Poker Raise After All In

More and more in today’s poker, aggression is the key. This is particularly true in tournament play. The best poker players know how to pick their spots and are great at sensing weakness. One aggressive play that should be in everyone’s arsenal is the re-raise (also known as a re-steal). We will use the two terms interchangeably, but this poker lesson will focus on situations when the goal of re-raising pre-flop is to get the other player to fold.

Mar 20, 2015  First, without saying anything, you can simply slide forward, in one continuous motion, all of the chips constituting your bet, i.e., both the amount needed to call and the extra amount of your raise. Poker rules raise after all in If you think this sounds familiar, it is. Online craps is limited to just a handful of software providers led by poker rules raise after all in Microgaming, Playtech and NetEnt.

The first step in learning the power of the re-raise is to be able to recognize situations in which the re-steal is more likely to be effective and profitable over the long run. Sure, there are times when you re-raise and the guy wakes up with Aces, but you have to take that chance sometimes to win a poker tournament.

Risk/Reward

Plain and simple, there must either be enough chips in the pot to make the risk of re-raising profitable or your stack in relation to the binds must dictate that you are in a situation that you need to take risks. For example, if the blinds are 10/20, you and your opponent both have 1500 and he raises from the button to 60, there is little value in re-stealing here and he’s not as likely to fold.

Stage of the Tournament

Bubbles are the best time to re-steal in poker because people are less likely to take big risks that might cost them their tournament life. This could be the money bubble stage, the final table bubble or near any significant jump in pay.

Stack Sizes

If stacks are deep and there are enough chips in the pot to make re-raising worth it, you can re-steal and have two ways to win:

  1. They fold
  2. They call and you continue your aggression post-flop.

If there’s a chance your opponent will call, you are much better off re-stealing from the button or cut-off so that you have position after the flop.

Caution – make sure you’re deep stacked enough in order to re-steal effectively without pushing all-in pre-flop. If you are mid-stacked it’s easy to commit yourself in an awkward flop situation. If you are somewhat short stacked, the best re-steal is to push all-in. Depending on how much fold equity you have (see below), this can put a lot of pressure on your opponent. Re-steals tend to be more effective and valuable during the late stages of a tournament since stacks are shorter on average and pots contain more blinds and antes.

Fold Equity

Assuming your re-steal is pushing all-in, it is best to do this when you are not going to give your opponent the correct odds to call. Most conventional advice says that if you are getting around 2-1 you have the odds to call with almost any two cards. It doesn’t always make it a correct call, but since many people use this as a guide you should start looking for re-steal opportunities around 7-10M (M = your stack divided by the size of the pot pre-flop). Depending on their stack size, by giving incorrect odds to call you are increasing the amount of fold equity you have.

Damage to the Other Player

When looking for profitable re-steal situations you must consider your opponent’s stack size. Generally you want to avoid re-stealing into a huge stack because they have the chips to gamble with. At the same time, you don’t want to re-steal into a short stack who may feel desperate. The best stacks to re-steal against are the ones who you can do damage to if they called and lost. If you have 15,000 and your opponent has 22,000 with blinds at 500/1000 they are going to risk dropping down to 7BB. Even if they have a hand that is possibly ahead of your range, they will often still fold because they can pick a better spot to risk their chips.

Your Opponent’s Image

Have they been stealing a lot, are they capable of folding to a re-raise, are they willing to gamble, are they a new player who overvalues their hand? These are some of the questions you have to ask yourself. Generally, re-steals are the most effective against loose aggressive players who know how to let go of a hand. By shoving into them, you are taking away their play and they will likely pick another spot. But pay close attention to who you are re-stealing from. Because re-steals have become more prominent, people are loosening their calling re-requirements. Where it used to be common place for someone to fold AT to a re-raise, some people are now insta-calling with this hand.

Your Image

The main question to ask yourself is “what hand range will they put me on based on how I’ve been playing?” If you have re-stolen the last 3 times you were in the blinds, you are probably going to be called by someone who decides to look you up. If you’ve been playing like a rock, you could probably re-steal with any two cards and someone will fold AQ to you.

Position

The most popular positions to re-steal from are the blinds because people will often raise with any two cards from the late position. While these are still effective, an often more believable re-steal position is from the button. Since a late position player may be stealing with a marginal hand, a button push is still effective against his range. In fact, a re-raise from the button looks much more believable that you have a very strong hand and will get the blinds and your opponent to fold a decent hand such as a mid pocket pair or AJ.

