I was recently at a table where a player was regularly shoving pre-flop (I mean, virtually every hand) with complete rubbish. He'd been called and managed to get lucky a few times, building a hefty stack, which just encouraged him more.
I managed to avoid getting involving in a major pot with him, but I was wondering what tactics you would employ against him.
The way I played it was to try to wait for a high pair as I figured that even with a hand like AK I wouldn't like to be raised all-in, even if I knew my opponent probably had nothing. A bit too much of a coin flip to risk my whole buy-in.
As it happened, he left before I could get involved, but do you think I was right to wait for a monster, or should I have been getting stuck in if I knew he was shoving light?
For example, in one hand, the whole table limped in. I was on the BB and raised to 20p with KQ. The first two limpers called (yes, perhaps I should have raised more, but then KQ isn't that great) then this guy shoved all-in. I knew he was probably weak, but I just couldn't bring myself to risk a whole buy-in with KQ. He was called by another player and turned over 10-2 suited. As it happened, my KQ would have held up against both hands.
Comments
I prefer to isolate the pot v the shover too. Mostly when you have a player like this youll see the table fill with regs, at NL4 this includes myself. When one of us call, none others teand to without a big hand, But any 60/40 shot is +EV long term so im calling.
My range against people who shove every hand does widen as i know im so much +Ev against them and lets face it, they aint going to sit around will i wait for aces. So if im last to act/call i will often call with a pretty wide range myself.
Also Sillymunch if your folding AK v these villians your losing serious amount of value. Ive spoken to you about ur BR and i know your situation so i can understand if they shove 72 and u snap AK and they hit a 2 how much it can hurt, out of experiance. However this is why ive learnt recently we play with a BR, so that we make money long term, and not on the short term