WPT GTO Trainer Hands of the Week: 3-Betting From The Big Blind

3 min read
WPT GTO Trainer Hands of the Week: 3-Betting From The Big Blind

This week we’re focused on a tournament scenario where you are out of position against a tough player in early position who opens to 2.5BBs, you raise to 10BBs from the Big Blind and they call.

This is an interesting situation due to the larger sizing of 4x the UTG+1 player’s raise since you’re out of position. In addition, remaining stacks in relation to the pot size going to the flop are relatively shallow with an approximate Stack to Pot Ratio of 2. These factors coupled with your opponent being in position postflop, leads to a higher calling frequency of your raise even with some of their biggest hands. The early position player will be utilizing a strategy that mixes calling and 4-betting and flat calling our 4x raise with the majority of their range that includes pocket aces, pocket kings, suited broadway hands, plus a handful of suited connectors and Ax combos.

WPT GTO Trainer Hands of the Week: 3-Betting From The Big Blind

So unlike many other situations with a reraise and call, the preflop caller in this instance doesn’t have a capped range. Your range as the Big Blind is also uncapped but is quite polarized with all of the strongest hands still possible as well as a mix of bluffing hands that includes suited combos such as Q5, 75, and 54.

With the shallow stacks, positional disadvantage, and polarized preflop range you should focus on continuation betting strategy balanced between some betting and some checking. You will notice that many that do c-bet in this spot do so at less than a 70% frequency. The best hands to c-bet will have significant hard equity and the ability to fire multiple barrels on certain runouts. For example, hands with reasonable showdown value such as top pair with good kicker and strong back door draws would be good candidates to bet.

To see more examples and test your skills, you can play through five free solved hands from this scenario.

To access the free five hands, visit this page.

Regular play on the WPT GTO Trainer will help you adjust your decisions closer and closer to GTO strategy.

You don’t have to be the world’s best player to use GTO Strategy, and thanks to the WPT GTO Trainer, now you don’t have to buy expensive software or have expert level knowledge to study GTO.

Why use the WPT GTO Trainer?

The WPT GTO Trainer lets you play real solved hands against a perfect opponent in a wide variety of postflop scenarios for cash game and tournament play.

If your goal is to be a tough poker player then you should try the WPT GTO Trainer today.

Register a free account here (it only takes your e-mail address to begin) to play hands and see true GTO strategy in real-time.

The WPT GTO Trainer has over 4 billion unique solved flops, turns and rivers that are fully playable.

As you make decisions in a hand, you receive instant feedback on the specific EV loss (if any) and Played Percentage for every action you take as compared to GTO strategy.

The full selection of scenarios for the WPT GTO Trainer are only available to members of LearnWPT, however we’re giving PokerNews Readers free access to the Trainer on a regular basis with the WPT GTO Hands of The Week.

Use this series of articles to practice the strategies you learn on LearnWPT (or at the table) and test your progress by playing a five-hand sample each week

Share this article

More Stories

Other Stories