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  #1  
Old 09-22-2004, 07:19 AM
Tommy Angelo Tommy Angelo is offline
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Default AQ in SB

Full $20-40 at LC. I'm in the small blind with AQ. Two players limped and the button raised. The profile on the button is that he has a hand to raise here.

Should I fold, call, or raise?

I called. The BB called. The limplers called. Five players to the flop.

The flop was A-10-x rainbow. Should I bet or check? I checked. All the limpers checked, and the button bet. The profile on the button is that he almost certainly has a hand to bet here. Should I fold, call, or raise? I called. Two players called and one folded. Four players to the turn.

The turn was a blank. Should I bet or check? I checked. Both limpers checked. The button bet. The profile on the button is that he definitely has a hand to bet here. Should I fold, call or raise? I called. Both others called. Still four players going to the river.

The river was a blank. Should I bet or check? I checked. Both limpers checked and the button checked and showed. He turned over AQ, so I did too. Both limpers mucked and we split. Weird little hand. Gnite


Tommy
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  #2  
Old 09-22-2004, 07:39 AM
largos largos is offline
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Default Re: AQ in SB

Hi Tommy!
Checking with intention of calling . Nothing wrong with that in your position.
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  #3  
Old 09-22-2004, 08:51 AM
LarsVegas LarsVegas is offline
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Default Re: AQ in SB

As I have said before, it all comes down to how your general game plan is, how you could play other hands. You wouldn't be chasing two pair with a Ten, a set with a pocket pair or even be in there with a small Ace Tommy.

So is there ever a time where you would play like this and lead on the river with something better than AQ (or preferably better than Ace-King as well)? If so, I could see a case for leading the at the river. I could also see case for leading at the river if you opponents are poor enough not to pick up on the fact that you always have a fair holding only when you suddenly bet out on the river.

Rewind to the flop, and I see case for leading here too. You really want to put more than one-bet-closing-or-almost-closing-the-action pressure on the THREE players behind who are easily given the correct odds to chase a gutshot on this decent pot. If you do not fancy checkraising, leading into a field on an Ace-high flop with a preflop raisor last to act will put some pressure on the players in between.

However, I somehow fancy checkraising the flop too. Perhaps followed up with a meek check on the turn. And if he bets, you could call, and if he bets the river, depending on the moon and the tide you could use your great Tommy-read and perhaps make a beautiful laydown.

Checkraising the flop and leading the turn is very viable if you image is so strong that AK would not threebet the flop or pop it again on the turn.

lars
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  #4  
Old 09-22-2004, 09:05 AM
random random is offline
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Default Re: AQ in SB

How about leading the turn and putting pressure on the two middle players calling with their broadway or two-pair draws? You said he "has a hand to bet" but there are a lot of hands you can beat that he will bet the flop and turn that raise two weak limpers preflop.
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  #5  
Old 09-22-2004, 10:09 AM
Lawrence Ng Lawrence Ng is offline
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Default Re: AQ in SB

Hi Tommy,

Long time no see. I still remember our good ol' PL game back in Vegas a couple of years back. [img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img]

Tommy, I'm not sure how the nature of your game was, but in general against solid players, A-Q offsuit is a hand I hate calling raises with. The reason being is that most times it's either a slight lead or you are majorly dominated. Against most LAG or looser players it's a monster, but against a solid player, I'd hesitate a bit sometimes calling even in the SB with it.

However in your case, you already have 3 other players, and it's a good hand to have with the number of callers. The button, as solid as he is could raise with a variety of hands given his position, but I'm sure you are aware of that already. So calling is correct.

I think to properly play this hand you'd defintely have to take a chance on the flop and do a Check-raise. It's good value, it makes the other two limpers pay for their draws, and ultimately protects your hand if it is the best.

If the solid player is aware and observant enough, he will know you most likely have Ace-big kicker and play you accordingly from there.
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  #6  
Old 09-22-2004, 12:12 PM
elysium elysium is offline
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Default Re: AQ in SB

hi tommy

i'm trying to figure out what the button's having a hand to raise with on the pre-flop means. does it mean that he would raise with a hand that strategically can use a raise here? or does it mean that he has a strong hand?

if he has a strong hand, and he wouldn't raise pre-flop as a strategic type play, then folding is correct. if, however, he would know to raise from the button for reasons other than having a strong hand, then you should reraise to get the BB out of there, and maybe a limper.

but tommy, under the conditions you describe, calling is almost never correct.

it is very tough to fold AQ pre-flop for 1 more bet. if you had AQs, if his raise meant a strong hand, then calling has merit. the problem with the AQo isn't that you aren't getting correct odds to hit your hand. the difficulty with it is that when you do hit your hand, a weaker hand is capable of folding you out those times the pre-flop raiser is coming in strong. this is a pretty basic concept that many players fail to understand or completely ignore in tougher type games.

