Stealing Blinds

Stealing the blinds is defined as raising pre-flop from the Cutoff, Button or the Small Blind in an attempt to collect the blinds.

  1. Stealing Blinds Tournament
  2. Stealing Blinds

Stealing the blinds in cash games might seem like a wasted endeavor. We’re often playing 100bb+ stacks, and the blinds only represent at most 1.5% of our stack. It’s not like a tourney, where the blinds and antes are constantly increasing, making stealing an integral part of maintaining your stack.

But I’d argue that there are lots of reasons to steal the blinds in cash games:

Stealing the blinds When playing poker, one of the tricks that most people pick up on early on is stealing the blinds- also known as stealing the pot, stealing the button position advantage, or a blind steal. Stealing the blinds is an extremely profitable technique for online poker. If you haven’t mastered blind stealing, you are leaving plenty of easy money on the table. I’ll explain blind stealing here, and offer you some strategies I’ve developed by investigating an database of 2. 'Blind stealing' is a term used in poker for when a player in late position raises pre-flop in an attempt to win the uncontested blinds. This strategy is often effective because the players in the blinds will have any random two cards, meaning there is a small chance that they will have a hand worth calling a raise with, allowing you to take their blinds. Stealing blinds are profitable because in most cases they are given up without a fight. The players in the blinds are the only two players left between you and the pot, and they're not dealt good enough cards often enough to play back at you, much less play you out of position. Each successful blind steal nets you a profit of 1.5bb. Two successful blind steals over 100 hands is the difference between breaking even and playing profitable poker. Blind stealing is especially important at the low stakes, where players do not always defend their blinds properly. This means they fold either too often or not enough against.

  • Monetarily, 1.5bb’s doesn’t seem like a lot. But, if we can steal the blinds just once every 100 hands, everything else being equal, wouldn’t our win rate be 1.5BB/100 bigger? So, for example, if over 100 hands we had a 6BB/100 win rate, but there was a hand that the big blind got a walk and we threw away J8s on the BTN, wouldn’t we have a 7.5BB/100 win rate had we stolen? You know it.
  • Stealing helps to keep our red line (BB’s Won Without Showdown) from getting too negative.
  • It makes up for the money lost from playing the blinds, which are generally losing positions for all players.
  • Stealing lets us practice playing IP as the aggressor.
  • We learn how different opponents react to steals, and this might inform our own steal defense game.
  • We can work on our 3bet defense game from IP.
  • Stealing allows us to practice our light 4bet and value 4bet game. What opponent stats do light 4bets work against, and what stats do value 4bets get da monies from?
  • Stealing disguises our good hands. If your 3bb open on the BTN could be AA, 22, KQs or J8s, you’re more difficult to play against.
Stealing Blinds

Stealing the Blinds in Cash Games

Who are likely steal targets?

  • Tight blinds who give up easy
  • Passive post-flop fit-or-fold players
  • Anyone else with post-flop leaks that you can exploit in raised pots while playing IP.

What stats to have in your HUD?

Stealing Blinds Tournament

  • Total Fold to Steal (more steal stats in your Steal popup – click here for a video detailing my Steal Popup)
  • 3bet (3bet by position in your 3bet popup)

Stealing shouldn’t be based on the opportunity to do so, but the likelihood that you’ll make money doing so.

Stealing starts pre-flop, but doesn’t end there.The range of cards you decide to steal with will help to inform your post-flop decisions when it comes to bluffing down the streets.

Stealing

It shouldn’t be done every orbit as the blinds will wise up to your shenanigans and fight back eventually. You should base your steal attempts on your opponent’s tendencies both pre and post-flop. If he’ll fold a ton to bets down the streets, then it’s more likely to be profitable. If he’s a sticky station, then you may want to forgo that steal and wait for a value hand.

The Maths of Stealing the Blinds

How often does your steal have to work to break-even? That Question is answered by the Break-even % formula:

Stealing blinds tournament

BE% = Risk / (Risk + Current Pot)

For example, how often does a 3bb open from the BTN have to work?

BE% = 3 / (3+1.5) = 3/4.5 = 66.67%

Stealing

So if the blinds fold more than 67%, our steal is a profitable one.

How do we know how often the blinds will fold? This is answered by combining probabilities.

If the Small Blind folds 80% vs steals, and the Big Blind folds 70%, we just multiply them together to find how often they fold together:

Steal blinds

80% x 70%, or .80 x .70 = .56 or 56%

So, a 3bb steal vs these two opponents needs to work 67% of the time to break-even, but they fold only 56% of the time >>> so it’s not an immediately profitable spot (not taking into account post-flop weaknesses or your hand vs their range of calling hands).

Defending Against the Blind Steal

Just like you shouldn’t steal every orbit, don’t defend against every blind steal. The opponent and his tendencies pre and post, the amount he’s charging and your cards all play a part in your choice to defend or not.

Choose your opp’s and your hands wisely, and defend when it seems profitable to do so. Does he only cbet when he hits? Does he ckb when he whiffs so you can steal w/ a delayed turn donk bet? Does he steal so much that he’s likely on a very weak range and will have to fold most of the time to 3bets?

Stealing Blinds

*Remember: the blind money you post isn’t yours any more, it belongs to the pot. Don’t defend out of some notion that he’s trying to steal your money. Only get involved if it seems profitable to do so. Re-raising the more aggressive opponents occasionally will make them think twice about stealing your blinds again, effectively derailing this strategy.

And, when in doubt, fold. It’s just 1bb after all.

Until next time, study smart, play hard and make your next session the best one yet!

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