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Vegas Trip Post #3: Outplaying tight opponents post-flop
Post #3 from my Vegas trip.
Unusually tight $4-$8 game, with only 2-3 people seeing the flop and only about half of the hands going to showdown. I've been folding for 45 minutes, and my table image is ultra-tight. I decide after folding for the zillionth time that if the next hand brings me anything that even remotely resembles something playable, I'm going to play it and out-play whoever sees the flop with me. I'll have the button, and any well-timed bet or raise is likely to win me the pot if the flop is not too threatening. Here we go: Hero has the button with J [img]/images/graemlins/spade.gif[/img]4 [img]/images/graemlins/spade.gif[/img] 3 folds, 1 caller, 3 folds, Hero calls, SB folds, BB checks Only now I get the miracle flop: J [img]/images/graemlins/club.gif[/img] 9 [img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img]4 [img]/images/graemlins/diamond.gif[/img] BB bets, 1 fold, Hero ??? I want to extract maximum value here. The board is pretty ugly. I don't have much of a read on BB since he only sat down 10 minutes or so earlier, but he has thus far played weak-tight like the rest of the table. Should I raise here or smoothcall and go for the raise on the turn? |
#2
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Re: Vegas Trip Post #3: Outplaying tight opponents post-flop
Your strategy of seeing a lot of flops with semi-garbage and pounding postflop is a very good one in games like the one you describe. Until you have to turn over A5o or something in a showdown, then usually they stop letting you do this.
-Michael |
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