Select Page
Poker Forum
Over 1,292,000 Posts!
Poker ForumShort-Handed NL Hold'em

How Bad Did I Play This??? (tough hand)

Results 1 to 13 of 13
  1. #1

    Default How Bad Did I Play This??? (tough hand)

    effective stacks 200bb

    Im in the bb with AKdd (600nl)

    TCblade a strong tag regular who I have no strong reads on opens for 24 in the hijack. I raise to 78 in the bb he calls.

    flop A Js xs I bet 96 he raises to 316 I call.

    Turn x offsuit (7 i think) i check he bets 240 I fold.

    Comments on all streets appreciated as it seems like I played this terribly. I'll post some of my thoughts on the hand later. Only relevant history is that I'm running terribly on 3 tables with TC and he has pushed me out of multiple pots when I have had nothing.
  2. #2
    On the hand... Maybe I'm reading way too much into it but I really like it. You can't fold this flop, but when he bets so little on the turn it's pretty obvious he is either
    1. begging you to push
    2. feeling like you're only calling smallish bets.

    The one thing I feel he's not trying to get you to do is fold. Unless he's like nth to the nth leaveling you.

    There's way more analysis I think, especially because he thinks your bluffy and probably threebetting really light. The one thing I'm afraid of is if he semibluffed here with Ax, and is now thin value betting KK/QQ, or even an ace with a "worse" kicker (or so he thinks).
    Check out the new blog!!!
  3. #3
    I'm not sure i call the flop raise.
  4. #4
    I check the flop all day unless I'm ready to go to war on this board.

    I don't think you butchered it all that badly but you prob lost a small amount of ev by folding the turn. If you call turn and lead river he may look you up very light (it would help if you had more history with villain).
    when the vpip's are high and the value bets are like razors, who can be safe?
  5. #5
    I'd fold the flop raise without good reads- ie like genitruc wrote, wanting to play a big pot.
    I also like checking the flop more.
  6. #6
    I think folding to a flop raise here is bad. This is a good flop to bluff on for opp and I think we're laying down to too many worse hands by folding.
    That being said I like a flop check.
    Check out the new blog!!!
  7. #7
    i agree it's pretty weak, but still think putting in 60bb on the flop with no idea what to do afterward is worse than just folding to the raise.
    it's not like u can just hope he calls down with a worse hand like a loose passive fish.
  8. #8
    elipsesjeff's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Posts
    4,826
    Location
    Northern Virginia
    If you're not willing to call his turn bet then you should be folding to the flop raise.


    Check out my videos at Grinderschool.com

    More Full Ring NLHE Cash videos than ANY other poker training site. Training starts at $10/month.
  9. #9
    Quote Originally Posted by elipsesjeff
    If you're not willing to call his turn bet then you should be folding to the flop raise.
    This logic is overused imo (stuff like "why fold river if you call turn" etc).

    Ppl are less likely to make suicidal bluffs when it looks obvious you're priced in, especially good villains like the one OP is describing.

    Once things get to the "nth" level I agree outthinking yourself is bad but I think ppl generally (and often incorrectly) approach hands as if each street needs to have a logical progression ("if I wasn't beat on the flop I MUST still be good here, even though villain knows I have to call"...).
    when the vpip's are high and the value bets are like razors, who can be safe?
  10. #10
    Checking the flop is way better then betting.
  11. #11
    Seems like everyone is implying that your range for betting this flop should be something like 80% bluffs, 20% monsters (AJ/JJ/AA), 0% good one-pair hands. Maybe that's true against a guy you don't have much history with but it seems counter-intuitive.
  12. #12
    Quote Originally Posted by mcatdog
    Seems like everyone is implying that your range for betting this flop should be something like 80% bluffs, 20% monsters (AJ/JJ/AA), 0% good one-pair hands. Maybe that's true against a guy you don't have much history with but it seems counter-intuitive.
    I think it's a pretty good rule of thumb vs aggro hand-reading players who will have position on you for later streets.
    when the vpip's are high and the value bets are like razors, who can be safe?
  13. #13
    elipsesjeff's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Posts
    4,826
    Location
    Northern Virginia
    Quote Originally Posted by Genitruc
    Ppl are less likely to make suicidal bluffs when it looks obvious you're priced in, especially good villains like the one OP is describing.
    That gets less true as you play in more aggressive games vs better players. This hand would be fairly simple if we were only 100 BB deep...


    Check out my videos at Grinderschool.com

    More Full Ring NLHE Cash videos than ANY other poker training site. Training starts at $10/month.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •