#1
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WSOP hand - how would you have played it?
I will say right up front that I misplayed this hand. I'd like to get some advice on how this hand could have been played better:
WSOP $1500 NL Hold-Em Second level(25-50), a few minutes before the third starts(50-100) Folded to Tom McEvoy who rasies to 175 from middle position. Folds around to SB who calls. BB has AJs. Tom has been fairly conservative playing only a few hands in the past two hours, although he has left his seat a few times missing some hands. SB has been extremely active. Putting in lots of raises and making what appear to be many steal moves. BB has played 2 two pots so far. Once he raised in EP and it was folded around. And once he re-raises the SB PF and took it down. Tom has about 1500 in chips SB has accumulated a decent stack, maybe 2500. BB has around 1200. What's BB's move? |
#2
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Re: WSOP hand - how would you have played it?
See a flop.
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#3
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Re: WSOP hand - how would you have played it?
I know you're shortishly stacked, but I'd fold pre-flop. The flops that will really help you are very limited and an ace or J with another overcard is just going to mess with your mind.
It's situations like this that really illustrate the advantage of being the preflop aggressor. |
#4
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Re: WSOP hand - how would you have played it?
I call and see the flop. The plan in the flop, if I flop an A or a J; I'm leading with a 300 bet, Tom will fold his hand unless he has a better hand than you, if he raises, you should fold.
If I flop a flush draw I'm committed and bet about 500-600 in the flop, so they know. |
#5
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Re: WSOP hand - how would you have played it?
call McEvoy's raise
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#6
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Re: WSOP hand - how would you have played it?
These tournaments where you have short chips cause a little more gamble than some of the deeper stacked ones. I'd call this preflop raise(which I normally wouldn't from Tom b/c he's about as tight as it gets) and try to win a big pot. I don't think folding is terrible, but I like seeing a flop here. I agree with Sirio's post flop play.
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#7
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Re: WSOP hand - how would you have played it?
I don't like calling preflop. You are putting 10% of your chips in when you are out of position and often dominated vs a tight player. If you aren't willing to go to the felt any time you pair, it becomes even more questionable.
A lot of scenarious will boil down either to you winning 600 the rare times you manage to get ahead, wasting a couple blinds and check/folding, or losing anywhere from half to all of your chips. Is Tom raising A8? Will sb bet overcards to a J high flop? I say fold and I'd like a better explanation why I'm wrong than "gamble." [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img] |
#8
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Re: WSOP hand - how would you have played it?
fold preflop, at this stage McEvoy is not likey on a steal,
AJ is a chipburner |
#9
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Re: WSOP hand - how would you have played it?
Due to the call from SB, I think you must play this hand. If only up against the raiser, I'd be more inclined to fold.
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#10
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Re: WSOP hand - how would you have played it?
I fold this PF.
Here's my reasoning (all comments are welcome)- For one, you are calling 100 into a 350 pot with high suited cards - not bad getting 3.5:1, but you are OOP versus the PFR'r and you are likely behind given the typical range of hands that we could put McEvoy on (AJ/KQ+ or PP I'm guessing). I'm thinking that over half the time Tom is going to have you dominated by AK/AQ/JJ-AA so you'll probably be drawing to 3 outs on the flop - which is well shy of the 3.5:1 you need to make this call correct. Add to the fact that it's going to cost us ~1/3 of our stack ATF to find out where we are at even if we do hit our A/J. I'm not a big fan of playing AJ/AJs OOP vs a tight PFR'r. No, I'd rather call 100 with a hand like 55 than AJs in this spot - because I know if I flop my set with 55 I'm likely to take down the pot and hopefully double-up against an overpair or TPTK type hand and I can easily check-fold the flop if I miss and go on to the next hand; as compared to AJ where if I hit the flop I could be in even more trouble. |
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