#1
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Too aggressive?
NL Texas Hold'em $20 Buy-in + $2 Entry Fee Trny:15938691 Level:4 Blinds(50/100) - Wednesday, September 21, 14:56:05 EDT 2005
Table Table 13881 (Real Money) Seat 4 is the button Total number of players : 3 Seat 4: craigira ( $3955 ) Seat 7: kinesis0410 ( $1370 ) Seat 9: suited_ace ( $2675 ) Trny:15938691 Level:4 Blinds(50/100) ** Dealing down cards ** Dealt to suited_ace [ Ts Th ] craigira raises [325]. kinesis0410 folds. suited_ace is all-In [2575] |
#2
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Re: Too aggressive?
icky. plenty of poker to play, don't go crazy. I'd probably call and see a flop.
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#3
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Re: Too aggressive?
I don't know. TT 3-handed is certainly good enough for the OP to tell the button/chip leader not to F with his BB. In this spot the villian's raising range is huge. I definitely agree with reraising. All-in gives you the best chance to take it down without having to face an overcard flop OOP. If he calls, expect to be ahead the LARGE majority of the time.
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#4
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Re: Too aggressive?
TT is a very strong hand ITM but the blinds are so low that a push will (assuming sanity in villain) only be called by huge hands.
But lets say I would re-raise to 900 and be willing to call a push. I don't really see how that approach would keep me out of trouble any more than yours did. |
#5
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Re: Too aggressive?
i kinda like it, unless u know that villian is kinda tight
i think he folds a large amount of the time...and you face 1/2 overs or lower pp a lot of the times he calls you there is only a 2% chance he has aa/kk/qq/jj (well, more than 2% since he raised, thus eliminating some hands from his likely holdings, unless he's a lag that raises with any 2 here) |
#6
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Re: Too aggressive?
With blinds of that size against the chipleader, I think I would either re-raise or call and then evaluate where I stand from there.
If the blinds were any higher or I was against #3 in chips, I love the aggression and the push. |
#7
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Re: Too aggressive?
I push here. You have to at least re-raise, and if you are called after making it 1000-1200, you are OOP and have no idea where you stand if any overcard flops, which it will two thirds of the time. Then you're just pushing and hoping or checking and folding, the latter of which is weak. Even at the $22s, villains will call here surprisingly often with stuff you dominate (Ax, smaller pairs, even a broadway card with a ten). Maybe I'm a pansy post-flop, but that's what I would do here.
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