when you come in with AX, if you play the hand correctly, you will be trailing any stronger A, and you will also be trailing behind any opponent who is capable of folding you out. and playing AX correctly necessarily means that you will have a 'fold' somewhere on the list under the heading of 'options'; and almost always, folding will be the number 1 option, almost always pre-flop, but also often post-flop. no, you don't have AX in this one. you have AQo. folding is, however, a contingency that you must have written down on your options list. whenever that is the case; whenever folding is an option, you must strongly consider raising because, while you might not be sure what to do, whenever one of your options is to fold, the possibility that calling is not an option increases dramatically. rarely do you ever have 3 options.

often, you find a player asking, 'is this a raise or fold situation?'. actually, that question is a little disorienting. the player should be asking, 'is folding an option?'. if yes, then calling is rarely an option. excluding those rare AJs and ATs events, and perhaps 99, if folding is an option, then calling is not an option.

whenever folding is an option, you should do so early those times that folding is an option, in large part, because a weaker hand can fold you out later in the hand. so whenever folding is an option, you should fold early. so whenever calling is not an option because folding is, it is better to fold early to avoid being folded out by a weaker hand.

that's what you have here tommy. you have a bona fide raise or fold; folding is an option, calling isn't; and to compound matters significantly, there is an opponent in there who is capable of folding you out with a weaker hand. if you were on the button's right, folding would not be an option, and you would ask, 'do i call or raise?'. if you called, and the button raised, if your call closes, calling becomes an option. you are in the same situation though; the button can still fold you out with a weaker hand. it's just that now you are getting correct pot odds to see the flop. it sounds unrelated, but from the SB, calling might be correct if you are very sure that the EP's will not reraise. then, your call closes. so it's really raise, fold or close. you don't have that. you have no idea what the BB is going to do. in fact, you are calling here because you fear a reraise. tommy, this is a clear fold pre-flop.

it is tough to laydown this type of hand for 1 bet on the pre-flop, but that is what you must do here. calling is not an option. raising, therefore, should be the only consideration given to the means by which you plan on continuing further in the hand. you cannot raise because later in the hand, a weaker hand might fold you out. you are out of position, and cannot rely on being able to close. in fact, you have precisely the worst seat in this one. it's a fold tommy. and it's not a fold because you want to save a crummy bet. it's a fold because you don't want to go around kicking yourself for the rest of the session for not knowing better than to pay off like a slot machine against that guy.

what, you folded on the turn? that's not too bad. the turn you say? C minus on this one tommy.

now let me see what actually happened.
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  #7  
Old 09-22-2004, 12:23 PM
elysium elysium is offline
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Default Re: AQ in SB

hi tommy

i didn't read the rest of the post. i usually do that too so as not to prejudice the response. hmmm, same hand you say? would the button have raised without a strong hand? interesting post tommy.
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  #8  
Old 09-22-2004, 01:04 PM
elindauer elindauer is offline
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Default Re: AQ in SB

Failing to check-raise the flop is a substantial strategic mistake. You have to force out gutshots and middle pairs in this pot. If you get the pot heads up, then you can think about check-calling it down.

Since you didn't check-raise the flop, you should check-raise the turn for the same reasons. Calling gives gutshots and middle pairs odds to beat you, raising does not.

You're so focused on the button that you're missing the big picture. Use player reads to handle close situations. This one isn't close.

Good luck.
Eric
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  #9  
Old 09-22-2004, 01:12 PM
TwoNiner TwoNiner is offline
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Default Re: AQ in SB

I like the flop checkraise too. Although players could still be getting implied odds after a checkraise they have to worry about the button popping it again and some will fold just because two looks scarier than one. Afterwards you will have to lead the turn into whoever is left which isn't great, but that's just the breaks of having to play from the SB.
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  #10  
Old 09-22-2004, 01:34 PM
Louie Landale Louie Landale is offline
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Default Re: AQ in SB

This is really "Tommy Blaze-Away Angelo"? Or is it your twin "Timmy Hide-in-the-weeds-until-I'm-paranoid Angelo"?

PF you need to quantify "Has a Hand". If he's raising with AT or betting I'd 3-bet him figuring to win unimproved, otherwise I'd call figuring to win after flopping a pair.

I don't think you gain much by checking and calling here since for whatever reason you don't think a raise is in order if he DOES bet, and you will certainly wish YOU had bet if he checks (which seems likely based on your Profile).

I think you need to face the callers with a double bet, since they are getting the right odds for their gut-shots considering there are two folks with a pair of Aces. This wouldn't apply if that "T" was a "9".

You prefer to face the limpers with a double bet and you wish you had bet if Villian checks. I think you need to play the two middle rounds more assertively.

Unless you can fold on the river or he's GOING to continue a bluff, you are MUCH better off betting out than checking-and-calling (especially since you can easily fold to a raise); even if you are a dog when called. So the repugnant betting pattern check-call-check-call-bet CAN work in this situation.

- Louie
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