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A $20-$40 game. You are on the button with the A-J and open with a raise. Both blinds call. There is $120 in the pot and three players. The flop is: Q-T-3, giving you a gutshot with an overcard. Both blinds check. You bet and only the small blind calls. There's $160 in the pot. The turn is the 8, giving you four more outs to a straight. Your opponent checks. What do you do?
Answer
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Bet. The player in question checked because he thought he wanted a free card. But when you are heads-up with position over your opponent, and the turn-card is unlikely to have helped him, you should bet again. You may win the pot outright if your opponent was hanging around on middle pair or bottom pair. Furthermore, with eight outs to a straight plus three more overcard outs, you will catch something good at the river about a fourth of the time anyway. Finally, if he is on a flush-draw, then you are giving a free card, not taking one, and a check would invite him to rob you at the river. It is seldom right to take a free card on the turn (and thereby reveal you are on some kind of draw) when you have one opponent and something to show down.
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