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#1
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400nl AK turn decision vs. deep opponent
UTG is sort of a donkey (58/20/~1) (same villian as in my previous hand, but read has changed), he's v. easy to read in the hands he plays against other people at the table. But I suspect he's actually decent, since he plays fairly decent vs. me (b/c of stacks). He calls flop very lightly vs me tho, and the times i've seen him bet into me when i've been the aggressor it's always been on the river when he's made his draw. I don't knwo what to make of his turn donk-bet, I suspect it's a flushdraw or steal of some kind as I expect him to raise KQ 100% of the time. It could be som other 2 pairs tho or a set (even deuces, he's loose enough to call the flop with that). EDIT: Although I have seen him limp v. good hands occasionally and play them passively on the first few streets, This usually hasn't been UTG tho, and it has never been semi-decent hands like KQ.
I've been raising him frequently preflop (and showing down lots of different hands, I could very well have 5[img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img]7[img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img], 22 or a similar type hand here) and calling his raises liberaly as I want to play a lot of pots vs. him to stack him, he knows this and has been avoiding it. Party Poker No-Limit Hold'em, $ BB (6 max, 6 handed) pokerhand.org hand converter CO ($296.16) Button ($453.50) SB ($80.04) BB ($642.43) UTG ($1861.70) Hero ($1540.60) Preflop: Hero is MP with A[img]/images/graemlins/diamond.gif[/img], K[img]/images/graemlins/spade.gif[/img]. SB posts a blind of $2. UTG calls $4, <font color="#CC3333">Hero raises to $18</font>, CO calls $18, <font color="#666666">3 folds</font>, UTG calls $14. Flop: ($60) 6[img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img], Q[img]/images/graemlins/spade.gif[/img], K[img]/images/graemlins/heart.gif[/img] <font color="#0000FF">(3 players)</font> UTG checks, <font color="#CC3333">Hero bets $40</font>, CO folds, UTG calls $40. Turn: ($140) 2[img]/images/graemlins/diamond.gif[/img] <font color="#0000FF">(2 players)</font> <font color="#CC3333">UTG bets $100</font>, Hero's plan? EDIT: Given the above, I'm not looking to fold (although if someone can make a persausive argument to do so I'd consider it). But I'm probably not looking to play a huge pot either as I'll almost surely lose if I do. |
#2
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Re: 400nl AK turn decision vs. deep opponent
If he's truly a donkey, I would call. If he's a solid player, you have some thinking to do. Yes, donkeys do call raises out of position with crap like K2, but you probably have the best hand at this point. Against a solid player, you have to consider other things like, what he limped in with, etc. Although, if a solid player limped in UTG with AA or KK, he would've reraised you preflop. Call.
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#3
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Re: 400nl AK turn decision vs. deep opponent
[ QUOTE ]
EDIT: Given the above, I'm not looking to fold (although if someone can make a persausive argument to do so I'd consider it). But I'm probably not looking to play a huge pot either as I'll almost surely lose if I do. [/ QUOTE ] If this is true, you have one option and its totally obvious. |
#4
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Re: 400nl AK turn decision vs. deep opponent
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] EDIT: Given the above, I'm not looking to fold (although if someone can make a persausive argument to do so I'd consider it). But I'm probably not looking to play a huge pot either as I'll almost surely lose if I do. [/ QUOTE ] If this is true, you have one option and its totally obvious. [/ QUOTE ] Yeah, but I could be facing another bet on the river... There's still the option of raising the turn and not putting any more money into the pot. |
#5
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Re: 400nl AK turn decision vs. deep opponent
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] [ QUOTE ] EDIT: Given the above, I'm not looking to fold (although if someone can make a persausive argument to do so I'd consider it). But I'm probably not looking to play a huge pot either as I'll almost surely lose if I do. [/ QUOTE ] If this is true, you have one option and its totally obvious. [/ QUOTE ] Yeah, but I could be facing another bet on the river... There's still the option of raising the turn and not putting any more money into the pot. [/ QUOTE ] let's say you raise to $300 and he calls. Now he leads the river for 2/3 pot. What are you going to do? |
#6
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Re: 400nl AK turn decision vs. deep opponent
passive is the new aggressive
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#7
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Re: 400nl AK turn decision vs. deep opponent
Yeah as I wrote, he's "sort of a donkey", he hasn't exactly been throwing his money at me.
But when I call the turn what's the plan for the river? Pot will be $340 and we'll have lots of $$$ behind, and he's not the kind to make a blocking bet that's a min-bet. In other words I might face a close to pot be on the river. |
#8
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Re: 400nl AK turn decision vs. deep opponent
[ QUOTE ]
Yeah as I wrote, he's "sort of a donkey", he hasn't exactly been throwing his money at me. But when I call the turn what's the plan for the river? Pot will be $340 and we'll have lots of $$$ behind, and he's not the kind to make a blocking bet that's a min-bet. In other words I might face a close to pot be on the river. [/ QUOTE ] If you raise the turn, will he still be inclined to bet a worse hand for value on the river? If not, you can make a smallish (1/2- to 2/3-pot) raise on the turn and fold to a reraise or a river donkbet without committing as much as if you call turn and call a pot bet on the river. Basically, your turn raise is a blocking bet to set your price for showdown but its no good if a call of the turn raise followed by a river bet could possibly be a worse hand. |
#9
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Re: 400nl AK turn decision vs. deep opponent
agreed. i say we get the information on the turn.
there are some donks and even decent players who will do this w/ AQ. |
#10
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Re: 400nl AK turn decision vs. deep opponent
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] Yeah as I wrote, he's "sort of a donkey", he hasn't exactly been throwing his money at me. But when I call the turn what's the plan for the river? Pot will be $340 and we'll have lots of $$$ behind, and he's not the kind to make a blocking bet that's a min-bet. In other words I might face a close to pot be on the river. [/ QUOTE ] If you raise the turn, will he still be inclined to bet a worse hand for value on the river? If not, you can make a smallish (1/2- to 2/3-pot) raise on the turn and fold to a reraise or a river donkbet without committing as much as if you call turn and call a pot bet on the river. Basically, your turn raise is a blocking bet to set your price for showdown but its no good if a call of the turn raise followed by a river bet could possibly be a worse hand. [/ QUOTE ] Yeah, I don't see him 3-betting the turn or donking the river for several hundred with just a weak pair, so I like a turn raise to ~$300 for the reasons Ghazban says |
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