|
 Originally Posted by johnny_fish
yup.. especially if you are holding a pp that is higher then the pair on the board...
I don't get this thread? Bearing, from reading your post, it seems like you are having trouble playing hands with unpaired cards that trip on a paired board.
Theres just no fun when you hit trips.
nonsense.
If you bet, you immediately give it away that you have them, and you'd better hope your kicker is good because the other guy with trips is gonna be up against you.
You should open up your betting range if this is the case. If your opponents can peg you for trips anytime you are betting agressively on a paired board, you are too passive. Judging from your kicker concerns, (I may be wrong here), but you probably play too many hands. For example, if you are paying A9 and the flop comes AAx, and a lot of money goes into the pot (assuming you don't fill up), you are usually going to be in a world of hurt. If this sounds familiar, I'd tighten up preflop which will lead to easier decisions post-flop. If you don't often play T8o, you won't have to wonder whether you are good facing a 3-bet on a TTx flop...
When i get trips at first i think great! but then i realise they just waste my time, theres so many more hands i'd rather have.
And I'd rather have AA on a 222 flop, or a 2 card straight flush, or quads, but we just have to work with what we've got! 
And sometimes when someone has trips and theres no draws, everyone just checks to the river leading to an amazingly boring, long hand where the person with trips makes a ridiculous pot bet on the end and it all over.
Don't be this player. When you flop huge hands, the pot should be such that the river betting is very large...
|