
Originally Posted by
martindcx1e

Originally Posted by
Geanosssss
I've found that at
low stakes floating flops is very proffitable, as a lot of the low-stakes donks tend to min-bet with
air or with a very small peice of the
flop. They may make another min-bet on the
turn, although 80% of the time a
raise will make them
fold.
Note that I play sit-n-go's not cash games. And that this topic is very situational and the question very general.
This topic is about cash games only.

Originally Posted by
Geanosssss

Originally Posted by
martindcx1e

Originally Posted by
Vi-Zer0Skill
Raising with K-Qo on a 7c-7d-2h
flop is better than doing so with 5-5, for example. This is because when you
raise the
flop you are essentially forcing
villain to continue only if he has a
pair/
set(a
made hand).
Raising with any hand here does the same thing. Overcards
don't accomplish this better than a small
pair.
I think your missing the point here...
I
don't think so...
I haven't done a great job explaining my point. Here it is again;
when you
raise with 5-5 on a 7-7-2
flop, you are basically turning your hand into a
bluff. This is because when you get called you are almost never
ahead, and way
behind any hand that is
ahead of you (~8%). However if you
raise with K-
Q and get called, you are almost always
behind but have 6
outs and 2 streets to pick up a winning hand (~25%).
So, with a hand like 5-5, which is way
behind a
standard villain's
calling range, floating is better since you have much better
equity against his opening
range. Plus if
villain checks the
turn, you can bet at the pot and win a high % of the time. If
villain bets again it is an easy
fold without
reads. With K-
Q you have much worse
equity against his opening
range and so, while folding is a viable
option, raising sometimes is good too since you aren't as far
behind his
calling range.
Still poorly worded, but one way to consider this is that since 5-5 has some
showdown value you
don't need to
raise the
flop (it is essentially a
bluff).
Villain will almost always
check the
turn with overcards, and then acquiring the pot becomes more profitable since you win a higher % of the time when you
raise the
flop. Having the worst hand also becomes cheaper since
villain will usually
value bet the
turn with a strong hand (7-x, J-J+). Floating overcards is not as good as raising, since you have almost no
showdown value with say a bare ace, but raising isn't terrible since you will get a
fold a good % of the time and you aren't WB
villain's
calling range.