Your Cards

Notice we are waiting until now to talk about your cards. That’s because these should be the last thing you think about when determining if the situation is right for a re-steal. Ideally, you will want to have live cards to re-steal with in case you do get called. A hand like is still only a 40% underdog against two over cards. When you factor that, along with the % of time they will fold, it makes the re-steal profitable.

Be careful re-stealing with hands like KQ or A-rag because if you do get called you are likely a 25-30% underdog. Obviously, if you have a hand that you feel is the favourite pre-flop you aren’t necessarily “stealing”. A shove might still be the correct play, but it’s more of a shove for value than for fold equity.

Hand Example – Re-Steal with Suited Connectors

The following hand example is from the money bubble stage of a no-limit hold’em tournament. It folds to your opponent in the cut-off who raises to 3,000. You are in the small blind with :

Figure 1

Your opponent is an experienced loose aggressive player. While he isn’t in every pot, you can be assured that if it folds to him in late position he is going to be raising. Your image is pretty solid. You haven’t been involved in too many pots and you have shown down good hands the last few that you have won. The big blind in the hand is a new, but very tight player who keeps commenting about making the money.

Should you fold, call or raise? Well, the worst play is to call. You are out of position with a marginal hand against an aggressive player. Unless you hit the flop perfectly, you are going to have to let the hand go.

Raise

There is nothing wrong with a fold here, but given the table image of each player still in the hand, the stage of the tournament and the stack sizes involved, I would re-steal and shove all-in. You will be giving your opponent 1.5-1 (23,900 in the pot and 15,400 to call), which makes it mathematically incorrect to call and he’s experienced enough to know that. Your stack can also do a lot of damage since it would leave your opponent with 7,500 if he lost.

If for some reason the big blind or your opponent wakes up with a hand, you are still not that big of an underdog. Regardless, the likelihood of them folding in this situation is very high and makes it move with positive expected value. You shove, the big blind folds and your opponent folds .

Strategies for Playing Against a Re-Steal

Since more and more players are utilizing the re-steal in their bag of tricks, you have to be observant and watch who may be using this technique and adjust your play. Here are some ways to counteract its effects:

Randomize your play by limping in late position

Poker raise after all in time

If you normally raise in late position when it folds to you and are now limping, this could freeze the action and cause the other players to be suspicious and worry you might have a monster. Since there are fewer chips in the pot to win, it also reduces their likelihood to raise from the blinds and you will have position on the flop.

Open up your calling requirements

Depending on your opponents’ propensity to re-steal, your stack size and need to gamble; you can make the call of a re-steal with a hand like AJ, KQ or a mid pocket pair and be confident that you are ahead.

Steal more from early position rather than late

Button steals have become so common place that many players automatically assume it’s a steal. But if you are stealing from an early position, it puts a lot more pressure on the other players because they are going to give you credit for a good hand.

Make your big hands look like a steal

If you pick up AA or KK in late position, consider raising larger or smaller than normal depending on what you think the re-stealer will think of your size (if you typically randomize your raise sizes). If you always raise the same amount, then just stick with that since any variation might look suspicious.

Reduce the size of your pre-flop raise

Instead of raising 3-4 times the big blind, start raising 2.25-2.75. These raise sizes are just as effective late in a tournament and reduce the amount you lose if someone does decide to come over the top.

This brings our lesson on re-stealing to a close. Hopefully you’ve picked up a few tips that will help you in future poker tournaments. Just remember that the best poker players know how to pick their spots and are great at sensing weakness – which is what you should be doing too.

Related Lessons

By Donovan Panone

Donovan started playing poker in 2004 and is an experienced tournament and cash game player who has a passion for teaching and helping others improve their game.

Related Lessons

Share:

Wizard Recommends

  • €1500 Welcome Bonus
  • €100 + 300 Free Spins
  • 100% Welcome Bonus

On This Page

Introduction

Raise 'Em Poker


Raise 'Em Poker is a poker variant popular in Africa. The game is basically the same as Let it Ride, except the player adds bets instead of pulling them back. The pay table used is the same as that used in Let it Ride at the Royal Swazi.

Rules


  1. The game is played with a single 52-card deck.
  2. Player starts by making an Ante wager and an optional 'Plus' side bet.
  3. Three cards are dealt to each player and two community cards will be dealt face down.
  4. After examining his cards, the player may check or make a Raise wager equal to the Ante wager in the spot marked '1.'
  5. The dealer will reveal the first community card.
  6. The player may check or make a Raise wager equal to the Ante wager in the spot marked '2.'
  7. The dealer will reveal the second community card.
  8. The dealer will pay each player according to the poker value of his hand and the pay table below, which shall apply to the Ante and all Raise wagers.

