please don't take offense, but i really dislike the push after the reraise. in a tournament it's the optimal play, but @ a cash table it seems to be supbar.the three of you limped preflop, meaning you can be holding any two cards. chances are that he's reraising behind a cold-call w/ something stronger than tptk or op, so you have to put him on two-pair or better here.

the pot is something like $20. sure your draw is a flip to virtually anything except flopped trips, but you're risking 3.5 times the pot when other plays may take it down w/o chancing a flip. consider: a minraise to 20 or even a re-raise to 30 gets the third player out even if he has the nut flush draw & makes your h-u opponent very seriously question the strength of his top two. did you really flop a set & are trying to extract maximum value out of it/defend against a flush draw? are you re-raising him w/ tp tk or bottom two? unless he's absolute trash, he has a hard decision to make. his options are:

a) he puts you on tp high kicker and/or bottom two & flat calls your re-bet to milk you, which gives you pot odds, plus you can rep the higher two-pair if a face card comes on the turn or the deck pairs 3, OR

b) he puts you on a set & calls out of frustration & checks on the turn/river (which gives you insane pot odds,) OR

c) he puts you on a set & folds thinking that he's basically drawing to 4 or 2 outs, OR

d) puts you on nothing except a draw & pushes in, which you will call anyway, b/c you're a flip anyhow.

anyhow, by simply re-raising him i just think you're just giving yourself a lot more opportunities to take down the pot than by simply pushing... i might've probably done the exact same thing, but i since i KNOW i'm a flip or better against almost anything out there, it seems odd not to exercise the other option here...