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how to price out draws
Full Tilt No-Limit Hold'em, $0.50 BB (9 handed) - Full-Tilt Converter Tool from FlopTurnRiver.com
MP2 ($14.05)
MP3 ($19.15)
CO ($14.50)
Button ($18.60)
SB ($20)
BB ($24.75)
UTG ($24.25)
Hero (UTG+1) ($25.80)
MP1 ($22.80)
Preflop: Hero is UTG+1 with 9 , 9
1 fold, Hero bets $1.50, 1 fold, MP2 calls $1.50, 5 folds
Flop: ($3.75) 10 , 2 , 5 (2 players)
Hero bets $2.50, MP2 calls $2.50
Turn: ($8.75) 2 (2 players)
Hero bets $5.50, MP2 calls $5.50
River: ($19.75) J (2 players)
Hero checks, MP2 bets $4.55 (All-In)
Hero?
Villain is 22/5.
First question, what to do here?
As a general issue, I run this type of line frequently, and I rarely win any pots with it. Villain does one of:
- reraises with a better hand, forcing me to lose by folding or give him my stack by calling
- calls down a draw on the flop and turn, hits the draw one out of three times, and stacks off on me
- slow plays a set and stacks off on me
After 25,000 hands I rarely run into the situation frequently talked about here where you can bet 1/2 the pot, get him calling down to the river, and take the pot most of the time by virtue of having a better starting hand and a good middle pair or top pair on the flop. I'm able to do that maybe once every 2,000 hands. I'm very confused, because people talk as if it's ABC poker against these guys, and I find it difficult to win hands this way. The usual way I might win is villain folds on the flop, and very infrequently fold on the turn, and that doesn't make up for all the losing hands I'm in.
If he has a 1:3 shot of hitting the flush by the river, it doesn't seem to me that it's possible to get the right odds over the long term unless I either way overbet the pot on the flop and turn or be willing to fold to any villain bet on the river. And what about if a suited card hits on the turn - keep betting, or let it go?
The problem there is I'm also usually out of position in this situation (not much I can do about that when I bet the best hand preflop, right?). On the river, if I bet, I'm paying off his chasing, giving him the odds to be profitable doing this repeatedly. If I check, he bets, and if I call, I'm again paying off his chasing.
So after a huge losing streak, I'm back to square one, trying to understand some basic aspects of poker to try to rebuild my game from scratch, because to lose this badly I must be missing out on one or more fundamental things. Help?
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