Poker Forum > Strategy
Can we talk him into a fold?
Swinebag:
--- Quote from: AAroddersAA on April 06, 2013, 16:09:13 PM ---
--- Quote from: Swinebag22 on April 04, 2013, 00:17:29 AM ---
--- Quote from: deanp27 on April 03, 2013, 20:12:07 PM ---
Tell him to stop arsing around and make his mind up
--- End quote ---
+1 to this.
Your stack is over the line. Everything else doesn"t matter
--- End quote ---
Disagree, it matter"s a lot if he calls or not.
I would agree with saying nothing personally.
--- End quote ---
What I meant was there are no more poker decisions to make.
Sure you can get into a war of words but anything you say can always be interpreted as either a tell or a reverse tell. So it"s 50/50 whether you influence the player favourably or not.
Even if you have history on the villain and seen how he processes spoken info, there is no guarantee he will process similar speech play the same way.
In short, "nothing else matters" so button it.
On second thoughts, if you are that desperate for a fold then try jabbering away non stop about absolute nothing. If someone who is generally quiet starts chatting, that is normally a sign of strength. He will fold for sure ;)
AAroddersAA:
--- Quote from: Swinebag22 on April 06, 2013, 21:49:49 PM ---
--- Quote from: AAroddersAA on April 06, 2013, 16:09:13 PM ---
--- Quote from: Swinebag22 on April 04, 2013, 00:17:29 AM ---
--- Quote from: deanp27 on April 03, 2013, 20:12:07 PM ---
Tell him to stop arsing around and make his mind up
--- End quote ---
+1 to this.
Your stack is over the line. Everything else doesn"t matter
--- End quote ---
Disagree, it matter"s a lot if he calls or not.
I would agree with saying nothing personally.
--- End quote ---
What I meant was there are no more poker decisions to make.
Sure you can get into a war of words but anything you say can always be interpreted as either a tell or a reverse tell. So it"s 50/50 whether you influence the player favourably or not.
Even if you have history on the villain and seen how he processes spoken info, there is no guarantee he will process similar speech play the same way.
In short, "nothing else matters" so button it.
On second thoughts, if you are that desperate for a fold then try jabbering away non stop about absolute nothing. If someone who is generally quiet starts chatting, that is normally a sign of strength. He will fold for sure ;)
--- End quote ---
So telling him to "stop arsing around and make up his mind" would probably be a bad plan :-)
Swinebag:
--- Quote from: AAroddersAA on April 06, 2013, 22:55:47 PM ---
--- Quote from: Swinebag22 on April 06, 2013, 21:49:49 PM ---
--- Quote from: AAroddersAA on April 06, 2013, 16:09:13 PM ---
--- Quote from: Swinebag22 on April 04, 2013, 00:17:29 AM ---
--- Quote from: deanp27 on April 03, 2013, 20:12:07 PM ---
Tell him to stop arsing around and make his mind up
--- End quote ---
+1 to this.
Your stack is over the line. Everything else doesn"t matter
--- End quote ---
Disagree, it matter"s a lot if he calls or not.
I would agree with saying nothing personally.
--- End quote ---
What I meant was there are no more poker decisions to make.
Sure you can get into a war of words but anything you say can always be interpreted as either a tell or a reverse tell. So it"s 50/50 whether you influence the player favourably or not.
Even if you have history on the villain and seen how he processes spoken info, there is no guarantee he will process similar speech play the same way.
In short, "nothing else matters" so button it.
On second thoughts, if you are that desperate for a fold then try jabbering away non stop about absolute nothing. If someone who is generally quiet starts chatting, that is normally a sign of strength. He will fold for sure ;)
--- End quote ---
So telling him to "stop arsing around and make up his mind" would probably be a bad plan :-)
--- End quote ---
Hahaha. Just realised what I did. That"s why I am a speech play failure. Saying what Dean said was my way of saying nothing, but of course that is not the case. Remind me never to speak at the table again.
Ever
Navigation
[0] Message Index
[*] Previous page
Go to full version