Can you explain what you mean there, please?
I know, broadly, what our equity is & will be, & I'm sure JH suited "flops well". But it's equity is it's equity, is it not?
it useful to think in terms of Capture Factor: ie how much of the pot the hand captures on the next street.
some hands don't do as well as their equity share - think about queen-high, or even bottom pair. Often these hands are devalued on later streets or we simply have to fold thus surrendering any equity we have in the pot.
one class of hands however always do better than their equity share and that is draws.
draws may often only have 20-38% flopped equity, but built into that equity is the possibility of hitting our draw. here we have improved to a nutted hand, and strong hands capture 2x the pot+. and as the payoff for draws are often on the river when the pot is biggest, this means draws out perform their equity share. Compare this to a hand like flopped mid pair which may have more raw equity than a draw, but will rarely hit the nuts, will rarely get to bet for value and will often become a bluff catcher where it performs rather poorly.
JTs actually flops incredibly well.
It hits a strong draw + midpair or better 53% iof the time.
If you include gutshots then it hits a hand strong enough to call a 1/2 cbet v most ranges a whopping 62% of the time it sees a flop. and 25% of the time it hits a strong draw, which as we know out-perform their raw equity.
Its a beauty of a hand. Even shallow.
In my games with no ICM and played out in near pure cEV I barely ever fold it preflop.
In a MTT with ICM and antes I have no idea as to the correct play.