Poker Pre Flop Percentages
2021年12月29日Register here: http://gg.gg/xdxpq
*Flop Poker Online
*Flop Poker Practice
PFR – the percentage of times a player raises pre-flop. This value converges at the same rate as VPIP and becomes useful after about 100 hands.
Obviously flopping four of a kind doesn’t happen every hard of online poker and given this you need to honor the percentages of Pre-Flop Texas Holdem Poker Strategy and in turn be quite conservative in your Starting Hand selection. You are going to throw away 4-8 and the flop will come 8-8-4 but that’s poker. You just have to deal with it. On the flop, it’s 9.4 (+4) = roughly 40% of hitting. Meanwhile, on the turn (so the odds of hitting on the river) is 9.2 (=2) = roughly 20% of hitting. With pot odds, think of the number of cards again. 52 in the deck, two in your hand and three on the board (flop). That means 47 unseen cards (including your opponents’ hole cards).
Tight-aggressive online poker players on 9-max and 6-max tables usually have a PFR percentage between 1/2 and 2/3 of their VPIP, with the tendency of increasing as the tables get shorter. Anything significantly below this range would mean that you are playing too passively and raising only the nuts, while being above it suggests you’re overly aggressive with marginal hands.
Examples using VPIP and PFR.
/For sake of simplicity we’ll assume all opponents have stacks of about 100BB/
No-Limit Holdem, full ring table, you are in late position holding AQo. Everyone folds to a player in middle position who raises 3 times the big blind. You look at his stats (we assume a large enough sample is available).
a) VPIP=34 / PFR=8, positionally aware with PFR=6 in middle position. Zynga blackjack app.
Obviously a very loose player preflop, but he raises only his strongest hands. So, his current range is AA through 88, AK, AQ, AJs, ATs. Five dollar blinds. Where do we stand?
We’ll dominate him 10% of the time – against AJs and ATs (0.6% of total hands), we’ll split it 50% of the time when he’s got AQ or the coin flip pairs JJ-88 (3% of total) and we’re far behind the rest 40% of the time. All in all, a clear fold.
b) VPIP=34 / PFR=31, same in all positions.
Loose-aggressive maniac who raises all the time. We are crushing his range, so we’ll definitely play – the only question is, should we re-raise? We have a drawing hand in position against an aggressive player and that’s an incentive to simply call and try to trap. However we probably have the best hand right now so it’s also correct to isolate him by re-raising and not let the blinds in cheaply. When deciding consider the additional traits of the raiser – some maniacs give up in the face of strong opposition and if so, a big re-raise could win the pot outright.
c) VPIP=11 / PFR=8, positionally aware with PFR=6 in MP.
A very tight, aggressive player raises in middle position and you should fold your AQ. Notice that this situation is identical to the first example, even though the VPIPs are starkly different. Many players who use HUDs still make the error of folding to the tight player and calling the one in example A, while thinking ”wow, he’s so loose”. But the villain in the first example actually raised and his VPIP alone is irrelevant!
Be mindful of yourself and learn to see what the poker HUD actually shows you and not what you want the situation to be.
Get a poker tracking program like Poker Tracker to put the odds in your favor!Which poker stats are most important?
Our poker HUD software offers a large amount of statistics. Knowing which ones are relevant and important can be overwhelming. If you are new to poker software you can initially ignore all statistics except the essential three poker statistics. Once you have understood how to use the basic statistics, you can add more depending on your style of play, and your chosen table size.
The big three poker statistics (and one bonus stat):
*Voluntarily Put $ in Pot (VPIP)
*Preflop Raise (PFR)
*Postflop Aggression Frequency (Agg)
*A bonus stat: Big blinds won/100 hands.
These three statistics are a great starting point to get an idea of a person’s playing style. They only require 25 hands or so to reliably give a good idea of a player’s tendencies.Voluntarily Put $ in Pot (VPIP)
VPIP in poker measures how often you voluntarily pay money into a hand before seeing the flop. Paying the big blind, the small blind, or the ante is not considered voluntary. Therefore this percentage indicates how often you called, bet, or raised. The lower this value, the tighter your hand selection is. The higher, the looser. Only preflop betting is taken into account.
Good players know to only invest money in the pot when they have decent starting hands. A simple way to measure whether you are doing this is to keep your VPIP at a sensible value.What is a good number for VPIP?
Simple answer: between 15% and 20%. This assumes you want to play tightly, you are playing micro-stakes, and you are playing on full ring cash tables.