    Ante and Raise Bets Pay Table

    HandPays
    Royal Flush 250 to 1
    Straight Flush 50 to 1
    Four of a kind 25 to 1
    Full House 12 to 1
    Flush 10 to 1
    Straight 8 to 1
    Three of a kind 3 to 1
    Two pair 2 to 1
    Tens or better 1 to 1

  9. The Plus bet is paid according the Plus pay table below.

    The following is the pay table for the Plus side bet. The three progressives are all independent of each other. When one jackpot hits, the others do not go down.

    Plus Bet Pay Table

    HandPays
    Royal Flush Top Progressive
    Straight Flush Top Progressive
    Four of a kind Second Progressive
    Full House Third Progressive
    Flush 50 to 1
    Straight 10 to 1


Strategy


With three cards you should make a raise bet with any of the following, otherwise check.

  • Any paying hand (tens or better, three of a kind).
  • Any three to a royal flush.
  • Three suited cards in a row except 2-3-4, and ace-2-3.
  • Three to a straight flush, spread 4, with at least one high card (ten or greater.)
  • Three to a straight flush, spread 5, with at least two high cards.
  • 10-J-Q unsuited.

With four cards you should make a raise bet with any of the following, otherwise check.

  • Any paying hand (tens or better, two pair, three of a kind).
  • Four to a flush.
  • Any four to an outside straight.
  • Any four to an inside straight with at least three high cards.

Four to an inside straight with two high cards is a break-even raise situation.

Analysis


The following tables show the probability and return of all possible outcomes. The lower right cell shows a house edge of 2.96%.

Return Table

HandBetPaysCombinationsProbabilityReturn
Royal Flush 3 750 80 0.000002 0.001154
Straight Flush 3 150 352 0.000007 0.001016
Four of a kind 3 75 7,872 0.000151 0.011358
Full House 3 36 33,408 0.000643 0.023138
Flush 3 30 10,008 0.000193 0.005776
Straight 3 24 11,568 0.000223 0.005341
Three of a kind 3 9 365,640 0.007034 0.063309
Two pair 3 6 577,368 0.011108 0.066646
Tens or better 3 3 2,605,908 0.050134 0.150401
Nonpaying hand 3 -3 95,508 0.001837 -0.005512
Royal Flush 2 500 - 0.000000 0.000000
Straight Flush 2 100 368 0.000007 0.000708
Four of a kind 2 50 4,608 0.000089 0.004433
Full House 2 24 41,472 0.000798 0.019149
Flush 2 20 92,152 0.001773 0.035457
Straight 2 16 112,464 0.002164 0.034618
Three of a kind 2 6 327,888 0.006308 0.037848
Two pair 2 4 679,536 0.013073 0.052293
Tens or better 2 2 2,684,136 0.051639 0.103277
Nonpaying hand 2 -2 1,233,696 0.023734 -0.047469
Royal Flush 1 250 - 0.000000 0.000000
Straight Flush 1 50 - 0.000000 0.000000
Four of a kind 1 25 - 0.000000 0.000000
Full House 1 12 - 0.000000 0.000000
Flush 1 10 - 0.000000 0.000000
Straight 1 8 79,968 0.001538 0.012308
Three of a kind 1 3 404,712 0.007786 0.023358
Two pair 1 2 1,214,136 0.023358 0.046716
Tens or better 1 1 3,157,956 0.060754 0.060754
Nonpaying hand 1 -1 38,238,396 0.735648 -0.735648
Total 51,979,200 1.000000 -0.029570

Poker Raise After All In Love


As a reminder, the house edge is traditionally defined as the ratio of the expected loss to the initial wager, which is 2.96% in this case. The player will make one raise 9.96% of the time and two raises 7.13%, for an average total bet of 1.24 units. The Element of Risk, which is the ratio of the expected loss to total bet, is thus 2.38%.

Plus Bet

When To Raise In Holdem


With three independent progressives, you'll have to get out a calculator to determine the value of the Plus bet at any given time. The general formula for the return per dollar bet is:

(40×(Top Progressive) + 624×(Second Progressive) + 37244×(Third Progressive) + 357,400×(bet amount))/(2,598,960 × (bet amount))

Go All In Poker

When this value exceeds 1, the odds are in the player's favor. With three different progressives, it would not surprise me if this side bet almost never goes positive.