Re: Kings pre-flop
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If Hero is seen as tight, wouldn't that make villain less likely to suspect a move, and hence less likely to call with some of the more marginal of these holdings?
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I doubt it. Villain is clearly a maniac and knows he has that kind of table image. He likes his hand and someone insta pushing against a maniac's aggression always looks like a move. I may be wrong.
The question is are you extracting any more money after the flop with Villain's more marginal holdings if he doesn't hit an A or a set? Even maniacs aren't completely stupid and know a $15 flat call means you have a huge hand. If Villain will fire again with nothing, then just call.
The other question is, what the hell are you going to do if an A flops? Another reason to push it in now imo.
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