Part: Part Five - Betting Before the Flop
The cold-call trap
Pre-flop
A solid player opens under the gun. You're next in middle position with K♠J♠, and there are several players still to act - including a known aggressive squeezer on the cutoff.
Solid UTG opener, K♠J♠ in MP, aggressive players still behind. Best?
WhyFold. Cold-calling here is the trap: K-J suited is dominated by a tight UTG range, you'd play out of position to the button, and the aggressive squeezer behind will often three-bet and blow you off the hand. With a marginal hand, flat-calling into players yet to act is the worst option - fold (or, rarely, three-bet), but don't cold-call.
What happensYou fold; the squeezer indeed three-bets behind. You saved yourself a mess.
Cold-calling a raise with players left to act invites a squeeze and a dominated, out-of-position pot. With a marginal hand you fold or three-bet - flatting is the worst of the three.
Beware the cold-call: flatting a raise with aggressive players still behind invites squeezes and dominated spots - prefer folding or three-betting marginal hands.