Usa bonus codes. Now the more complicated answer: it depends a lot. If you are still learning to play good poker, then you should be very selective in which hands you play, so your VPIP might acceptably be a tad lower than 15%. The less people on the table, the more hands you can play. If you are on a table full of ultralight players, you can also loosen up. An experienced player who understands the subtleties of the game can get away with a VPIP between 20% and 27%. In 6-max or heads-up, most players have a much higher VPIP. In Pot Limit Omaha, VPIP values will be even higher.Flop Poker OnlinePreflop Raise (PFR)
The PFR statistic indicates how often you have raised before the flop is seen. A high value is an indicator of an aggressive player. A low value indicates a passive player. Good players are aggressive players.
Your PFR has a possible range between a minumum of 0% and a maximum equal to the value of your VPIP. That is, if your VPIP is 20%, then your PFR can’t be higher than 20%. Ideally it should be a little lower than your VPIP, but not much lower.
Poor players and beginners play timidly. They call too often preflop. Good players frequently fold or raise preflop, especially if no other players have yet raised. If you are not prepared to raise, then you should consider folding. Calling preflop just in case the flop is good for you is not a winning poker strategy.What is a good PFR range?
Between 2% and 3% lower than VPIP. If your VPIP is 15%, PFR should be about 12%. These two numbers in combination indicate that you are only playing quality hole cards, and you are predominantly raising with them pre-flop. In other words, you are playing how most poker books and poker forums say you should play.Postflop Aggression Frequency (Agg)
Agg indicates how aggressively you play postflop. The higher this number, the more aggressively you are playing. This must be interpreted in combination with VPIP. Players who see very few flops will naturally tend to have a higher aggression percentage because they are only playing top-quality hole cards.
Poor players play passively postflop. They’ll check or call too often. Good players know to play good hands aggressively postflop:
*because players with speculative hands are forced to fold before they get free cards
*because if they hit the flop or have a dominating hand, a bet or raise will increase their return What is a good Agg range?
50% to 60% is ideal, assuming that you have a VPIP of 15% to 20%. Much higher, and you are probably overplaying speculative hands and bad hands, and bluffing too much. Much lower and you are not playing your good hands strongly postflop.
Leave the bluffing for the movies and for live play. At low stakes online play, bluffing is much less important than a good understanding of the probabilities of winning hands. Big blinds won/100 hands
The three stats I’ve presented so far mean nothing if you can’t keep your win rate positive. A nice way to ’normalize’ your win rate across different stake levels, table sizes, and opponents is to measure how much you won in terms of the big blind. If you are playing at a table where the big blind is $0.50, and you won $20, then think of this as winning 40 big blinds.
If this number is not positive, then you are losing money. The best remedy is to drop to a lower stake level, where the opponents are weaker. If, according to this stat, you consistently win over time, then you should consider going up to a higher stake level.Adjusting your play based on the villain’s poker stats
This is where our poker HUD software gets really useful: analyzing and exploiting opponent weaknesses. Let’s consider some hypothetical players:
Tight Tim has VPIP of 5%, PFR of 5%, and Agg of 100%
With such a low VPIP, we can guess that this player folds anything except the very best hands. And with a PFR equal to VPIP, when he gets premium hands, he raises. So if this player raises, and you are next to act, you know that you should fold every hand except the best few hands, such as AA, KK, QQ. You can be almost certain that if you go to the flop, he’ll raise postflop. So play tighter than usual with this player. But when you do get a premium hand, and he comes along, you can be sure that player B will put plenty of chips into the pot. Your pot, hopefully.
Passive Pete has VPIP of 20%, PFR of 16%, and Agg of 10%.
This player seems take have a good handle on preflop play. But when he gets to the flop, he gets timid. He is probably going to give you a chance postflop to see the turn and river for free. If you go to the flop with him and raise, there is a good chance he’ll fold. So you can play a bit more aggressively both preflop and postflop.
Eddie the Eagle has VPIP of 22%, PFR of 19%, and Agg of 55%.
Eddie has a good all-round balance between preflop and postflop play. Preflop, he plays tight and aggressively. Postflop, he balances between pushing hard with his good hands, and being willing to fold or check with his weaker hands. Eddie would be well-served to move on to understanding more advanced poker statistics. Tracking your poker stats
Poker players use poker software like Poker Copilot to automatically record their hands. Each hand is broken down into many statistics, which are then aggregated into simple percentages. Poker Statistics GuideFlop Poker Practice
What’s next after you’ve understood the basic poker stats? Read our Poker Statistics Guide for a comprehensive explanation of understanding and using all the main poker statistics.
