Hand Review
River Bluffing With Blockers
Why holding the right ace or suit blocker can make a river bluff more credible.
- Preflop: BTN opens, BB calls.
- Flop: Hero bets flop with backdoors.
- Turn: Turn adds equity, Hero continues.
- River: River completes spades; the A♠ blocks nut flushes and can support a bluff.
Looks first at hand strength and often misses position, range, and line.
A blocker is a selection tool, not a permission slip. The bluff still needs a believable value story and an opponent who can fold.
Start with range, sizing, equity, and defense frequency.
Then adjust to the opponent's leaks: over-calling, over-folding, or over-bluffing.
Hand Setup
Single-raised pot, 100BB effective. Hero reaches river with As5x after betting a two-spade board and the river bricks.
Street-by-Street Training Map
| Street | Training focus |
|---|---|
| Flop | Hero bets a board that can support value and spade draws. |
| Turn | Hero continues with blocker equity and a story that can represent strong hands. |
| River | the flush misses, villain checks, and Hero must decide whether As is enough to bluff. |
| Decision | blocker plus story plus fold target can bluff; blocker alone cannot. |
Pot and Sizing
- Flop: Hero bets a board that can support value and spade draws.
- Turn: Hero continues with blocker equity and a story that can represent strong hands.
- River: the flush misses, villain checks, and Hero must decide whether As is enough to bluff.
- Decision: blocker plus story plus fold target can bluff; blocker alone cannot.
Range Changes by Street
- Hero's betting line represents strong Kx, sets, and flush draws that can improve or keep pressure.
- Villain's call-call range includes Kx, pocket pairs, some slowplays, and missed draws.
- Holding As removes some nut-flush continues from villain, improving bluff selection.
- Against a station, the fold-target part fails even if the blocker is attractive.
Hand-to-Drill Prescription
| Step | What to do next |
|---|---|
| Read | Name position, stack depth, board texture, and opponent type before reading the conclusion. |
| Replay | Step through each street and state the value target, bluff target, or pot-control reason. |
| Practice | Run river-decision-lab and pot-odds-math in Practice Mode. |
| Review | Save one offline Analyze Lite note if the hand matches a leak from your own play. |
Decision Tree
Reasonable when they fold bluff-catchers and Hero's value story is credible.
Usually poor because curiosity calls reduce fold equity.
Often gets looked up by the target hands.
Acceptable when the line lacks value credibility or villain over-calls.
Beginner Thought vs Professional Thought
Beginner: I have the ace of spades, so I must bluff.
Professional: The blocker only improves candidate selection.
Beginner: A cheap bluff is safer.
Professional: Tiny sizing may fail to fold the hands you target.
Beginner: Same bluff versus everyone.
Professional: Bluffs need opponents who can fold.
Exploit Adjustment Table
Next Drills
Practice blocker bluffs and bluff-catchers.
Open DrillReview blocker quality before river betting.
Open DrillTrain This Hand
Focus on thin value, blocker bluffs, overbets, bluff-catchers, block bets, and river check-raises.
Make the final-pot formula automatic before adding implied-odds adjustments.
Adjust versus calling stations, nits, maniacs, and regulars after naming the baseline.
Why is 'I block the flush' not enough by itself?
Because the bluff also needs a credible value line and enough fold equity against villain's bluff-catchers.
FAQ
What is the main lesson of this hand?
A blocker is a selection tool, not a permission slip. The bluff still needs a believable value story and an opponent who can fold.
What is the difference between GTO baseline and exploit adjustment?
The baseline prevents obvious exploitation. Exploit adjustments intentionally deviate when an opponent has a clear leak.
What should I record when reviewing a hand?
Record positions, stack depth, board texture, bet sizes, opponent type, your thought process, and the better alternative line.