#1
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Flopped nut straight on a 2 suit board, when to come alive?
BM 100 hollywood game. Real fishy table. Guy to my right is an ultra LAG who's gotten a good run of cards. Everyone else in the hand is moderately fishy.
2 limpers, hero limps T [img]/images/graemlins/diamond.gif[/img]K [img]/images/graemlins/spade.gif[/img] in CO. Both blinds come along, 11 bucks in pot after rake. Flop comes 9 [img]/images/graemlins/club.gif[/img]J [img]/images/graemlins/spade.gif[/img]Q [img]/images/graemlins/spade.gif[/img], checked to ultra lag who bets 15. Do I raise here or do I wait for turn to come alive on a non spade? |
#2
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Re: Flopped nut straight on a 2 suit board, when to come alive?
Raise
preflop is marginal |
#3
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Re: Flopped nut straight on a 2 suit board, when to come alive?
Raise to $45.
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#4
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Re: Flopped nut straight on a 2 suit board, when to come alive?
Limping KTo in the CO is terrible. Raise it or muck it.
Raise the flop to 50. After the hand, write a note on your monitor not to limp KTo. Ever. -T |
#5
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Re: Flopped nut straight on a 2 suit board, when to come alive?
Against a LAG, raise the flop. He's going to call on his draw and you get to get more money in now.
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#6
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Re: Flopped nut straight on a 2 suit board, when to come alive?
It was a BM game, people were limping in with crap like 57o. Why is limping KTo in the CO horrible? If my hand's dominated someone would have raised, and I can get away from it easily if I don't hit, and I have position on pretty much everyone.
Also, why do I want money in now? He's a LAG, he'll call the turn regardless, and I can be more sure oy my situation on the turn. I'm usually a limit player so I'm trying to see the justification in trying to kick everyone out when anyone except a set or a flush draw is drawing dead to me pretty much. |
#7
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Re: Flopped nut straight on a 2 suit board, when to come alive?
[ QUOTE ]
It was a BM game, people were limping in with crap like 57o. Why is limping KTo in the CO horrible? If my hand's dominated someone would have raised, and I can get away from it easily if I don't hit, and I have position on pretty much everyone. [/ QUOTE ] Yes, but when the flop does miss people, you will have already anounced that you have a better hand than them. And when you have two high cards (let's pretend for a moment that a Ten is a high card), you want fewer players in the pot with you. Make sense? -T |
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