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Pushing allin with a set on the turn, your thoughts?
So I've been considering the situation where you hold a set vs the inevitable players who will be drawing to a straight, flush, or both at the same time. This can be a real pain to deal with, trying to figure out what to do, especially for newer players.
Many people would say the correct strategy is to bet the pot on the flop and turn to both disguise the set you've made and to lay bad pot odds for the people drawing. I used to do this but I really hate getting sucked out on when the river comes and all that money is in the pot already.
So I've changed my strategy a bit. Any time I flop a set and there is a straight or a flush draw on the board, I'll bet the pot on the flop to get players invested in the hand. If the turn misses, and there is still only a straight OR a flush draw on the board, I'll push allin.
(My reasoning in separating the flush and the straight draws is because conceivably someone could be holding both, or two players holding each one. This would make the odds of one of them hitting better than the made hand)
There are several reasons why I think this is +EV play.
1) When you flop a set and get a lot of action, theres a good chance you'll be allin right on the flop. So when that doesn't happen, your most likely against top pair or a draw.
Your opponent could be slowplaying a larger set here, but I'm ignoring this because you'll end up paying him off by the river anyway if the scare cards don't hit.
2) If your against top pair, its unlikely they will call both escalating pot sized bets and then go to the river and call another big bet. This would be the risk involved in this manuever. Against a fishy opponent, by going allin on the turn your losing possible profit from an unimproved river card.
3) The type of player who is willing to call for bad pot odds just on the chance he or she will "get lucky" and hit their flush is the same type of player that will call an allin bet on the turn. In addition, this type of player is also much more likely to be pot committed once they've chased on the flop and missed.
So the bottom line is this.
Positives:
1) Pushing allin on the turn gives you a 4:1 advantage since your set should hold up unimproved against just about anything else out there.
2) No more annoying river situations where you have a lot of money invested with a hand thats probably beaten.
3) Table image as a maniac.
Negatives:
1) Loss of possible bets from top pair on the river.
I don't really see a leak in this move, anyone have thoughts? I feel like this will work a good amount. Sure there will be a lot more folds, but any win is a good win.
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