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 Originally Posted by Micro2Macro
villain is reg. seems fairly straightforward. ATS is 45%, high fold to 3bet.
cbet is ridic high like 88% so I c/r cuz 1) he can't have a hand to continue with that often 2) equity etc.
river is uhh...idk fps i guess. what do you guys think?
sry if i left out relevant info just ground out 2500vpps want to go sleep now )
PokerStars No-Limit Hold'em, $4.00 BB (6 handed) - Poker-Stars Converter Tool from FlopTurnRiver.com
UTG ($236.65)
MP ($349)
CO ($415.40)
Button ($328.60)
SB ($490)
Hero (BB) ($422.05)
Preflop: Hero is BB with K  , J
2 folds, CO bets $8, 2 folds, Hero calls $4
Flop: ($18) Q  , 9  , 6 (2 players)
Hero checks, CO bets $12, Hero raises to $40, CO calls $28
Turn: ($98) 6 (2 players)
Hero checks, CO checks
River: ($98) 5 (2 players)
Hero checks, CO bets $64, Hero raises to $192
This is pretty interesting actually.
So, the main thing you left out in your analysis is his turn cbet%, and this appears on your HeM HUD (though it includes 3bet pots as well, but let's leave that out and assume it is accurate). Without that stat you are only comparing two lines, flop c/r and flop c/c and not 5+: flop c/c turn c/c river c/mix, flop c/c turn c/r river mix, flop c/r turn mostly bet river mostly bet, flop c/c turn chk chk river bluff, flop c/c turn chk chk river showdown. And then you need to think about various runouts which you can loosely group into 1) fd hits, 2) fd misses, 3) 1 or more sd hits, 4) total blanks 5) paired boards and then various subsets containing overs or conjunctions thereof. Anyways, the turn cbet% is particularly salient for your actual hand because you have both showdown value and 3 nut outs, and 8 outs against the vast majority of his range beating you on the flop. So, check/raise and then getting 3bet with a range that contains a moderate % of semibluffs (or worse, total bluffs) is a moderate equity disaster.
Another important stat is fold cbet to raise, your c/r wins a ton of equity if he folds a hand like JT or AK or K9 to your c/r.
Ok, fine, I'll be helpful now. Based on empirical work I've done, flop c/r and flop c/c are going to have similar equity here against typical populations of 6max opponents, which isn't to say that they may have wildly divergent value against individual opponents within the populations. Therefore, to make my range more difficult to read I typically mix my strategy with your hand in this situation if i have no knowledge of my opponent. Whichever line you choose, you are going to make a considerable profit relative to folding because cbetting 88% on this board with the way your ranges interact is going to be way too much on the part of the pfr if you exploit in a strong way. Your method of exploitation should be weighted more towards flop passivity with weak and medium draws when your opponent is passive on later streets (ie a turn cbet gives away a ton of information about his range which you can use to make a lot of good folds) and more towards flop aggression when your opponent is aggressive on later streets (ie he is likely to bet twice with K9 and AK and JT and 87 against which you have 52% equity but are forced to fold the turn mostly). It also may be correct to c/r if your opponent continues past the flop with an extremely wide range, but then folds too much to turn or river barrels.
I suppose to frame the analysis in more GT type vocabulary, the 88% cbet opens a hole in his game: either he has to fold a ton on later streets to not be exploitable by value betting/raising or he has to call a ton on later streets not to be exploitable by relentless bluffing/semibluffing. You can use your HeM stats to find which way on this axis he is disposed and exploit accordingly, or you can just stop folding the flop to cbet and showdown/apply aggression in a balanced manner if you want to hedge against his possible later street adjustments.
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