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View Full Version : Call with this strong draw?


Kristian
06-02-2005, 07:23 AM
This situation occurred in a home game with the guys and caused some discussion:

6 out of 7 left, stacks vary from 1000-2000, I have ~1700, BB has ~1400. Blinds 30/60.

I raise to 150 UTG with /images/graemlins/diamond.gifA /images/graemlins/diamond.gifQ, called by BB only.

Flop: /images/graemlins/club.gifK /images/graemlins/diamond.gifJ /images/graemlins/diamond.gif7

BB bets 100, I raise to 300, BB goes all-in.

There is now 1850 in the pot, and I need to pay up 950, giving me roughly 2-1 pot odds. If I win I get a handsome 3050 stack, if I lose I am crippled with 250.
My read is that he does not need to have a monster to make this play, so I count 10's, /images/graemlins/diamond.gif's and possibly A's as my outs, giving me an even 50% win chance. Assume my read is correct.

Can I fold this hand assuming I am on equal skill level with the rest of the table?
Can I fold it if I know I am the best player at the table by a fair but not huge margin?

The argument for folding would be that while I easily have pot odds to call, the tournament structure makes just staying in the tournament a high priority.
All comments appreciated.

NYCNative
06-02-2005, 07:39 AM
I would call simply because your raise kind of made that what you have to do. I don't raise there, incidentally. I take the cheap card to draw at the nuts. If villain is as loose as you say, he'll pay you off when the thord diamond hits.

Kristian
06-02-2005, 08:50 AM
I see your point. How strong to play a draw is a gray area for me. I probably tend to play them pretty strong most of the time, especially in a big pot heads up.

But the main point of discussion was whether or not a fold to his all-in could be a correct move under the circumstances mentioned.

tigerite
06-02-2005, 08:52 AM
No, a fold can't be right. But as the above poster stated I would also just have called, rather than commit my tournament to a (fairly strong) draw.. draws are death.

37offsuit
06-02-2005, 09:03 AM
First off, yes, call. You have to be willing to make these calls if you want to make money in tourneys.

You raise to t150 and get called by the BB so there is t330 in the pot. He leads off for a weakish t100 (pot: t430). Why make a weak reraise here? Essentially, what you did was he bet 1/3 of the pot and then you reraise 1/2 the pot. This doesn't work as a free card play, as you found out. You either need to take the cheap card off as was suggested, or raise more to either get your opponent to fold (+EV) or get to see the last two cards for free. Given your description of your opponent, I doubt raising more will make him lay this down. He Likes his KdTx or what ever he has.

Re-evaluate on the turn.

NYCNative
06-02-2005, 09:05 AM
[ QUOTE ]
How strong to play a draw is a gray area for me.

[/ QUOTE ] This is a nice Q&A on the subject. (http://www.learn-texas-holdem.com/questions/aggression-with-a-draw.htm)

Creole
06-02-2005, 12:35 PM
Just call on the flop. He called the raise post flop so him hitting one of those overs is very possible. Why raise on the flop when all you have is a draw? I would raise the flop if it were rags, but not strong overs. You seem to have put your tourney life on the line with a draw. Next time I would check/call and try to hit the nuts or at least improve your hand.

gumpzilla
06-02-2005, 01:10 PM
[ QUOTE ]
Why raise on the flop when all you have is a draw?

[/ QUOTE ]

Because it's a monster draw, very possibly to 15 outs. (3 aces, 3 non-diamond tens, 9 diamonds). This is plenty of hand. If you feel that you're not likely to get paid off when the draw comes, then trying to win the pot right here or get it all in is fine, in my opinion. I agree that probably a bigger raise is needed for this if you're going to raise here. Yes, even with 15 outs you're only 50-50 to win, but there's plenty of dead money in the pot by this time so it's a pretty good gamble.

[ QUOTE ]
I would raise the flop if it were rags, but not strong overs.

[/ QUOTE ]

Hero has an A, these are not overcards.

[ QUOTE ]
You seem to have put your tourney life on the line with a draw.

[/ QUOTE ]

There are tons of situations where I will happily "put my tourney life on the line with a draw." This is probably one of them. I'm not entirely sure where the piece of wisdom that this is such a horrendous thing comes from.

NYCNative
06-02-2005, 01:12 PM
[ QUOTE ]
I agree that probably a bigger raise is needed for this if you're going to raise here.

[/ QUOTE ]If you're going this route, then push it. I like a push here only a little less than a call but a lot more than I do any other kind of raise.

gumpzilla
06-02-2005, 01:18 PM
Pushing is fine. I think sometimes that a push is more likely to get called than a big raise, though. Certainly if you pop it somewhere in the middle you can't fold if he comes over the top. The only difficult question is what to do if you make a big raise and he just calls it. In this case, my thinking is that you'll probably get a free card on the turn - I don't think he's going to call a huge raise and then push on the turn as opposed to just pushing on the flop - and then you can evaluate on the river. Following this line, I think your opponent will push most any river, and you can fold if you whiffed. Going this route is likely, I think, to lose you somewhat less when you miss but probably get you basically the same when you hit. (I could be wrong, particularly w.r.t. getting paid when you hit.)

nokona13
06-02-2005, 01:44 PM
I saw an interesting point made by Matt Flynn over in the MHNL forum the other day on a similar strong draw hand. I think it's especially pertinent since this is a home game with guys you presumably play with quite a bit, so meta-game takes on some importance. Matt's point was that you can't only play your monsters strong, or you're way too easy to read. The easiest non-monster to play very strong correctly is a really strong draw (flush + str8, open or gut, flush + overs likely to win, etc). Obviously there's some wiggle room in that advice, but I think this is a situation where you need to basically play this like you had kings or jacks on the flop, ie raise ~3/4 pot, so call the 100 and put in say 400 more (pot is 530 with your call of the 100), for 500 total. In an online tourney say party 22s or 33s where you might feel you've got a big edge over the field and most of these players will never see you again, I think then you can strongly consider just calling the 100, assuming whatever donk is in the hand with you will still pay up if you hit a diamond, or especially a ten.

Kristian
06-03-2005, 06:02 AM
Thank you for your opinions, everyone. It is now quite clear to me that the flop raise was a mistake, and the correct move on the flop is a close call between a (much) bigger raise and a call.

As for my actual question, I understand the consensus is that the way it was played, I could not correctly fold this hand. If you have patience for one last question, should you fold in the case you were much superior in skill to the other players? How much better would you need to be to make this fold?

benza13
06-03-2005, 10:28 AM
If we assume that as a better player it means you have pretty solid reads on your opponents and will be able to rebuild your stack easily by picking your spots, ie you won't need cards to do it, then sure you can fold this sometimes. Its also possible that just hitting an ace will be no good if he has two pair or a set (even the worst players hit big hands and they usually play them bad too). So maybe you only have 12 outs. Putting your life on the line on a draw in a tournament is ok sometimes, but you can't make a habit of getting into these situations and a fold is not out of the question in this situation. If the blinds raise slowly then you have little to worry about if you truly are a better player and can use post-flop play to your advantage to rebuild your stack after a fold.