#11
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Re: QQ leads to odd waters
I'm check/calling after the cap on the flop. You capped pre-flop which is usually AA or KK and it didn't seem to bother him from capping you on the flop.
I really don't understand the bet on the river, he has shown good strength and certainly won't be folding this. The K just improved the chance your beat actually (AK). edit: Nevermind my post won't make sense as I made the same MP1/MP2 mistake. |
#12
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Re: QQ leads to odd waters
[ QUOTE ]
I think you're putting way too much likelihood on a T in his hand. What about JJ or KK or AA? [/ QUOTE ] I would have assumed that they would have helped cap it preflop with myself and MP1. And he flips over Kc6c for the win. At first (at the time) I was just REALLY pissed (again, thank goodness it was at the END of a session. I think my exact words were, "AK I could have taken, but K6? ****ing fish". But other than the preflop silliness, I can't say he played it entirely badly. Who WOULDN'T want to be in a large pot with 2 preflop aggressors when you have the 4 flush? True, it's not a draw to the nuts, but the king is pretty much good; If you hit, you get paid of BIG TIME. Right now, what I'm trying to take away from this how to narrow down the range of hands my opponent might have more correctly. Here, I put my opponent on a ten, and then failed to test for that ten on the turn. Opinions on this? Actually, putting someone on a range of hands has been a bit of a weak spot, so help would REALLY be nice here. -Alpha |
#13
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Re: QQ leads to odd waters
Frankly, the range of hands that this opponent could have is so large as to make the exercise pretty much worthless.
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#14
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Re: QQ leads to odd waters
I'd say he has JJ.
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#15
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Re: QQ leads to odd waters
It smells like a set, but then he doesn't raise the river. I'm clueless as to what he could have after that river call. Maybe a flush draw that he decided was worth going bonkers with?
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