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Re: TPTK trouble
 Originally Posted by PokerFreak
The biggest problem I have with TPTK is how to play a big raised pot against multiple callers.
At the Bodog $100 table on my first hand, I was dealt AQ in late position. There were 3 limpers, so I raised to $7 and there were 4 callers. This meant on the flop there was about $29. The flop was good, Q79 rainbow, giving me TPTK. It was checked around to me, so I bet $22. An early position player called. Everyone else folded.
The turn completes the rainbow with a 2, not completing any draws. My problem comes here. How do I handle this situation, on the turn, if it is checked to me? I could likely be up against a dominated pair, a straight draw or a set. The flop call and the turn check didn't really give me any info (no Pokertracker on Bodog, either), but I was covered.
I think the right move is to bet, but there's $73 in the pot (-3 in rake). I have $71 left in my stack. A normal bet should be at least half the pot. If I bet $40 I have $31 left. If I am reraised, I can't just fold to less than min-raise, so I am effectively all in if I bet. If I bet (either $40 or all in), I am risking donking off my buy-in with TPTK.
Thoughts?
Reads.
Now you know he likes to limp in EP with a lot of middle pairs. If he flops his set, he check/calls to the raiser on the flop, then check/raises (probably a blank card) on the turn.
Plan accordingly.
Of course, you're not just playing against one guy. My advice is to try not to put all your chips in the pot during a marginal situation. TPTK has its fine lines, but this HH you posted gets scary past the flop betting. You could throw out a small bet on the turn, and if you get raised allin, don't say "well, I'm getting such and such odds and I've invested 'x' amount already, I have to call". That's def not the right attitude. Pot odds don't matter anything if you're not getting the correct winning odds to match them. If he has the set or two pair, there is no way your calling of his AI raise can be +EV. I actually prefer the check here on the turn, follewed by calling a reasonable bet when a non-scare card comes out. Yes you are letting him catch a free card to beat you, but what many people fail to realize is that in the instance you are behind in this hand, which is going to be more likely than not, you are getting a free card to beat him. Use that position to your advantage!
"Don't invest all your chips in a marginal situation." I try to repeat that to myself like clockwork, but sometimes I forget too.
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