0.00, Hands: 30)
UTG+1: 58.2 BB (VPIP: 27.13, PFR: 15.51, 3Bet Preflop: 2.35, Hands: 189)
MP: 84.79 BB (VPIP: 32.14, PFR: 23.21, 3Bet Preflop: 6.90, Hands: 56)

9 players post ante of 0.13 BB, SB posts SB 0.5 BB, BB posts BB 1 BB

Pre Flop: (pot: 2.7 BB) Hero has 4d 4s
fold, fold, fold, MP+1 raises to 2 BB, Hero calls 2 BB, fold, BTN calls 2 BB, fold, BB raises to 20.12 BB and is all-in, fold, Hero raises to 38.31 BB and is all-in, fold

Flop : (45.94 BB, 2 players) 2s Ts Qs

Turn : (45.94 BB, 2 players) Ks

River : (45.94 BB, 2 players) Jc

BTN mucks 7h 7d (One Pair, Sevens)
(Pre 0%, Flop 0%, Turn 0%)

BB shows Ad As (Flush, Ace High)
(Pre 82%, Flop 93%, Turn 100%)

Hero shows 4d 4s (Flush, King High)
(Pre 18%, Flop 7%, Turn 0%)

BB wins 45.94 BB

Against {77+,KQs,KQo,ATs+,AJo+} it’s barely a fold even without the bounty. Tightening Villain’s range slightly by removing the KQo and KQs barely changes my equity at all, and pulling out the ATs and AJo makes a bit closer but still a call given the bounty. I really can’t imagine his range being any tighter than that.

Tomorrow is Big Antes at 8AM Pacific and then 6Max Shootout at 11AM, the latter of which is another I’m really looking forward to.

7 thoughts on “SCOOP Day 5: Super Progressive Knock-Out”

      • Ok, first of all. This is my first time ever commenting anywhere. Definitely the first time in a poker forum. Furthermore, if I had to name somebody, whose poker insights, his skill of THINKING poker I respect the most, it would certainly be you (and Nate, of course ;). I have been playing poker for 8 years (low stakes) and I am a winning tournament player, and you and your podcast, which I have discovered only a few month ago, have turned me, so far, in a winning cash game player, which is awesome (finally).
        So, it is exciting to communicate with you, about a hand you played, but I also do not feel qualified and am pretty sure, that I am missing something in my thought process.
        So here is why I do not like the call with 4s.
        To me it seems fairly simple. You have 38 big blinds. Not a lot. But also not in immediate danger zone. I could arguably agree on a gamble with less than 20 BB. You have enough BBs to wait for a better spot. With a low pair, in a preflop all-in situation, no matter what your opponent’s range is, you will be in a race a lot of times, at best, or dominated by a bigger pocket pair. I know I am not telling you anything new, which makes me wonder even more why you picked this spot to gamble. Now, had you had 80 BB’s, I could agree with the gamble, because of the stack sizes. You would only risk a quarter of your stack for the chance of getting a bounty. But with your stack size you will be left crippled. If it was a clear race, all right, gamble. But with the decent chance of being dominated, as eventually happened, the gamble was not a well chosen spot, mostly due to your stack size. Not enough to take players of the table with mediocre hands, and too many to shove and pray. In my humble opinion.
        Now, I did not pay attention to the BTN, since I am not sure whether he folded preflop, or not. I believe he did. With action behind you the 4s are even worse, right. In fact, whether he called or folded you were dominated by his hand, too.
        One more word about bounties. I think they should influence your decisions only very slightly, if at all. If you run deep in a tournament, you will eventually take out players. The bounties will come on their own. There is much more value in running deep, cashing and collecting bounties on the way without focusing on it, than playing more risky early on, or basically at any point, just to maybe get a bounty. Much more value in passing a bad spot for a potential bounty.
        I am not a native English speaker, so the last sentence is confusing me, but I think you know what I mean.
        Best of luck to you in the SCOOP, hope you take one down.
        You rock.

        • Thanks for the kind words, Tim. I don’t often post “standard” hands here, because they aren’t interesting. I deliberately post unconventional hands because I think there is something interesting (or at least brag-worthy!) about them. I want to encourage discussion, debate, and even criticism of my play.

          In that spirit, this second comment is a lot better than the first. I’m aware that 44 would not generally be a hand good enough to call a shove of this size. I tried to explain, in the original post, why I considered this to be an exception. If you disagree with that, I encourage you to explain what you think is wrong about my analysis, as you do here. I’ll admit that your original comment was a bit frustrating because I took the time to write up an explanation of why I played the hand in an unconventional way, including some number-crunching and even a test of just sensitive to Villain’s range my analysis was, and in your first comment you ignored all of that and simply said “this hand isn’t strong enough to call.”

          I appreciate that you took the time, in your second comment, to explain why you thought that, and I’ll try to do you the same courtesy now and explain why I think you are incorrect. You are relying on simple rules and rough estimates (“either flipping or dominated”), which are the best you have available to you at the table, but when analyzing hand away from the table you should get more precise by plugging ranges into an equity calculator, as I did. It matters just often you are flipping compared to how often you are dominated, and it matters what price you are getting on the call. I didn’t “pick this spot to gamble”, I called because I thought doing so had a higher expected value than folding.

          I also think it can’t possibly be right to play a bounty tournament and then ignore the bounties, particularly when, as in this case, winning this player’s bounty would be worth 25% of the entry fee for the tournament. That’s a huge portion of the prize pool to ignore, and it absolutely should affect your willingness to call when you have the chance to eliminate a player.

          What I’m not sure of is just how much it should affect it. After looking at my equity in greater depth, though, I realized that I wouldn’t need to rely on much $EV from the bounty at all to turn the call into a correct one. In game I had to rely on feel and rough guesses to make a decision, but my hope is that, now that I’ve looked at the hand in greater depth, I’ll have a better intuition the next time around.

          I hope I’m not being too harsh here. I do appreciate your reading, listening, and commenting. Take care,

          Andrew

          • This also felt bad to me, esp. just calling and then calling it off. But I think the hand description doesn’t help (it’s not obvious what we need to call, and what the pot is).

            Not everyone has poker stove, plugging this into PPT:

            http://www.propokertools.com/simulations/show?g=he&h1=4d+4s&h2=77%2B%2CKQ%2CAxTx%2CAJ%2CAQ%2CAK&s=generic

            This gives us 38.65%, we’ve called off 2bb and need to call off another 18.25bb to win a pot of 45.94 so we need 39.73%. 1% is a lot less than I’d have thought (but still bad, no?). Somewhat more interesting is that as villain adds 1bb we need roughly 0.45% more equity (but it goes down as more are added) and if villain shoves 66+ we lose 1% and if villain only shoves 88+ we gain 1.1%.
            As you say the big hit comes if villain shoves less overcards AJs,AQo+ (even if he only does 88+ with it).

            I’m sure you know all this, but I’m discovering/reminded again how combinatorics distorts everything so it quickly becomes impossible to balance overcards with paris.

              • Oh, yeh, no question the bounty makes it a call.

                I was mostly running numbers on my own to agree with you (I’m so good ;).

                My “but it’s still bad” was mostly to clarify your “it’s barely a fold even without the bounty”.

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