Some Facts About Casino
What is meant by ‘limping in’……..like “I limped in on the big blind”?
Answer 1:
It means that you do not have a good hand, but would like to see the flop or the next card if it will not cost you too much. So if you are the big blind and there has been one raise, you might ‘limp in’ with a call where as if there were multiple raises you would fold. And if there were no raises and you are the big blind, you would of course just check so you could see the flop.
Answer 2:
‘Limping in’ would be just calling the original bring in bet without a raise. For example if the big blind (BB) is 10 and the person under the gun (the person to act first after the big blind) just ‘limps in’ for 10 instead of a raise…or if the BB just checks without a raise I suppose that would also be considered limping in.
Answer 3:
“Limping in” means “opening for the minimum”. You can “limp in” in Holdem with A. Usually it implies weakness on the part of the hand but that is not the point. Limping is coming in for the minimum bet, usually before anybody else comes in. “Limped in on the big blind” is not a common term. It’s basically impossible to limp in on the big blind, you either just check because nobody has raised (that is, everyone else limped in), or you call a raise. Calling a raise is never “limping in”, period.
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