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 Originally Posted by iopq
 Originally Posted by ColdDecked
 Originally Posted by iopq
 Originally Posted by Robb
 Originally Posted by ColdDecked
We rep the diamond draw here, so unless he wants to bet out when the draw hits, the diamond face cards are bluff outs for us.
Almost half of his unpaired range and exactly half of his paired range has a diamond in it that has be bigger that whatever diamonds we're repping. Bluffing a face card diamond is taking a sizable risk of getting shoved over.
I don't agree we rep a diamond draw by calling, we're repping a diamond draw by raising
also, like half of his diamonds are low, is he really shoving TcTd on a 5d3d9cKd board?
I dunno about you, but I usually call with my draws. So if I' m raising the flop, I usually don't have a draw unless it's a really big one. But flops like this hits my range pretty hard since I' m calling preflop with a lot of suited connectors in position.
well, I prefer if I raise with a draw and he checks to me on the turn I can check it back
same amount of bets as call/ call to get to the river while having fold equity on the flop
Meh, we get 3 bet by the hands that will may likely stack if we hit. Both ways are fine and good imo, but I like to float a lot so I like to keep a wide range for floating. Sometimes I pick a suit in a specific position on the flop to determine whether I play it aggressively. For example, if I had JTo, I'd say to myself if a club is the middle card on the flop, I'll raise my oesd. Helps keep us from building a pattern.
And as for Robb, your play isn't wrong. If you have a good read, it's still +EV for you to be doing this. I personally float with better and worse here (depends on villain of course). Float bet turn saves us money in the long run, I think. If he calls the turn bet I'm giving up unless I hit a 6. I play pretty loose so low non-face card flops are yum yum for me.
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