#11
|
|||
|
|||
Re: 400 games on party very tough?
If he calls a flop raise I'd probably be done with the hand barring improvement. No one is calling a flop raise out of position with hopes of running a delayed bluff.
|
#12
|
|||
|
|||
Re: 400 games on party very tough?
calm down. play a little and learn how small a difference it really is.
|
#13
|
|||
|
|||
Re: 400 games on party very tough?
1. Don't post results.
2. Don't call a preflop raise with T9os. 3. If you do call, hit your T, and think you're ahead, reraise him to $80 on the flop. Check/fold the turn. If UTG checks the turn, and checks the river when a club(a scare card) hits, bet 3/4 of the pot. |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
Re: 400 games on party very tough?
Also...without commenting on other streets, your play on the river is bizarre. I'm a bit surprised he ended up having JT, and calling. However, you seem to bet only because he checked. I don't know if you think you're bluffing, or value betting, but it ends up being neither. He's probably not going to fold a better hand (if I were him and had AT, I would definately call), and he isn't going to call with a weaker hand.
For this reason, making a sizable bet on the river in NL with second pair seems to always be a large mistake. |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
Re: 400 games on party very tough?
I think the preflop call is good for exactly the reasons given. T9 is not a bad hand at all with position in a heads up pot. I probably would have been more aggressive with it—i.e., raise flop—but I don't think the call on the flop is terrible.
The turn call.. is terrible, as is the river bet. But, I think assuming that calling a raise preflop with position is facially obviously terrible is weak-tight nonsense. |
|
|