Register here: http://gg.gg/xdxpq
https://diarynote-jp.indered.space
*Flop Poker Online
*Flop Poker Practice
PFR – the percentage of times a player raises pre-flop. This value converges at the same rate as VPIP and becomes useful after about 100 hands.
Obviously flopping four of a kind doesn’t happen every hard of online poker and given this you need to honor the percentages of Pre-Flop Texas Holdem Poker Strategy and in turn be quite conservative in your Starting Hand selection. You are going to throw away 4-8 and the flop will come 8-8-4 but that’s poker. You just have to deal with it. On the flop, it’s 9.4 (+4) = roughly 40% of hitting. Meanwhile, on the turn (so the odds of hitting on the river) is 9.2 (=2) = roughly 20% of hitting. With pot odds, think of the number of cards again. 52 in the deck, two in your hand and three on the board (flop). That means 47 unseen cards (including your opponents’ hole cards).
Tight-aggressive online poker players on 9-max and 6-max tables usually have a PFR percentage between 1/2 and 2/3 of their VPIP, with the tendency of increasing as the tables get shorter. Anything significantly below this range would mean that you are playing too passively and raising only the nuts, while being above it suggests you’re overly aggressive with marginal hands.
Examples using VPIP and PFR.
/For sake of simplicity we’ll assume all opponents have stacks of about 100BB/
No-Limit Holdem, full ring table, you are in late position holding AQo. Everyone folds to a player in middle position who raises 3 times the big blind. You look at his stats (we assume a large enough sample is available).
a) VPIP=34 / PFR=8, positionally aware with PFR=6 in middle position. Zynga blackjack app.
Obviously a very loose player preflop, but he raises only his strongest hands. So, his current range is AA through 88, AK, AQ, AJs, ATs. Five dollar blinds. Where do we stand?
We’ll dominate him 10% of the time – against AJs and ATs (0.6% of total hands), we’ll split it 50% of the time when he’s got AQ or the coin flip pairs JJ-88 (3% of total) and we’re far behind the rest 40% of the time. All in all, a clear fold.
b) VPIP=34 / PFR=31, same in all positions.
Loose-aggressive maniac who raises all the time. We are crushing his range, so we’ll definitely play – the only question is, should we re-raise? We have a drawing hand in position against an aggressive player and that’s an incentive to simply call and try to trap. However we probably have the best hand right now so it’s also correct to isolate him by re-raising and not let the blinds in cheaply. When deciding consider the additional traits of the raiser – some maniacs give up in the face of strong opposition and if so, a big re-raise could win the pot outright.
c) VPIP=11 / PFR=8, positionally aware with PFR=6 in MP.
A very tight, aggressive player raises in middle position and you should fold your AQ. Notice that this situation is identical to the first example, even though the VPIPs are starkly different. Many players who use HUDs still make the error of folding to the tight player and calling the one in example A, while thinking ”wow, he’s so loose”. But the villain in the first example actually raised and his VPIP alone is irrelevant!
Be mindful of yourself and learn to see what the poker HUD actually shows you and not what you want the situation to be.
Get a poker tracking program like Poker Tracker to put the odds in your favor!Which poker stats are most important?
Our poker HUD software offers a large amount of statistics. Knowing which ones are relevant and important can be overwhelming. If you are new to poker software you can initially ignore all statistics except the essential three poker statistics. Once you have understood how to use the basic statistics, you can add more depending on your style of play, and your chosen table size.
The big three poker statistics (and one bonus stat):
*Voluntarily Put $ in Pot (VPIP)
*Preflop Raise (PFR)
*Postflop Aggression Frequency (Agg)
*A bonus stat: Big blinds won/100 hands.
These three statistics are a great starting point to get an idea of a person’s playing style. They only require 25 hands or so to reliably give a good idea of a player’s tendencies.Voluntarily Put $ in Pot (VPIP)
VPIP in poker measures how often you voluntarily pay money into a hand before seeing the flop. Paying the big blind, the small blind, or the ante is not considered voluntary. Therefore this percentage indicates how often you called, bet, or raised. The lower this value, the tighter your hand selection is. The higher, the looser. Only preflop betting is taken into account.
Good players know to only invest money in the pot when they have decent starting hands. A simple way to measure whether you are doing this is to keep your VPIP at a sensible value.What is a good number for VPIP?
Simple answer: between 15% and 20%. This assumes you want to play tightly, you are playing micro-stakes, and you are playing on full ring cash tables.
