finally on the giving end of a bad beat
Before I go through the hand history, let me throw in a few background details first, so I don't look like a total maniac. I was in a freeroll last night at PStars, and I had roughly 12300 chips, which, shortly after the first break, made me the large stack at the table I was at. I was on the button, and the SB had a little over 8000 chips, while the BB had something like 3900. Blinds had been upped to 100/200, and for the past few orbits, I'd been stealing 'em whenever I'd been on the button through 5xBB raises.
The hand goes down like this. I'm dealt [5c 3c], and after literally everyone on this table folds over to me (3 people were sitting out), I again raise 1000 chips. Well, to my dismay, both the SB and the BB call, so I figure I'm a huge dog, but wth, they just called...
Flop comes [4d 6h 7d], and I'm literally sitting there and creaming my goddamn pants, although I am a little worried about the high flush draw (both the SB and the BB were tight passive, so I knew they wouldn't have called my raise without something like Big Slick or possibly pockets). SB checks, and to my delight, BB raises all-in. I immediately call, and SB folds, and we both flip over our cards.
Turns out BB had [Ah Ac], so there was no possible flush draw for him, and he was pretty much drawing dead unless he hit running As (which didn't happen). I know I probably played this hand poorly, but damn, it's about time I reversed roles in bad beat situations.
Re: finally on the giving end of a bad beat
Quote:
Originally Posted by Running Gag
I know I probably played this hand poorly...
Hmm, I really don't see that at all. You went for a blind steal in late position with the big stack. When it failed, you got to see the flop anyway, and with that hand, you are likely to win big if it hits the flop hard (like it did). The only poor play was AA letting you see the flop for no more than your initial raise. I think your play was fine.