Coach Commentary #1 – When You Should and Shouldn’t C-Bet

Question to the Coach

When we put my poker improvement plan together, you said this: “C-betting when it’s obviously good”. I tend to C-bet 100% of the time if my preflop bet went unraised, which at low levels it’s almost never reraised.

Coach’s Answer

Yep — this is a really common micro-stakes leak, and you’ve already done the hardest part: noticing it.

When I said “C-bet when it’s obviously good,” I very deliberately did not mean “c-bet whenever you were the preflop aggressor.” At 5NL/10NL, automatic c-betting ≠ disciplined c-betting.

Let’s tighten this up.

The core problem with 100% c-betting

At low stakes:

  • You rarely get reraised preflop, so you’re the aggressor a lot
  • Villains call too wide preflop
  • And then they call flops way too honestly (pairs, draws, stubborn A-high)

So when you c-bet every flop:

  • You torch money on boards that smash their range
  • You build pots with hands that want pot control
  • You give away information (“I always bet”)

In short: you’re betting because you can, not because you should.

Replace “always c-bet” with this question

Before you bet the flop, ask one question:

“What worse hands call me here?”

If you can’t name several, checking is usually correct.

When c-betting 

is

 “obviously good”

These are the spots I want you betting almost automatically:

1. Heads-up pots

Multiway c-bets at microstakes are lighting money on fire unless you smashed the board.

Default:

  • Heads-up → consider c-bet
  • 3+ players → check a lot

2. Dry, disconnected boards you smash as the aggressor

Examples:

  • A♣-7♦-2♠
  • K♠-8♦-3♣
  • Q♦-9♠-2♥ (less so, but still okay)

Why:

  • You have range advantage
  • Villain has a ton of whiffs
  • You fold out hands that actually beat you later

👉 These are small c-bet boards (⅓ pot is fine).

3. You have real equity 

or

 real value

C-bet when you have:

  • Top pair+
  • Overpairs
  • Good draws (not trash backdoors)
  • Strong combo equity (two overs + draw)

You’re betting either:

  • For value, or
  • With a plan if called

When you should 

not

 auto c-bet

These are the leaks I want gone.

1. Low, wet, connected boards

Examples:

  • 9♠-8♠-6♦
  • 7♦-6♣-5♥
  • T♣-9♦-8♠

These boards:

  • Smash calling ranges
  • Miss your high-card hands
  • Turn your c-bet into a donation

Default: check. A lot.

2. Multiway flops you didn’t smash

If two people called you preflop and you whiffed:

  • Someone probably connected
  • Someone probably won’t fold

C-betting here is hopeful, not profitable.

3. Marginal hands that hate getting called

Example:

  • You raise AQ
  • Flop comes J-7-4 rainbow

If you bet and get called:

  • What’s your turn plan?
  • Are you barreling?
  • Or are you just inflating a pot to give up later?

Often the correct move is check → realize equity → reevaluate.

A better default strategy (simple + strong)

Replace your current rule with this:

“I c-bet by default heads-up on dry boards, and I check by default multiway or on wet boards.”

That one sentence alone will save you money.

One last mindset shift (important)

At microstakes:

  • Checking is not weakness
  • Pot control is a skill
  • Winning comes from fewer, better bets — not more bets

Your goal isn’t to “represent strength.”

Your goal is to get paid when ahead and lose less when behin