How to Beat Loose Aggressive Players in Live Cash Games

How to Beat Loose Aggressive Players in Live Cash Games

Most players either try to out-maniac the maniac or tighten up so much they become easy prey. Both are wrong. Here's the actual plan.

Watch the Full Video on YouTube:

There's a player at your table who hasn't folded in an hour. He's raising preflop, betting every flop, firing the turn, and somehow winning pot after pot. And you're sitting there thinking, what the hell do I do with this guy?

Most players make one of two mistakes. They either try to fight fire with fire and play back at him with garbage, or they tighten up so much they become a predictable, exploitable target. Both responses are wrong. And both are costing you money every single session.

The correct approach is neither. Your job is not to out-maniac the maniac. Your job is to make their aggression expensive.

First, Diagnose Which LAG You're Actually Facing

A LAG is not one player type. Before you adjust your strategy, you need to diagnose which kind you're dealing with, because your entire counter-strategy changes based on the answer.

The first type is the thinking LAG. He applies pressure on purpose, reads hands, and can actually fold when the situation calls for it. The second is the maniac. This guy bets because aggression is his personality. There's no plan. He just goes. The third is the sticky LAG. He's aggressive and he hates folding. He calls down light, floats, and hero calls everything.

Against a thinking LAG, be more careful about trapping. He might sense it. Against a maniac or a sticky LAG, your primary weapon is value.

Position Is Your Weapon

When the LAG is on your left, tighten up. Don't open hands that can't continue versus a 3-bet. When the LAG is on your right, attack. Isolate him. 3-bet wider for value. Hands like AQo, AJo, KQs, QJs, JTs, pocket nines through queens, all of these become monsters against a player opening 40% of hands or more. Their range is so wide that your decent hands crush it. Punish the open. And don't 3-bet garbage just because he's loose. That's ego poker. That's not a plan.

The Core Adjustment Is Pretty Simple

Bluff less. Value bet thinner. Bluff-catch better. Trap selectively. That's the whole war plan.

On the flop against a LAG on a dry board, let them stab. Say you've got AQ and the board comes Q, 7, 2 rainbow. The LAG bets. Don't panic. Top pair top kicker is a strong hand here. A lot of players raise immediately for protection, but that just pushes out all his garbage. Often the better play is to call and let him keep firing. Your medium-strong hands go way up in value against a LAG because their betting range is full of nonsense.

On the turn, ask yourself one question. Did that turn card actually improve his value range, or is he just applying pressure? If the board was Q, 7, 2 and the turn is a 3, what changed? Almost nothing. Don't auto-fold top pair just because the bet got bigger. But if the turn comes a king, now you need more caution, because that card improves a lot of his broadway floats and semi-bluffs. Read the board, not just the bet.

On the river, this is where you make your money. And this is where math matters. Say the pot is $300 and the LAG bets $200. You're calling $200 to win $500. The formula is your call divided by the total pot after your call. Two hundred divided by seven hundred is about 29%. That means you only need to be right about 29% of the time for a call to be profitable. If this player is overbluffing missed draws, random floats, and ego barrels, a lot of your bluff-catchers become profitable calls. You're not calling to see it. You're calling because the math says the call profits.

Thin Value Is Where Low-Stakes Players Leave Piles of Money

Against a LAG, hands like top pair medium kicker, second pair good kicker, overpairs on uncomfortable boards, these can all become value bets. The key question is simple. What worse hands call me? If you can name them, bet.

Say you've got KJo and the board runs out J, 8, 5, 4, 2. Against a tight player, a river bet might be thin. Against a sticky LAG, bet it. Worse jacks call, eights call, pocket pairs call, bluff-catchers call. That's money you leave behind every single time you check that river.

Sizing Changes Based on Who You're Up Against

Against a thinking LAG, use more balanced sizings. Don't make your hand obvious. Against a sticky LAG, size up for value. He's calling anyway. Against a maniac, let him bet. Check your strong hands more often and give him the rope. Don't slowplay everything though. Only slowplay when the player is likely to bluff. If they're actually loose-passive postflop, just bet.

The Trap Play

Flatting a monster can be higher EV against certain LAGs. Say the LAG opens and you've got KK on the button. Standard play is to 3-bet. But if this player is going to barrel off three streets postflop regardless, flatting can sometimes be correct because you keep his entire trash range alive. Let him build the pot for you. That is PIPO in action. Precision In, Profits Out.

The Biggest Leak of All

The LAG wins a pot or two, maybe three in a row. Now everyone at the table wants revenge. They start making hero bluffs, tilt raises, and revenge plays. And the LAG absolutely thrives in that chaos. He's counting on it.

Your job is to stay disciplined. Your job is to force him to put money in bad. If he steals five small pots and then stacks off into your value range, you win the war. That's the entire game.

A lot of players rely on emotion and feel against LAGs instead of making decisions based on logic, math, and opponent tendencies. That's exactly how LAGs get paid. The profitable adjustment is to identify their specific leaks and exploit them systematically. Not emotionally. Systematically.

The Table Rule

Before every big decision against a LAG, ask yourself one question. Is this player aggressive with air, aggressive with equity, or aggressive only when weakness is shown? That answer tells you whether to call, raise, trap, or fold.

Your Next Session Challenge

Pick one LAG at your table. Not the whole table, just him. Track what hands he shows down after betting. Does he fold to 3-bets? Does he barrel scare cards or random blanks? Does he pay off river value bets? After two or three hours of tracking, you'll have real data instead of guesses. And that's where the profit starts.

That is Precision In. Profits Out.

If you want to work through your specific spots together, come find me on WhatsApp. We'll do a free 60-minute coaching session, just you and me, breaking down your hands and finding the leaks that are costing you the most.

Click here to book your free 60-minute coaching session on WhatsApp

Want to go deeper on your own time? Try my free AI poker coach, trained on my course and book, used by 10,000+ players:

https://vintonpoker.kit.com/ai

And if you want the complete framework for replacing emotion with math at the poker table, pick up a copy of my book:

The Poker Delusion — vintonpoker.com/book

Precision In. Profits Out.

#poker #pokerstrategy #livecashgame #pokertips #pokercoach #vintonpoker #LAG #pokertraining #cashgame #pokerlife

Previous
Previous

You'll Never Get Better at Poker Until You Understand This

Next
Next

The Hidden Cost of Being Under-Rolled