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i really hate trying to checkraise or re-bluff a turn card like this. Of course it is extremely dependent on what exactly the flop is, for example, a J97 board is much much different than a J72.
In either case, you have to ask yourself this ... Why is a K on the turn such a valuable bluff card? It's because it nails the preflop raiser's range so hard that there is really nothing a check/calling opponent can do except call the turn hoping villain is bluffing it too much, and hoping he wasn't merging his range w/ a hand like JT figuring the K def didn't hit your range and that he needs to merge occasionally for balance.
Basically, it just becomes a huge guessing game, and if you take it on pure numbers, think about the types of hands that most players like to raise ...
AK AQ AJ KQ KJ QJ KT QT QT JT .... every one of these hands either picked up extra equity on the turn, already had a made hand, or picked up a pair on the turn ....
like i said, the main problem is that it just hits the opener's range too hard and there really is nothing u can do about him bluffing there, it's why it's so profitable to do so.
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