Villain is 20/17/4 winning regular. When he raises my cbet we have to stop and put him on a range. It seems like a very marginal spot and as weak as it seems this may be a fold. Curious to see what other do on the flop.
$2/$4 No Limit Holdem
6 players
Converted at weaktight.com
Stacks:
UTG | ($791.15) | ||
Hero | ($458.80) | ||
CO | ($884.90) | ||
BTN | ($1313.55) | ||
SB | ($465.35) | ||
BB | ($817.20) |
Pre-flop: ($6, 6 players) Hero is UTG+1
1 fold, Hero raises to $16, 1 fold, BTN calls $16, 2 folds
Flop: ($38, 2 players)
Hero bets $28, BTN raises to $99, $71 to Hero ($414.8)?
Villain is 38/23/1.6 with a flop AF of 5. Again another spot where I think my hand doesnt fair extremely well vs his range. What is our best line vs his range?
$1/$2 No Limit Holdem
6 players
Converted at weaktight.com
Stacks:
UTG | ($97.00) | ||
UTG+1 | ($195.90) | ||
Hero | ($214.20) | ||
BTN | ($188.50) | ||
SB | ($200.00) | ||
BB | ($298.80) |
Pre-flop: ($3, 6 players) Hero is CO
1 fold, UTG+1 calls $2, Hero raises to $9, BTN calls $9, 2 folds, UTG+1 folds
Flop: ($23, 2 players)
Hero bets $16, BTN raises to $38, $22 to Hero ($189.2)?
Villain is 61/11/5.5, he tended to over bet if weakness was present. I decide to check back my two pair on the flop to induce. When he fires the turn I again decide to extract max value I will flat allowing him to spew on the river. Maybe I should have min raised the river?
$2/$4 No Limit Holdem
6 players
Converted at weaktight.com
Stacks:
UTG | ($895.40) | ||
Hero | ($960.60) | ||
CO | ($369.80) | ||
BTN | ($517.30) | ||
SB | ($524.70) | ||
BB | ($781.90) |
Pre-flop: ($6, 6 players) Hero is UTG+1
1 fold, Hero raises to $16, 2 folds, SB calls $14, 1 fold
Flop: ($36, 2 players)
SB checks, Hero checks
Turn: ($36, 2 players)
SB bets $40, Hero calls $40
River: ($116, 2 players)
SB bets $236, Hero goes all-in $904.6, SB folds
Final Pot: $588
Hero wins $1253.1 ( won +$292.5 )
SB lost -$292.00
3 comments:
Hand 1: I tend to fold here. It is kinda weak, but I think more often than not, you are not in good shape. If the board had a flush draw as well as being J107, I would reraise and try to get in, because it dramatically changes his range.
Hand 2: I like a fold here as well. These are the spots that are giving me fits. If you call here, what do you on the turn? This is not a hand I want to play for stacks, which could easily be the case against such an aggressive opponent, who will most likely fire the turn.
Hand 3: I like the shove, because you said that he overbets when he senses weakness. He may put you on the bluff. He is also not the type of player I would expect to 3-bet AK, AQ, or AJ, so I think he would have trouble laying those hands down here.
In the first hand, I like calling his c-bet and folding to a turn bet (this is assuming no history). Our hand is quite indicitive of strength once we call his checkraise on a flop texture like that. For him to bet the turn in this spot is quite strong. (Again, I am assuming no history.)
Hand 1: Jesus, I hate these spots. I'd generally want to call and evaluate a turn in this spot, but I don't have a plan and the stacks are awkward. If we do call, it's $236 on the turn with $343 effective behind, so any bet he makes is committing him. I'm weighing his range more to JT/77/KQ/air versus a flopped straight/AJ. Not sure if that means folding is best...it just seems so goddamn weak.
Hand 2: I'd flat, then c/c safe turn, c/f big river bet.
Hand 3: I guess this is fine given your read and the texture of the board -- I'd still prob autobet it w/o thought (bad). If the board texture changes on the turn, then I'm raising. As it fell, calling here makes sense. I might be raising, though, to build a pot. On the river, shoving is obligatory. Love the fact that he overbet majorly -- it looks like you have KK/QQ and got stubborn up to his bet. I like the shove -- your line doesn't make too much sense (to him) and he might look you up light (A9-AJ).
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