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				 Re: How far would you go with Big Slick pre-flop and post fl
				
					
						
	I like the advice after the flop here.  It is exactly how I play it. However preflop if I am faced with a raise of 8 times the BB I will probably throw it away. Unless the guy making the raise is a known maniac or I am short stacked in a tournament than I stroke it all in.
		
			
			
				
					  Originally Posted by bunthorne 
	
		
			
			
				
					  Originally Posted by chewbaka I believe that AK is the key hand in a poker tournament. You have to win with it against pocket pairs and you have to beat it when your opponent has it. More often than not the decisive hand in a tournament (not necessarily the last hand) involves one player holding AK . I also believe that AK is the most misplayed hand in poker.
 
Preflop, you can reraise with AK or flat call  the raise , depending on the situation. If the pot is raised and reraised preflop, you should just call . You could consider moving in if there are 3 or 4 other players in the pot with you - the idea of moving in is not only to try to reduce the field but to see the entire board - with AK you want to see all five cards as, until the A or K pairs, the hand is nothing. The only hand you are really afraid of is AA  - even KK  is not so bad as you could hit the A to beat it. Moving all in would prevent you from being bluffed.
 
On the flop  following a bet and a call , if you have missed then you must fold . You have nothing and are almost certainly behind . Easy play. Lets I am in a cash game, I have called a raise 8 times the BB and the flop comes down K72 rainbow.  I have hit top pair.  But I have no confidence that my opponent doesn’t have aces.  I have to put him on a big pair seeing as there are 2 kings out I have to hope he has QQ and not AA.
 The even worse scenario is flop comes K72 and my opponent is holding KK. Not very likely but I have run into it many, many times. That’s why with AK I like to be the one raising not calling raises.
 Now faced with a small raise, I will reraise to see where I stand.
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