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#1
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Ray Zee made me do it
I read a thread on the high limit forum that had some Ray Zee comments that motivated me. So, instead of drinking raw eggs and jogging I did something I never do, I shoved my whole stack in the middle and put the other guy to a decision. He made it suprisingly quickly.
$200 NL Hold'em 6 max Hero has 152.6 in the SB. Villain has $98.9 on the button. Up to this point he's done nothing special but seems to be trending toward the simian end of the spectrum. I get Ad Qd. Villain raises to $4 and I call. Flop is Kd Qc 5d. I bet $9. Villain is trite. He min raises. I push. He calls. As I said, it was quick. Results in white. <font color="white">Turn 2s and river is the 8h. Brick, brick. Villain shows Kc Tc to break the hero's heart.</font> |
#2
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Re: Ray Zee made me do it
Short stacks and tilters are usually that way for a reason.
~DoomSlice's words of flawed wisdom~ |
#3
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Re: Ray Zee made me do it
The play is alright. I hope these 200NL guys are not all auto-callers on that crap of a hand though.
cards %win Ad Qd 50.51 Kc Tc 49.49 |
#4
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Re: Ray Zee made me do it
[ QUOTE ]
cards %win Ad Qd 50.51 Kc Tc 49.49 [/ QUOTE ] You beat me to it. When I saw his cards I was glad I got a call. Fold equity anyone? I've made the move to full ring $400 NL, but this was my first session at $200 6max. I shan't go back. |
#5
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Re: Ray Zee made me do it
I don't like either players hand. Pushing a huge stack with such a 1% advantage doesn't seem so good to me.
(I know I have the advantage of knowing what both players had... but after the minraise, there's quite a few hands the villain could have to indicate that if you're ahead, its not by much.) |
#6
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Re: Ray Zee made me do it
[ QUOTE ]
I don't like either players hand. Pushing a huge stack with such a 1% advantage doesn't seem so good to me. (I know I have the advantage of knowing what both players had... but after the minraise, there's quite a few hands the villain could have to indicate that if you're ahead, its not by much.) [/ QUOTE ] I like it. It's called fold equity. |
#7
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Re: Ray Zee made me do it
I don't think there's any other way to play it (as) profitably.
You'll have 48-52% equity against a wide range of villain's possible holdings, but it's essential that you see the turn and the river. If you call and miss, your equity dips below half on the turn and you could be priced out. If you hit, you have to worry about getting paid. Pushing the flop neatly solves both problems and gets your money in as a favorite, or near favorite. And don't forget to factor in the times he'll fold the favored hand. I play it this way 100% of the time. |
#8
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Re: Ray Zee made me do it
[ QUOTE ]
I don't like either players hand. Pushing a huge stack with such a 1% advantage doesn't seem so good to me. [/ QUOTE ] Really? Give me that 1% everytime, and I will push my stack. Lawrence |
#9
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Re: Ray Zee made me do it
[ QUOTE ]
Quote: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I don't like either players hand. Pushing a huge stack with such a 1% advantage doesn't seem so good to me. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Really? Give me that 1% everytime, and I will push my stack. Lawrence [/ QUOTE ] See Lawrence I told you these guys were weak-tight, I don't think they ever heard of EFFEE. Mack |
#10
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Re: Ray Zee made me do it
Reraising preflop is ok. The flop is quite standard, as playing it any other way would be dumb.
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