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Poker Forums => Poker Hand Analysis => Topic started by: Flash92 on October 15, 2013, 06:29:15 PM



Title: 2c/5c Zoom - AJs
Post by: Flash92 on October 15, 2013, 06:29:15 PM
Poker Stars $0.02/$0.05 No Limit Hold'em - 6 players

BTN: $5.90
Hero (SB): $5.17
BB: $5.42
UTG: $7.19
MP: $5.33
CO: $2.46

Pre Flop: ($0.07) Hero is SB with Jd Ad
1 fold, MP raises to $0.15, CO raises to $0.25, 1 fold, Hero calls $0.23, 1 fold, MP calls $0.10

Flop: ($0.80) 4d Kd 5c (3 players)
Hero bets $0.35, MP folds, CO calls $0.35

Turn: ($1.50) Ts (2 players)
Hero checks, CO bets $0.40, Hero raises to $4.57 all in, CO calls $1.46 all in

River: ($5.22) 7d (2 players - 2 are all in)

Looking for thoughts on the whole hand really...

Preflop too loose?
Flop lead okay? Prefer c/c? Can't c/r with my stack right?... :/
Turn c/r too spewy or good with his small sizing?

Thanks in advance,
Ash


Title: Re: 2c/5c Zoom - AJs
Post by: jgcblack on October 15, 2013, 07:19:26 PM
Pre is a fold, we can't make a reraise and get called by worse and by calling ourselves we get into a lot of sticky situations, out of position, with an easily dominated hand.

Flop is interesting, quite often people just blindly 'raise' a lead here and we have a really good hand for lead/ shove when raised by AQ or K10 etc...

Turn is pretty strange, just put him in yourself rather than this...

River - nice bink techniques... next time bink the Qh for the proper chatbox explosion.




Title: Re: 2c/5c Zoom - AJs
Post by: Flash92 on October 15, 2013, 08:53:17 PM
yeah I probs agree on pre, it is a loose peel.

Flop is good I think.

But turn He has $2, pot is $1.5. Doesn't it look pretty weak/drawwy to overbet here?


Title: Re: 2c/5c Zoom - AJs
Post by: MelissaChloe on October 16, 2013, 10:21:40 AM
Hey Ashley :)

I'd probably fold pre due to the fact that we are OOP and we don't close the action, although it is a weak 3 betting size from villain so I can see why you would be tempted to call

Also, I think if you are going to lead the flop, then make it a bigger sizing and also lead the turn after leading the flop. By making it bigger on the flop, you leave a much nicer amount to move all in on the turn without it being a huge overbet