Select Page
Poker Forum
Over 1,292,000 Posts!
Poker ForumBeginners Circle

Did I play this hand right?

Results 1 to 12 of 12

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #1

    Default Did I play this hand right?

    PokerStars Game #25308024864: Hold'em No Limit ($0.02/$0.05) - 2009/02/24 19:24:25 GMT [2009/02/24 14:24:25 ET]
    el036: posts big blind $0.05
    jjppoo: sits out
    *** HOLE CARDS ***
    Dealt to spud_gun [Ks Qh]
    CrazyBitos: folds
    Streydan: raises $0.15 to $0.20
    spud_gun: calls $0.20
    Fooze666: folds
    PotRaise: folds
    G-Sport-S04: folds
    Squallh: folds
    el036: folds
    *** FLOP *** [Kh 2c 7c]
    Streydan: bets $0.30
    spud_gun: raises $0.50 to $0.80
    Streydan: calls $0.50
    *** TURN *** [Kh 2c 7c] [Qd]
    Streydan: checks
    spud_gun: bets $2
    Streydan: raises $2.15 to $4.15
    spud_gun: raises $0.79 to $4.94 and is all-in
    Streydan: calls $0.02 and is all-in
    Uncalled bet ($0.77) returned to spud_gun

    About 20 hands in, had him down as loose aggressive didn't feel like he'd hit a set, I guess the question is, was the reraise the right move in that spot?
  2. #2
    Fold pre flop, you're way behind an utg opening range and there's players still to act.

    I'd just call the flop - you're only going to get action from hands that beat you when you raise here. If you really want to raise, make the raise bigger so you're not laying him awesome odds to draw to a flush etc.

    Turn is standrad and looks like you may have sucked out on AK. The problem with your flop raise is that if he 3 bets, you are in a terrible spot and on non Q turns you're oop with a marginal hand and an inflated pot with no idea where you are. Just call flop in position and evaluate the turn. You're mini raise on the flop is pointless imo.
  3. #3
    Quote Originally Posted by Carroters
    Fold pre flop, you're way behind an utg opening range and there's players still to act.

    I'd just call the flop - you're only going to get action from hands that beat you when you raise here. If you really want to raise, make the raise bigger so you're not laying him awesome odds to draw to a flush etc.

    Turn is standrad and looks like you may have sucked out on AK. The problem with your flop raise is that if he 3 bets, you are in a terrible spot and on non Q turns you're oop with a marginal hand and an inflated pot with no idea where you are. Just call flop in position and evaluate the turn. You're mini raise on the flop is pointless imo.
    This.

    The point about not raising in WA/WB situations is extremely important. If they're bluffing, they're drawing slim. So let them bluff! A raise makes them less likely to keep firing (and if they do you're more likely WB).
    Ich grolle nicht...
  4. #4
    im with the 2 posts above. ur way behind until the suck out with the queen. i don't really mind the raise on the turn tho.
  5. #5
    Quote Originally Posted by TAGurit
    im with the 2 posts above. ur way behind until the suck out with the queen. i don't really mind the raise on the turn tho.
    he didn't necessarly get sucked out on, it could've easily been KK/QQ who beat him
  6. #6
    dev's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Posts
    1,624
    Location
    swonging and swonging
    I don't know that this is exactly a WA/WB situation.

    You can play this preflop if you really think the guy is raising UTG with garbage. I don't think 20 hands is enough to get that kind of a read. Assuming we have that kind of a read, we generally want to raise to isolate, and KQ is borderline.

    On the flop, we're really not strong enough to be charging the flush draw yet. We can definitely call and see the turn. If it's a blank and he checks we'll be betting to charge a flush draw to see the river. Very few V's can check a better hand than us there. Since we hit the turn so hard, we're looking to get the money in ASAP.

    So preflop is questionable, flop is questionable, turn is good. What was your reasoning for raising the flop? I can understand if the guy was cbetting every flop, but after 20 hands how many flops could he have seen?
    Check out my self-deprecation here!
  7. #7
    I raised the flop to try and drive the guy out, charging the flush draw.

    Then when I hit the turn as well I thought there was no point trying to hide the fact it'd hit me hard, add to that the flush draw again.
  8. #8
    dev's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Posts
    1,624
    Location
    swonging and swonging
    The phrase "drive the guy out" made me think of this:
    http://www.flopturnriver.com/phpBB2/...ld-t25206.html
    Check out my self-deprecation here!
  9. #9
    Quote Originally Posted by AFchung
    Quote Originally Posted by TAGurit
    im with the 2 posts above. ur way behind until the suck out with the queen. i don't really mind the raise on the turn tho.
    he didn't necessarly get sucked out on, it could've easily been KK/QQ who beat him
    ...true
  10. #10
    If you have him down as a loose aggressive player and seen him bet with air, you could just call the flop and let him hang himself.

    Flop: A raise on the flop opens up the betting again, and if he has AK, he would've probably stuck in a reraise, which you'd have to fold to and lose your chance of getting lucky. IMO, it'd be better to just called the flop here and re-evaluate the turn. If a club comes on the turn and he's still betting, you can consider folding or put in a small to represent the flush. Even if he calls the raise on the turn, it'd be pretty hard to bet the river (unless he has the goods), in which case you can check behind.

    Turn: Turn is fine, as others have mentioned, you probably sucked out on AK.
  11. #11
    Quote Originally Posted by spud_gun
    I raised the flop to try and drive the guy out, charging the flush draw.

    Then when I hit the turn as well I thought there was no point trying to hide the fact it'd hit me hard, add to that the flush draw again.
    You don't want to drive him out, you just want to give him the wrong price to chase his draw but hope he chases anyway. When you bet so big that you force your opponent to fold his draw, all you've done is help your opponent make the right decision.

    Instead, you want to figure out the maximum to bet that will still get called by villain. Of course, villain won't always be on a draw here, but if villain is on a draw, you don't want him to fold.
  12. #12
    Here is an intresting spot in which both arguments are true, but neither can be accomplished without the others failure.
    Side #1 Villian has a draw and you try to raise enough for the value to be favorable for yourself, which i thought you could have raised slightly more maybe to $1.00 or so. This would create a positive value for yourself and he would be in a unfavorable situation,
    However
    Side #2 Villian has A-K, you raise the action to over 1/2 the pot, he then reraises and you are faced with a decision which could have been prevented if you had not raised his bet. You then fold (maybe) and you never see the Q and possibly a bigger pot.

    The other option would have been to just call his bet, which puts him in the driving seat for the rest of the hand. After the turn he would fire out a larger bet(probably) and then you could then force the action by raising enough for the odds to be in your own favor, and if he has A-K you're in prefect position to double up.

    I probably would have gone with option 2 in the moment. But as I am typing this post I realize option 3 would be the most profitable in most cases,(this one obviously turned out great for you).

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •