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 Originally Posted by argash
 Originally Posted by bjsaust
You stopped betting on the turn...
General consensus here seems to be you all don't like me checking the turn here. My thought process was I fired at the Q high flop and he called so I had him on a lower flush draw and when it hit I was hoping he would lead into me. Not to mention I didn't want to scare him off. I felt like checking gave the best chance to get all the chips in the middle.
Let me get this straight... You felt a lower flush draw was a huge portion of his flop calling range. However, when you hit the nut flush on the turn, you didn't want to bet when you believe he has a lower flush fairly often, because that would scare him off? So in essence, you think he is calling the flop with a flush draw, to fold to one bet when he hits his flush? Now that's just strange wouldn't you say?
Also, when you give up the initiative like this here, you are usually going to have a few things go against you. You will either miss value from the numerous hands bad/passive players will station you with. Passive players are just that passive. They aren't bluffing much, they aren't value betting thin, but they are calling a wide range. Why would you give up initiative with the nuts when a villain isn't betting too often, but will call like crazy? Doesn't make sense.
Another thing that could go wrong is just what happened here. You want the money in, but he doesn't want to do it for you. So either he checks back a street and you miss value from his worse hands, or he bets sizes not conducive of getting allin, and you have to check/raise or lead into him larger, which is generally a bit stronger than just bet/bet/betting. If you bet/bet/bet here, you can have the nuts, thin value bets, and bluffs (we prob wouldn't against this player, but he doesn't know that). Well if you check/raise the turn, 'you' probably never have a bluff, nor a thin value hand. You pretty much have a flush everytime. Same goes for the river, you probably aren't betting, c/c, c/shoving with a bluff, or even thin value hands. By bet/bet/betting you exploit his leak of calling too much while also keeping your perceived range wider, meaning he can call down with a wider range (if he's even thinking about that, which he isn't). And these are the reasons when we have the initiative with our strong hands, we generally just bet/bet/bet and try to size it appropriately enough to get all of the money in.
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