Part: Part Two - Playing Styles & Starting Requirements
Kicker trouble
Pre-flop
One player limps and it folds to you on the button with K♥J♣. King-jack offsuit is a decent but easily-dominated holding - a textbook 'trouble hand'.
A limper; you're on the button with K♥J♣. Best play?
WhyRaise to isolate. King-jack offsuit plays much better heads-up and in position than in a limped multiway pot where it's easily dominated. A raise thins the field and takes the initiative - but keep the next streets in mind, because the kicker can still get you in trouble.
What happensYou raise to 700 (3.5 BB). Only the big blind calls. Pot: 1,600 (8 BB).
Flop
Flop: K♣ 7♦ 3♠ - top pair, but only a jack kicker. The big blind checks.
Top pair, jack kicker, on a dry board. Best?
WhyMake a controlled value bet. Top pair is good enough to bet for value and protection on a dry board, but the weak kicker means you don't want to build a huge pot - a medium bet gets called by worse kings and pairs without committing you against a better king.
What happensYou bet 900 (4.5 BB); the big blind calls. Pot: 3,400 (17 BB).
Turn
Turn: 9♥. You bet again and the big blind check-raises - a big move on a board with no obvious draw completing.
Facing a check-raise to 6,800 (34 BB) with top pair, weak kicker. Best?
WhyFold. A check-raise on this dry turn represents a better king (K-Q, A-K), two pair, or a set - precisely the hands that dominate your jack kicker. King-jack flopped well but can't profitably stack off here. Recognizing kicker trouble and letting go is the whole lesson of the trouble hand.
What happensYou fold; he shows K-Q. Your kicker would have cost you a stack.
You played a trouble hand correctly - raising to isolate in position, value-betting carefully, then folding when a big turn raise exposed your kicker. Trouble hands make top pair that is hard to fold; the skill is folding it anyway.
Trouble hands like K-J flop top pair with a vulnerable kicker - keep pots controlled and fold to serious pressure rather than pay off a better kicker.