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#1
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($60) 88 early, from the blinds
$55+5 turbo, L1 - no notes on villian Seat 1: (1500 in chips) Seat 2: (1260 in chips) Seat 3: (1470 in chips) Seat 4: (1470 in chips) Seat 5: (1480 in chips) <font color="blue">bluefeet (1500 in chips) </font> Seat 7: (1480 in chips) Seat 8: (1790 in chips) Seat 9: (1550 in chips) Seat 5: posts small blind 10 bluefeet: posts big blind 20 *** HOLE CARDS *** Dealt to bluefeet [8h 8d] 1 fold Seat 8: calls 20 5 folds Seat 5: calls 10 bluefeet: checks *** FLOP *** [3s Tc Ts] Seat 5: bets 100 <font color="blue">bluefeet: raises 140 to 240</font> 1 fold Seat 5: calls 140 *** TURN *** [3s Tc Ts] [Jc] Seat 5: checks <font color="blue">bluefeet: ??? </font> "fold the flop lead" would work too, but IMO on a paired board this is worth a shot. your thoughts on the flop...also, what do you do now on the turn? what type of hand do you put him on? would a T overpot this flop 3-way? would he just call my raise? |
#2
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Re: ($60) 88 early, from the blinds
I put villain on a 3 half the time and a pocket pair the other half (but probably not QQ-AA). I wouldn't worry about the T, his flop overbet wouldn't make sense with trips on this drawless board.
So, value bet the turn (maybe 300). If he calls and checks the river I think I'd check behind (fearing 99 or JJ) but I don't mind betting again either. |
#3
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Re: ($60) 88 early, from the blinds
$55+5 turbo, L1 - no notes on villian Seat 1: (1500 in chips) Seat 2: (1260 in chips) Seat 3: (1470 in chips) Seat 4: (1470 in chips) Seat 5: (1480 in chips) bluefeet (1500 in chips) Seat 7: (1480 in chips) Seat 8: (1790 in chips) Seat 9: (1550 in chips) Seat 5: posts small blind 10 bluefeet: posts big blind 20 *** HOLE CARDS *** Dealt to bluefeet [8h 8d] 1 fold Seat 8: calls 20 5 folds Seat 5: calls 10 bluefeet: checks *** FLOP *** [3s Tc Ts] Seat 5: bets 100 bluefeet: raises 140 to 240 1 fold Seat 5: calls 140 *** TURN *** [3s Tc Ts] [Jc] Seat 5: checks <font color="blue">bluefeet: bets 320</font> Seat 5: raises 320 to 640 <font color="blue">bluefeet: ???</font> bastard [img]/images/graemlins/wink.gif[/img] |
#4
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Re: ($60) 88 early, from the blinds
I feel your pain...what started out so innocently.
yuk |
#5
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Re: ($60) 88 early, from the blinds
[ QUOTE ]
Seat 5: checks <font color="blue">bluefeet: bets 320</font> Seat 5: raises 320 to 640 <font color="blue">bluefeet: ???</font> bastard [img]/images/graemlins/wink.gif[/img] [/ QUOTE ] What a suck pill. I think he owns you. The fun news is that you fold and as the new short stack you get to have all the fun...... |
#6
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Re: ($60) 88 early, from the blinds
Yea, with the c\r on the turn it looks like your beat. Did you fold? Did villain show? I put him on a J or a T, I don’t think villain would do this with a 3 or a str8 draw? Would villain do this with the BP\nut-flush draw or OESFD ?
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#7
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Re: ($60) 88 early, from the blinds
Up until the turn play, Ax-spades fits all his moves as well. He even has odds to call your flop raise if he thinks his A is an added out.
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#8
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Re: ($60) 88 early, from the blinds
not sure how these 60 turbos play, but i was thinking he might have a jack hi flush draw...
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#9
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Re: ($60) 88 early, from the blinds
I think you can bet smaller on the turn. He's not going to check raise with something you beat unless he's insane, and he won't be able to say oh that guy's bet looks weak I'll attack it, because so many donks bet small with huge hands like trips. You're not really protecting against draws, so why not bet 2/5 pot and save some when you're c/r'd?
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#10
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Re: ($60) 88 early, from the blinds
baaa, stars sucks, nobody does this on pp.
Anyway, I agree with everyone that hero should throw in the towel. Also, I think it is dangerous for me to think too much about this hand. Thinking more could lead to following conclusions: 1) laying down to the flop overbet (weak) 2) checking behind on the turn (giving another free card). Both of these options seem -EV longterm. In this hand we ran into a tricky opponent (or simply someone who hit the turn), that happens... and if he is (still) overplaying his flush draw, then wow... would anyone here play Axs this strong? |
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