#11
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Re: 5/10 OOP set vs overpair
I play in a different type of game, but...
If I have an overpair and see a flop like that, and I'm lead into by certain players, I'll muck my overpair on the flop. The argument that leading with your set into a PF raiser who most likely has an overpair is standard is just wrong. If you flop a set OOP in an unraised pot, then leading is correct most of the time, but in a raised pot things are much different. If your standard line is to lead into PF raisers (assuming they are not idiots) with your sets, then I think you are leaving money on the table. My qualifier for this is that if you're playing in very tough/deep games there are more times when leading here may be correct, but against an average opponent, I don't like it. |
#12
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Re: 5/10 OOP set vs overpair
[ QUOTE ]
Villain is 14/1(!) with 1.24 aggr on the flop and 11 on the turn (to be honest I only found the out the aggression afterwards, and I'm not too sure what this turn aggression means anyway). [/ QUOTE ] It means that your sample size on villain is too small to be meaningful. |
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