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 Originally Posted by Lexicon Devil
You're never going to make alot of money on this hand unless someone else has trips with a worse kicker. So you might as well just lead out and bet.
You can actually win some decent pots from a player with an ace with some creative post-flop play.
A nice line you can use here (one that I use frequently) is to lead out and bet, then when you get called you can generally put your opponent on an ace. If you check the turn, you've concealed your hand completely (you're acting as though you're afraid of the kings, or even the ace alone) and induced a bet from your opponent, at which point you can put out a substantial raise. A lot of players will even semi-bluff the turn when you check to them if they were on a draw on the flop. This approach can win some nice pots.
An interesting thing about this line is that, up until the turn raise, it's identical to the line which any aggressive player will be making all the time when they raise preflop and represent the flop but don't necessarily have much of a hand.
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There's really no point in slow-playing this. If everyone folded, you weren't going to win anything anyways.
I remember a hand I played a while back where I had 3-3 and called an early position raise, along with another guy. The flop came K, K, 4, they both checked to me, and I checked. The turn was a 3, the guy who opened preflop bet, the other guy raised, I reraised, and both ended up going all-in (they both had kings) on the turn and I busted both of them. I think that hand helps illustrate the stupidity of slow-playing trips. There was no way I was getting involved unless I hit a full house, in which case both opponents were going to lose a huge pot.
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