yakes
109 posts
Joined 09/2010
Here is a hand i played last night in a loose $1/3 home game
I am UTG+1 and UTG limps and I raise to $25 with KsKh
the 2 relevant players in this hand are the SB (stack of $335) and the player directly to my left (stack of $416); I cover them both
The player to my left (who I have never played with before) calls and so does the button, SB and BB. UTG folds.
The SB is a loose calling station type of player and the guy to my left is on tilt after losing a $1000 pot to a bad beat.
pot is $128
flop comes out Qs7d5s
it is checked to me and I bet $80 and get called by the guy to my left and the SB, everyone else folds
pot is $368
turn is the 2d for a board of Qs7d5s2d
it is checked to me and I bet $150 and the player to my left goes all in for $311 and the SB calls his last $230
pot is $1059 and it is $161 for me to call; I am getting 6.6/1 to call here
am I good 1 out of 7.5 times in this spot?
Posted 11 months ago
Reply to Topic
Reply w/Quote
UU!I.I.4AAUU35
1162 posts
Joined 07/2010
micsquab
692 posts
Joined 09/2010
shuttle
3333 posts
Joined 11/2008
Koekenbakker
104 posts
Joined 03/2012
yakes
109 posts
Joined 09/2010
I was sure I was ahead of the SB's range but didn't know enough about the other guy.
Ultimately I couldn't fold given the pot odds even though I felt I was behind a good percentage of the time.
The river was a total brick and the SB had Q9 and the other guy had AsJs and I dragged a huge pot.
Posted 11 months ago
Reply to Topic
Reply w/Quote
Sillygoose87
85 posts
Joined 08/2011
First, I doubt villain has a set. Set would raise flop and I doubt 22 is getting to the turn after you bet pot on the flop. That 2 pretty much changes nothing which kind of makes me wary of the fact that he's shoving... But again, on that semi-wet flop I have a hrad time seeing a tilted villain not raise strong hands. We can't ever fold here and if we were palnning onf folding to a raise we should've sized flop and turn smaller.
But yea, this is a call even if villain tells you he is ahead
Posted 11 months ago
Reply to Topic
Reply w/Quote
PokerBaby
15 posts
Joined 01/2010
First, I doubt villain has a set. Set would raise flop and I doubt 22 is getting to the turn after you bet pot on the flop. That 2 pretty much changes nothing which kind of makes me wary of the fact that he's shoving... But again, on that semi-wet flop I have a hrad time seeing a tilted villain not raise strong hands. We can't ever fold here and if we were palnning onf folding to a raise we should've sized flop and turn smaller.
But yea, this is a call even if villain tells you he is ahead
If I had flopped a set of deuces in this spot I may not raise the flop in an attempt to get my entire stack paid off...especially with the loose caller behind me. I still agree with the call with the just huge risk/reward ratio.
Posted 11 months ago
Reply to Topic
Reply w/Quote
Ass Get to Jigglin
4273 posts
Joined 10/2010
Call. You need to be good like 13% of the time and that's if you didn't have any equity when behind. You have ~5% when behind with your two outer. I think you will be good here at least 1 out of 10 times easily.
Posted 11 months ago
Reply to Topic
Reply w/Quote
yakes
109 posts
Joined 09/2010
Sillygoose87
85 posts
Joined 08/2011
If I had flopped a set of deuces in this spot I may not raise the flop in an attempt to get my entire stack paid off...especially with the loose caller behind me. I still agree with the call with the just huge risk/reward ratio.
Not much reason to slowplay with this SPR. Only bad things can happen
Posted 11 months ago
Reply to Topic
Reply w/Quote
tommy396
7 posts
Joined 01/2013
I was sure I was ahead of the SB's range but didn't know enough about the other guy.
Ultimately I couldn't fold given the pot odds even though I felt I was behind a good percentage of the time.
The river was a total brick and the SB had Q9 and the other guy had AsJs and I dragged a huge pot.
I like everything u did in that hand, but the turn bet, should be at least 220,or even shove on turn, the pot i big enough u don't want let the players keep drawing, or at least mke them madke a very big mistake for keep drawing. in a 3 way pot like that, less then 1/2 pot is too light.
Easy call, you are not only pot commited here but you basically have 4 kids, 2 in college with that pot
Posted 4 months ago
Reply to Topic
Reply w/Quote
Nateshot3
45 posts
Joined 10/2012
would anyone play this differently from a bet sizing standpoint?
The preflop raise is pretty big to be honest, why did you make it 8x? With one limper my standard would be like 4x. You are kind of giving your hand away straight away but I guess if the table is full of fish they wont really notice the difference.
Anyway, we raise to $25 and get called in two spots, For me personally playing a home game like that with a tilting guy to my left I want to get as much money in on this board as possible because I think he will be much more willing to get it in with alot less than the nuts. So I think on the flop I bet between 100-128, If i bet 100 and get called in both spots, turn is a brick. pot is 428, easy ship on the turn, and will get called by alot of worse hands in this type of game. A set would raise our bet on the flop.
Posted 4 months ago
Reply to Topic
Reply w/Quote
rrumsey
5405 posts
Joined 06/2010
a lot of talk about odds but what type of range do we put everyone on?
they can't have any top pair nut flush draws, very few AX fd's play this way with the K blocker and the fact the Q is out as well, and their aren't likely a lot of st8 flush combo draws (there are some but only one person can have them unless they block each other) so its actually pretty likely someone has 2p or better here a lot of the time when we think about combos of hands that they actually can have
Posted 4 months ago
Reply to Topic
Reply w/Quote