Spoon, Spoon, Spoon. You know better than to post hands without giving us all of the information.

2. Give any stats or reads on the opponents in question. This includes any table image you may have as well. So many decisions in poker come down to our opponents' tendencies and what our opponents think of us at any given time, so if you don't post this information, you will rarely get good replies since it's often too difficult to determine what the best course of action is if you're only given the hand history and nothing else. As a result of posting stats and reads, you will get better replies, which will increase the benefit you receive from posting hands.

3. Don't show the results of the hand. This includes whatever action you took during the decision you're asking about. For example, instead of setting up a question like "Should I have called on the river here?" you should edit out your decision on that street and the result of the hand and ask something like "Is a call +EV here, or should I just fold?" If you post results, you skew the replies you get and the type of advice you can get in the hand, which will severely lower the potential for growth you have in posting any single particular hand.


Seriously though, I can't see a scenario where this is anything but a snap call. You are getting just under 2 to 1 and have 41% equity if his range is as tight at KK,TT,77,AKs,AKo.

The only way this is a fold is if you can take AKo out of the above range as then your equity drops to just under 18%