Conclusion
• To my surprise he now bets $660 into the $1,035 and I just thought- “if he did have it and it looks like I’ve missed my draw – why wouldn’t he check it to me and let me maybe bluff at it”. I think if I was him and lets say I held QQ44 or 101066 (hands he could maybe overcall a 3bet with) and I did fill up on the river, I think I would probably check it here since:
- 1. It looks like your opponent has missed their combo-draw so the only way to get more money is to get them to bluff.
- 2. If your opponent has made a worse full-house they are still going to bet it for value anyway and you can check-call with 1010xx or check-raise with QQxx.
• Final point on his river bet was the sizing. $660 was two-thirds of the pot and in general it does seem like a bluffy amount I find. Obviously you can’t live and die by this rule, but here it seemed like he was thinking ,“well if he has missed his draws $660 will do the job and if he did have a set then I’ll save a little by bluffing less”. This thinking is pretty logical as he would have gotten me to fold all my missed draws, however I would prefer just a half-pot bet on the river, since you save a bit more if I do have a house and it probably looks even stronger than a two-thirds pot bet. The sizing here wasn’t too crucial, but I think it’s still worth mentioning.
For these reasons I called his bet on the river and fortunately I was good. He had a pair and an open-ender, but then turned his hand into a bluff on the river. I don’t think I like his over-call pre-flop here, but he has a looser kind of style to mine and knows what he’s doing for sure.
Villain shows

Anyway I hope this hand helped you guys with your PLO thinking. Again it wasn’t too complicated and showed a reasonable thought process on my behalf throughout the hand. What I think is actually the biggest lesson in this hand is that you need to be able to get inside the head of your opponent and put yourself in their position, “what would he do if he had X or if he thought I had Y”. It is easier said that done, but if you can think like your opponents, or know how they think, then you’re always going to be on the next level and be one step ahead of them.