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Author Topic: KK - set on turn  (Read 4030 times)
Royal Flush
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« Reply #15 on: January 04, 2007, 05:28:26 PM »

If we lead with T9 we only ever get paid if out oppo slowplays a big hand and we hit. Most of the time we get raised and lose the pot.

If we check call it is more likely we are on a draw but we limit the cost, it has the added benefit that if we miss the turn and it goes check check then we can with the pot with a river bet, a much higher success rate than the bet on the flop, and the pot we win is bigger.

If we check raise we succeed a much larger % of the time, we also win a bigger pot when we do win, of course we lose more when we get 3-bet.

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Nem
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« Reply #16 on: January 04, 2007, 05:52:54 PM »

Well played doubleup.

Good thread as well.
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Highstack
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« Reply #17 on: January 04, 2007, 07:07:56 PM »

I don't have a problem with the check raise, but that didn't happen here either. If you miss the turn after the preflop raise and flop bet it would go check-check almost never.
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Royal Flush
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« Reply #18 on: January 04, 2007, 07:11:44 PM »

If you miss the turn after the preflop raise and flop bet it would go check-check almost never.

Most players give up after 3 bullets, like i say it only happens when they have NOT connected, just like the flop leadout.
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« Reply #19 on: January 04, 2007, 07:34:08 PM »

Connected or completed? Where was teh 3rd bullet? Preflop ... flop ... check. Nasty 3rd bullet that check.
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Royal Flush
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« Reply #20 on: January 04, 2007, 09:03:37 PM »

My bad, i meant most players never fire the 3rd.
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Smart Money
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« Reply #21 on: January 04, 2007, 09:46:39 PM »

Rob (Highstack), regarding playing T9 OOP on this flop (in a full-handed cash game:)

If the pot is unraised pre-flop, and there are three or less other players in the hand, then I would recommend betting out, typically a 2/3rd pot bet.

Given that it's been raised pre-flop, a check/call would be my preferred move. You're hand is disguised well, so you should have excellent implied odds if you hit, however you should be trying to keep the pot as small as possible until/unless you do hit. This more passive play is also more likely to keep the third player in the pot (which is want you want) if he has a good but not a monster hand.


Doubleup: You HAVE to bet the turn here (despite the fact that you were behind this time.) These are hands that you have to be prepared to go bust on. Anyone who is not prepared to lose a full buy-in in this situation, should probably move down in stakes. You can't legislate for players playing a hand this poorly with ATs. In most situations, you will be well ahead here but still vulnerable to a lot of cards (any 9, T or A) You want to bet big enough so that the only callers you get are those with made hands already (i.e. hole cards: JJ, 22, QQ, QJ, KQ) who will think their set/two pair is good. Therefore you should be betting big here given that all three players still have plenty back. I'd bet close to a pot sized bet, or even over bet it.

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doubleup
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« Reply #22 on: January 05, 2007, 12:06:03 AM »

Doubleup: You HAVE to bet the turn here (despite the fact that you were behind this time.) These are hands that you have to be prepared to go bust on. Anyone who is not prepared to lose a full buy-in in this situation, should probably move down in stakes. You can't legislate for players playing a hand this poorly with ATs. In most situations, you will be well ahead here but still vulnerable to a lot of cards (any 9, T or A) You want to bet big enough so that the only callers you get are those with made hands already (i.e. hole cards: JJ, 22, QQ, QJ, KQ) who will think their set/two pair is good. Therefore you should be betting big here given that all three players still have plenty back. I'd bet close to a pot sized bet, or even over bet it.



The problem with this as you rightly point out is that if I bet I have to overbet - because if I bet less there are a lot of draws that will still call and wont pay me on the river unless we both improve and the scary rivers will still come making it difficult for me to call or bet if checked to.  I would def bet if it was heads-up, but vs 2 players likely drawing on the flop (AQ/KQ wld prob have bet to "see where they were" or crsd) I thought there was a reasonable chance that the turn had helped one of them, I therefore get stacked as I have to overbet or they fold and I win a small pot.

Checking on the other hand is likely to get elicit a bet or let me value bet.  QQ/JJ were not very likely hands as I wld prob have been reraised preflop - certainly raised on the flop for fear of me having AK.  2pr was a possible hand but I dont think I stack them off on that board.  I certainly get a good amount from them on the river if I check.

I'm actually rather tired of the philosophy that "this is a hand you go broke with" as too often my opponent has exactly the worst hands in their range.

My overall take on this hand was that the pot wasn't big enough to merit risking my stack to defend it.  I was happy to either lose some on the river or win a bit more.  As it was I did get lucky and didn't lose anything more.
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Smart Money
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« Reply #23 on: January 05, 2007, 02:03:55 AM »

Doubleup: You HAVE to bet the turn here (despite the fact that you were behind this time.) These are hands that you have to be prepared to go bust on. Anyone who is not prepared to lose a full buy-in in this situation, should probably move down in stakes. You can't legislate for players playing a hand this poorly with ATs. In most situations, you will be well ahead here but still vulnerable to a lot of cards (any 9, T or A) You want to bet big enough so that the only callers you get are those with made hands already (i.e. hole cards: JJ, 22, QQ, QJ, KQ) who will think their set/two pair is good. Therefore you should be betting big here given that all three players still have plenty back. I'd bet close to a pot sized bet, or even over bet it.



The problem with this as you rightly point out is that if I bet I have to overbet - because if I bet less there are a lot of draws that will still call and wont pay me on the river unless we both improve and the scary rivers will still come making it difficult for me to call or bet if checked to.  I would def bet if it was heads-up, but vs 2 players likely drawing on the flop (AQ/KQ wld prob have bet to "see where they were" or crsd) I thought there was a reasonable chance that the turn had helped one of them, I therefore get stacked as I have to overbet or they fold and I win a small pot.

Checking on the other hand is likely to get elicit a bet or let me value bet.  QQ/JJ were not very likely hands as I wld prob have been reraised preflop - certainly raised on the flop for fear of me having AK.  2pr was a possible hand but I dont think I stack them off on that board.  I certainly get a good amount from them on the river if I check.

I'm actually rather tired of the philosophy that "this is a hand you go broke with" as too often my opponent has exactly the worst hands in their range.

My overall take on this hand was that the pot wasn't big enough to merit risking my stack to defend it.  I was happy to either lose some on the river or win a bit more.  As it was I did get lucky and didn't lose anything more.


You don't HAVE to overbet, but you do have to bet big, and you can not be afraid to do so. You will very rarely be behind in this position, and giving free cards here is massive -EV.

QQ and JJ are likely holdings, and certainly more likely than AT. (Players re-raise pre-flop far less in full-handed cash games with these pairs than short-handed cash or Tournament play, and with good reason.)

The philosophy is not "this is a hand you go broke with." It is "this is a hand I have a very good chance of breaking my opponent with, however they is a small chance he may get (or may have got) lucky."

As I mentioned, there are 5 holdings that you are far more likely to be up against than AT, and players are going to call any large turn bet that you make- with them either drawing dead or with one out for quads. If you give a free card, and one of the many scare cards comes on the river, then you are going to win far less than you should do against these hands- and even risk being bluffed off the pot.
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totalise
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« Reply #24 on: January 05, 2007, 10:30:43 AM »

theres zero chance that I'd ever check in this spot, and I think its a really bad play to do so. Sure, there are hands that beat you, but theres also a shit load of hands you beat, that are willing to either get it in before the river is nasty, or try and take the pot away from you on a scary board.

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