
Originally Posted by
Sprayed
I mean, you raised preflop to $40 and then followed it up with a flop bet of $40. That's really weak IMO.
It is weak of course, but it was meant to be weak (it was a trap). It doesn't matter because I know that it's weak and I know he thinks that it's weak (unless he knows that I know that he thinks that its weak and actually thinks it's strong, but I didn't give him credit for thinking that deep here). I was also sweetening the pot because I was convinced I had him beat. Making a weak play doesn't improve villains cards, but it can increase the profitability of an induced bluff.

Originally Posted by
Sprayed
Not to mention villain played this hand awful
I agree, but for different reasons. He probably put me on something like ATo, which was pretty close to the truth (and exactly what I wanted him to think I had). He just didn't see the trap, and can you blame him? The min raise is a bit strange, but perhaps he was setting up the river bluff. I guess he wanted it to look like a sweetener, but I didn't buy it. Perhaps he was trying to represent trips by giving two overcards correct odds to draw against made two pair.
He did make two mistakes, but you didn't mention them. His first mistake was to cold-call UTG raise with garbage (that's a standard "mistake" at this level though).
His main mistake was to represent two overs (his actual hand) by calling the flop, and then on the turn decide to be deceptive and go for a steal when a safe card came. This is a pretty classic mistake. A change of plan is more likely to work if a scare card comes. Here he was representing that the three helped him in some way, which didn't really make sense. The river card was even more safe for me, so I knew that if I was ahead on the flop, then I was ahead on the river as well.

Originally Posted by
Sprayed
I think that you are saying that you were thinking that he had nothing, but why not raise this up on the flop to find out? Also, I think you are being results oriented because you won this hand.
I got all the information I needed on the flop without making the pot too big. A bigger raise would have scared him away, or possibly he would have played back at me and I might have had to fold the best hand. Again if he would have raised on the flop, I probably would have moved in.

Originally Posted by
Sprayed
Also, I think you are being results oriented because you won this hand.
I might be a bit, but that's why I'm asking if anyone agrees with this play...
I also thought he was weak because I had flashed a couple of bluffs a while earlier, and after that he was constantly calling my raises (a lot of them cold) with random hands, perhaps tilting or wanting me to think that he was tilting. Sure, he could have have had a pocket pair, but I don't think this particular villain would have given me a free card on the flop, had he had PP (unless he had exactly AA or KK, a bit less likely since I had AK and he didn't reraise preflop).