Rope-A-Dope
Posted in Poker, Strategy on December 26th, 2006 by Live PokerIf you’ve ever watched Muhammad Ali box (or saw a movie about him) you are probably familiar with his rope-a-dope technique. He would lean back into the ropes and let his opponent wail away on him, while Ali protected his body. The opponent would think that he was close to winning the fight. When the opponent would start to tire, Ali would come out firing away and usually knock out his opponent. You may wonder why I am talking about boxing, and the reason is because in poker, we call the rope-a-dope “slowplaying”.
Slowplaying is when you let your opponent bet and raise while you just call the bets, all the meanwhile you are holding the nuts unbeknownst to him. This maneuver can be very effective in limit games, but works best in no-limit. Your opponent bets most of his stack holding what he thinks is the best hand, but you wait until he has committed most of his chips into the pot before you fire back.
The best time to slowplay is when your hand is so strong that you are unlikely to be outdrawn and you want to give your opponent a chance to catch up a little.  If you are in the big blind with pocket eights and the flop comes 883, you have found a perfect time to slowplay. With a flop like that, it is unlikely that your opponents will call a bet on the flop. However if you check and the turn brings an ace, you may find that your quads will get paid off.
The key is you should only slowplay on hands that are unlikely to be outdrawn. Too many players try to slowplay only to find that they have allowed their opponent to outdraw them. You should not slowplay when there are obvious draws on the board. If you have pocket tens in the big blind and the flop comes JT2 with two spades, you should play your cards aggressively. You want to make anyone holding a spade draw or a QK pay as much as possible to catch their draw. Slowplaying can be a valuable weapon if used properly, but just like the great Muhammad Ali, you have to pick your spots.











