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Small Hand, Big Pot
Doyle says "Don't go broke in a nothing pot." Gordon says, "Small hand, small pot. Big hand, big pot." And everyone says to bet when you think you're ahead. Okay, here's the scenario:
Hero and villain have full stacks in 6-max NLH10. Hero finds JJ UTG, and raises it to $.40, gets two callers. Flop is T 7 2. Hero bets $.80, gets called once, the other folds. Now there's $2.95 in the pot (with blinds). Turn is a 5, but there's a flush draw. Hero thinks he's ahead, so he bets $1.50. Call. Now there's more than half a stack in the middle of the table. This is now a big hand, and hero's still on JJ, unlikely to improve without a miracle river. What does he bet? He's got $7.60 left. Does he bet the pot? Half? Should he have bet harder on the turn, when he was head's up, hoping to take it down right there?
I tend to fire away, at least half the pot to deny the odds for a draw, but that violates Doyle's/Gordon's advice. And I'm pot committed after betting $3+, so I pretty much have to call/shove the river unless some obvious flush/straight hits.
How do you play these types of hands?
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