I know general wisdom is that buying in short is not optimal, and it's great to take someone's entire stack, but I wonder if playing short stack works. You don't give implied odds for people to go for a set. You have a better chance of people playing with you when you have a high PP, even though you make less on each of those hands. I can see some advantages...
There's this guy on 50NL on party who always buys in for $14 at the 50NL table, and I make fun of him but his stats look pretty good.
Hands: 2100
VPIP: 22.25%
BB/100: 18.58BB (actual BB)
PFR: 9.19%
AF: 2.82
WtSD: 24.5%
W$SD: 54.6%
His plan is this: comes in with $14, plays fairly tight and aggr good cards, when he makes 3-4$ he goes out and comes back with $14. I don't have that many hands on him, but it seems to work for him. What do you think?
Then the question is how do you play against this? If he raises to $2 or $3 you don't have odds to go for a set. If he has a pp and the flop is small, he will go to the end. A lot of times with AQ or AK he will bet strong or go all in on a missed flop. Should I always reraise him preflop with TT+, AQ+ or even small pocket pairs? He does fold to reraises a reasonable percentage (not a maniac).
The problem is you don't get implied odds for a set preflop, you don't get implied odds for draws on the flop. The frustrating thing is that when I fold to a flop bet, he takes that money out of the game and I don't get it back even if I bust him later. Do you just wait for reasonable hands and force him to play for his stack or fold preflop? What's your gameplan?