Usa bonus codes. Now the more complicated answer: it depends a lot. If you are still learning to play good poker, then you should be very selective in which hands you play, so your VPIP might acceptably be a tad lower than 15%. The less people on the table, the more hands you can play. If you are on a table full of ultralight players, you can also loosen up. An experienced player who understands the subtleties of the game can get away with a VPIP between 20% and 27%. In 6-max or heads-up, most players have a much higher VPIP. In Pot Limit Omaha, VPIP values will be even higher.Flop Poker OnlinePreflop Raise (PFR)
The PFR statistic indicates how often you have raised before the flop is seen. A high value is an indicator of an aggressive player. A low value indicates a passive player. Good players are aggressive players.
Your PFR has a possible range between a minumum of 0% and a maximum equal to the value of your VPIP. That is, if your VPIP is 20%, then your PFR can’t be higher than 20%. Ideally it should be a little lower than your VPIP, but not much lower.
Poor players and beginners play timidly. They call too often preflop. Good players frequently fold or raise preflop, especially if no other players have yet raised. If you are not prepared to raise, then you should consider folding. Calling preflop just in case the flop is good for you is not a winning poker strategy.What is a good PFR range?
Between 2% and 3% lower than VPIP. If your VPIP is 15%, PFR should be about 12%. These two numbers in combination indicate that you are only playing quality hole cards, and you are predominantly raising with them pre-flop. In other words, you are playing how most poker books and poker forums say you should play.Postflop Aggression Frequency (Agg)
Agg indicates how aggressively you play postflop. The higher this number, the more aggressively you are playing. This must be interpreted in combination with VPIP. Players who see very few flops will naturally tend to have a higher aggression percentage because they are only playing top-quality hole cards.
Poor players play passively postflop. They’ll check or call too often. Good players know to play good hands aggressively postflop:
*because players with speculative hands are forced to fold before they get free cards
*because if they hit the flop or have a dominating hand, a bet or raise will increase their return What is a good Agg range?
50% to 60% is ideal, assuming that you have a VPIP of 15% to 20%. Much higher, and you are probably overplaying speculative hands and bad hands, and bluffing too much. Much lower and you are not playing your good hands strongly postflop.
Leave the bluffing for the movies and for live play. At low stakes online play, bluffing is much less important than a good understanding of the probabilities of winning hands. Big blinds won/100 hands
The three stats I’ve presented so far mean nothing if you can’t keep your win rate positive. A nice way to ’normalize’ your win rate across different stake levels, table sizes, and opponents is to measure how much you won in terms of the big blind. If you are playing at a table where the big blind is $0.50, and you won $20, then think of this as winning 40 big blinds.
If this number is not positive, then you are losing money. The best remedy is to drop to a lower stake level, where the opponents are weaker. If, according to this stat, you consistently win over time, then you should consider going up to a higher stake level.Adjusting your play based on the villain’s poker stats
This is where our poker HUD software gets really useful: analyzing and exploiting opponent weaknesses. Let’s consider some hypothetical players:
Tight Tim has VPIP of 5%, PFR of 5%, and Agg of 100%
With such a low VPIP, we can guess that this player folds anything except the very best hands. And with a PFR equal to VPIP, when he gets premium hands, he raises. So if this player raises, and you are next to act, you know that you should fold every hand except the best few hands, such as AA, KK, QQ. You can be almost certain that if you go to the flop, he’ll raise postflop. So play tighter than usual with this player. But when you do get a premium hand, and he comes along, you can be sure that player B will put plenty of chips into the pot. Your pot, hopefully.
Passive Pete has VPIP of 20%, PFR of 16%, and Agg of 10%.
This player seems take have a good handle on preflop play. But when he gets to the flop, he gets timid. He is probably going to give you a chance postflop to see the turn and river for free. If you go to the flop with him and raise, there is a good chance he’ll fold. So you can play a bit more aggressively both preflop and postflop.
Eddie the Eagle has VPIP of 22%, PFR of 19%, and Agg of 55%.
Eddie has a good all-round balance between preflop and postflop play. Preflop, he plays tight and aggressively. Postflop, he balances between pushing hard with his good hands, and being willing to fold or check with his weaker hands. Eddie would be well-served to move on to understanding more advanced poker statistics. Tracking your poker stats
Poker players use poker software like Poker Copilot to automatically record their hands. Each hand is broken down into many statistics, which are then aggregated into simple percentages. Poker Statistics GuideFlop Poker Practice
What’s next after you’ve understood the basic poker stats? Read our Poker Statistics Guide for a comprehensive explanation of understanding and using all the main poker statistics.
Register here: http://gg.gg/xdxpq
https://diarynote-jp.indered.space
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