Poker Pot Committed
Pot commitment refers to the pot odds for your present stack size compared to your odds of winning the hand. It's a fairly basic concept in poker that can help you decide how - and if - you should play your hand.
A player is pot committed in poker if the pot is so big that he is getting great pot odds so that he is obligated to call if someone puts him all-in. This means that the pot odds he is getting are so high that he is priced in, given his hand and his opponent’s presumed range of hands, and it would be a mathematical error to fold.
- 'Pot committed' happened on the prior bet. On the turn if you call off or bet out 1/3 of your stack then you are pot committed. On the turn (or flop if no turn bet) should have pushed or folded. If the prior bet was $6 or more then you were pot committed. For sure pot committed if the prior bet was $11 or more. You got where you are you are 17:1.
- Pot See main article: pot pot-committed More often in the context of a no limit game; the situation where one can no longer fold because the size of the pot is so large compared to the size of one's stack. Pot-limit See main article: pot limit pot odds See main article: pot odds pre-flop.
Ah, pot commitment. The closet maniac's excuse to get wild and reckless. Pot commitment, which refers to the pot odds for your present stack size compared to your odds of winning the hand, is a fairly basic concept in poker, but unfortunately, it's also one that is often used to justify bone-headed behaviour.
Assessing your actual pot commitment means rather than measuring the pot size in relation to the size of an opponent's wager, you are going to measure it against the remainder of your stack. As such, you are deemed 'pot committed' when your odds of winning the hand are greater than the pot odds for the rest of your stack.
Pot Commitment: An Example
Seem a little too abstract? Let's break it down with an easy example.
You and your opponent both begin with $500 stacks. By the turn, you have accumulated an $800 pot split evenly between you (so you both put in $400), leaving you each with $100 stacks.
Let's say you have a top pair. In this case, you are basically pot committed and it is not in your overall best interest to fold on the turn or river. This is because your pot odds relative to your remaining stack are 9:1. (900/100 - you need to account for your own stack to get the total pot size.)
With 9:1 pot odds, it is almost certain that you have a better chance of winning the hand, even if you are up against an aggressive opponent. Yes, it's true you may not win this particular hand, but in the overall scheme of things, you stand to win more often than you stand to lose. To justify the fold, you would need to be sure that your chances of winning the hand were less than 10% (the percentage equivalent of 9:1). You can learn more about pot odds and ratio to percentage conversion here.
The lesson? You should never shy away from acting if you are pot committed. You don't have to make crazy raises, but at least call. Your pot odds increase when you have more of your stack you have committed in the pot and as a result, the greater your pot commitment.
When Good Commitment Goes Bad: The Ugly Side of Pot Commitment
Poker Pot Committed
Just because you have put most of your stack in the pot DOES NOT mean you are pot committed. By definition, pot commitment involves accounting for your odds of actually winning as well. Tossing your last chip in the pot when you have zero chance of winning is not strategic; it's just stupid. If you don’t have a good enough hand, fold.