#1
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TD A-5 situation Im not really sure of.
Say you raise a bunch of limpers in the BB with A23KK. They all call, you end up with A237Q. Against lots of players in a moderate size pot do you keep the 7 or draw two for the 6?
What if the pot was headsup/shorter and was smaller? |
#2
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Re: TD A-5 situation Im not really sure of.
6 handed, depending on how loose the players are and how low the limits are, the deck is about to become nearly void of new cards before the reshuffling takes place and roughly 20 good cards leave the new deck of reshuffled draw cards. Therefore holding the 7 is the best move in this situation. Not to mention the limping lets you believe a smooth 7 is strong.
I played a 6 handed pot with a 654, the deck nearly ran out of good cards after the first draw, where I caught a 78. I proceeded to bet my straight 8 into the entire field and let them draw (They were all drawing very thin it appeared), which they all did on every street. The SB ended up catching an 85 to beat me (didn't gain an extra bet, however), but my odds to win the hand into the entire field drawing into a reshuffled deck was strong enough. Shorthanded it depends on how shorthanded we are talking and player tendencies, but unless I am playing against a few players I know that deceptivly draw very thin and have position on me, I am more then willing to draw at the 732A, even out of position. At worst you can catch a 6 and break it against legit heat on future streets |
#3
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Re: TD A-5 situation Im not really sure of.
I think it should be pointed out that the number of cards your opponents draw along with how they play them is of substantial importance.
First off, if they're drawing 3, you can often assume they have at least one A,2 or 3. Second, they're just not going to make as good of hands. After that, you should consider what your opponents stay pat with. If they constantly showdown 8's and bad 7's then keeping the 7 becomes much more attractive. I'd get more specific about this situation, but I don't really play enough A-5 to be that confident in my answers. |
#4
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Re: TD A-5 situation Im not really sure of.
[ QUOTE ]
6 handed, depending on how loose the players are and how low the limits are, the deck is about to become nearly void of new cards before the reshuffling takes place and roughly 20 good cards leave the new deck of reshuffled draw cards. Therefore holding the 7 is the best move in this situation. Not to mention the limping lets you believe a smooth 7 is strong. I played a 6 handed pot with a 654, the deck nearly ran out of good cards after the first draw, where I caught a 78. I proceeded to bet my straight 8 into the entire field and let them draw (They were all drawing very thin it appeared), which they all did on every street. The SB ended up catching an 85 to beat me (didn't gain an extra bet, however), but my odds to win the hand into the entire field drawing into a reshuffled deck was strong enough. Shorthanded it depends on how shorthanded we are talking and player tendencies, but unless I am playing against a few players I know that deceptivly draw very thin and have position on me, I am more then willing to draw at the 732A, even out of position. At worst you can catch a 6 and break it against legit heat on future streets [/ QUOTE ] You may or may not know what you're talking about but you are an [censored] at the table. |
#5
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Re: TD A-5 situation Im not really sure of.
I am an ass. Donkeys alwasy draw.
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