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if you hit your set and villain misses completely, you probably arent going to win enough to cover the times you miss your set and end up folding the best hand to his missed AK.
all of the uncertainty is what makes it such a fun game. put your opponent on a range of hands, narrow it down as the hand progresses, and make the best play available based on what you think his current range is.
here's a simple example (although it is pot limit)
PokerStars Pot-Limit Hold'em, $1.00 BB (9 handed) Poker-Stars Converter Tool from FlopTurnRiver.com (Format: FlopTurnRiver)
MP3 ($89.50)
CO ($19.25)
Button ($191.05)
SB ($42.40)
BB ($76.60)
UTG ($181.35)
UTG+1 ($86.60)
MP1 ($88.55)
Hero ($155.75)
Preflop: Hero is MP2 with 9 , 9 .
UTG raises to $3.5, 2 folds, Hero calls $3.50, 2 folds, Button calls $3.50, 2 folds.
Flop: ($12) 9 , 6 , J (3 players)
UTG bets $7, Hero raises to $21, Button folds, UTG raises to $63, Hero raises to $152.25, UTG calls $89.25.
Turn: ($316.50) T (2 players)
River: ($316.50) 4 (2 players)
Final Pot: $316.50
this raise from this player in this position is AA 80%, KK/QQ, 15% and AK/AQ/JJ 5% IMO. we are 150 deep, so easy call with position.
I was looking for one that fit your description better, but can't seem to find one. Didn't look too long though, maybe I will find one later.
A lot of the players that I am playing against are not raising their lowest PP's from EP when they open the pot, so that is one way to narrow their range pf. Some players will raise behind limpers from MP with large PP's or a large A, but not medium PP's, so that can help also. You just have to pay attention to what your opponents are doing and adjust your play accordingly.
I got kinda rambly there, but hope it helps some
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