^^ what he said. Because A6s is one of the strongest hands of the
range you could be bluffing with (one of the ones that has the strongest pot
equity vs the
range of your opponent). In other words, if you
don't
bluff with A6s here, it pretty much means you never ever
bluff (except maybe with an
open ended straight flush draw).
It's also good for
balance against regs.
Besides, what else are you going to do? Chasing your
draw or folding seem like inferior options.
I am also looking at your pf
range, why is it that, for example, you include Td9d and Th9h but not Tc9c? Also with a
PFR of 16% it is arguable (not impossible though) whether he raises stuff like 87s-T9s, A5s-A8s and 22-66.
Now write us a piece on the EV of your semi-
bluff, say if you make a half pot-sized
raise. Split his cbetting
range into hands that
fold, hands that
call and hands that
shove over and do some math. Then should you
call if he shoves over with the shoving
range you came up with?
Note: this can get quite complicated, so you will have to make some simplifying (conservative) assumptions, such as "when he calls I will only win 25% of the time in the end" (either because you will go to
showdown and
loose, or because you will have to
fold the
turn). For starters, you can even start by assuming that he will only
fold or
shove over, never
call.