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When I'm playing, 1 factor matters to me. 1) What is my/his stack size? It's an easily overlookable factor, but let's think about it.
For this example, blinds are .25sb/.50bb. Assume you are heads-up every time.
a) Either you or your opponent has 5.00max in front of you. It was raised 5xbb, so there is now about $5 in the pot. On the flop, you now have enough money to bet half the pot, so your opponent must call 2.50 to get 7.50. To call you must put in 33% of the pot, so pot odds says a flush draw or better will call. There are no implied odds (somebody is all in).
b) One of you has 10.00max in front of you. Same preflop bet. On the flop, you bet the pot, so now your opponent must call 5.00 to get 10.00. The bet is 50% of the pot, so unless it's a race, it's inconceivable that a very bright opponent will call you. Also, there are no implied odds.
c) Both of you have 130.00 in front of you. Same preflop bet. On the flop, you bet the pot, and your opponent calls with a pair of 2's. The turn looks like a blank, you bet the pot again ($20) and he calls with a pair of deuces. The river looks like a blank, you bet $50 more, he reraises, you call. He hit a miracle 2 pair on the river. "WHY THE HELL DID HE KEEP CALLING? I MADE HIM MAKE A MATHEMATICAL MISTAKE!!!" It was only slightly mathematically incorrect for him to stay with a 20% chance to win against TPTK if he knows (100%) you will go all in on the river. He was getting 127.50 by calling 2.50, 122.50 by calling 5 more, 112.50 by calling 20 more (here is his error; he has a 10% chance to win with a 5 outer, so he should lay it down to this bet), but the rest of your stack by calling on the river. So his overall -EV here was the $20 call on the turn; because he will fold the river if he blanks, his implied odds were cut in half and he was paying you $10 to make this call on the turn, all things being equal.
In a casino, I've seen guys call 9xbb raises with 7 8 offsuit. Why do they do this? Because a big fat stack made this raise preflop, they were equally-stacked, and the guy who made the "poor" call knew that the big stack would give him action if he connected with the flop. (In reality, the 7 8 offsuit caller flopped a straight and the 9xbb raiser had AA. The guy with 7 8 won a HUGE pot.)
The way you play through your hands will depend on imlied odds, if your opponents know what those are. If they are stupid fish, then just raise the hell out of the pot and let them "gamble" on whatever crap cards they have. If they flopped a set then they made a mathematical mistake against you preflop (assuming you do have a relatively moderate stack and you raised it enough preflop) because there were no implied odds.
To answer your question, don't worry about laying it down. The only time you should every lay it down on the flop is if you get pushed all-in or check-raised huge on the flop from a tight player...and do you really have to "worry" when you make this laydown?
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