Select Page
Poker Forum
Over 1,291,000 Posts!
Poker ForumShort-Handed NL Hold'em

100z: Hand selection for 3barrel sb v bu 3bet pot

Results 1 to 6 of 6
  1. #1

    Default 100z: Hand selection for 3barrel sb v bu 3bet pot

    PokerStars Zoom No-Limit Hold'em, $1.00 BB (6 handed) - PokerStars Converter Tool from http://www.flopturnriver.com/

    Button ($100)
    Hero (SB) ($155.09)
    BB ($74.04)
    UTG ($100)
    MP ($139.03)
    CO ($117.81)

    Preflop: Hero is SB with 8, 7
    3 folds, Button raises to $2.50, Hero raises to $10, 1 fold, Button calls $7.50

    Flop: ($21) 7, Q, A (2 players)
    Hero bets $10.03, Button calls $10.03

    Turn: ($41.06) A (2 players)
    Hero bets $19.60, Button calls $19.60

    River: ($80.26) 9 (2 players)
    Hero bets $115.46 (All-In)


    not sure how I feel about this

    I think most regs just raise a set on the flop or turn for whatever reason. I dont think KQ ever folds turnso I figure to put 87 > KJ/KT for barreling off.


    so bluffs: 87s (3) 76s (3) = 6ish

    AQ (6) AK (8) A7s (2) 77 (3) = 19ish

    The problem is this is potential 7x hands, and I have a number of unpaired cards in my 2barrel range that can bomb river. 7x probably has close to zero sd value, though I think we seldom come across someone who will meek out of betting the river when checked to with a hand such as JcTc.

    I think Im getting carried away going 3 when the board pairs here w/ 87 considering how many unpaired hands I can have, like XcXc or just KT etc. JT is probably the nut bluffing hand as it blocks AT/AJ so I feel like I need to have JT > 87. So now I really dislike this and believe I should be checking the turn.

    Thoughts on what our 3barrel range should look like?
    Last edited by Micro2Macro; 03-30-2015 at 11:48 PM.
  2. #2
    Renton's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Posts
    8,863
    Location
    a little town called none of your goddamn business
    His definite calling range (no combos discounted):

    AQ (6)
    77 (1)
    A7s (1)
    A9s (1)

    total of 9 combos

    His probably calling range:

    AJ (8)
    AT (6) {I'm having him fold or 4-bet ATo some of the time so we discount AT 25%}

    total of 14 combos

    His maybe calling range:

    A8s (1)
    A6s-A2s (8) {I'm discounting these combos 20% as well because they sometimes 4-bet or fold}

    total of 9 combos

    His always folding range:

    KQ (12)
    QJs QTs (4) {I'm really not sure he calls turn with this many queens so I'm discounting QJo entirely and QJs/QTs by 33%}
    Qc9c (1)
    KcJc (1)
    KcTc (1)
    JcTc (1)
    KJ (2) {Seems reasonable to expect this hand to get stubborn and call turn from time to time}

    total of 22 combos
    grand total of 54 combos

    So, worst case scenario he will call his maybes every time:

    EV(shove 60.4) = (22/54)*(80.26) - (9/54)*(60.4) - (14/54)*(60.4) - (9/54)*(60.4) = -3.09bb

    And, best case scenario he will fold his maybes every time:

    EV(shove 60.4) = (22/54)*(80.26) - (9/54)*(60.4) - (14/54)*(60.4) + (9/54)*(80.26) = 20.35bb

    how often does he need to fold his maybes?

    0 = (22/54)*(80.26) - (9/54)*(60.4) - (14/54)*(60.4) + (9*x/54)*(80.26) - (9*(1-x)/54)*(60.4), x = 13.2%

    So this seems definitely like a spot where you should be bluffing quite a bit. The question is what are the best hands to choose for this bluff?

    As you said, blocking KQ is pretty bad. It seems quite clear to me that your best bluff by far is JT with no club. This blocks almost none of his always folding range but much of his AJ/AT that is almost certainly calling. A lot of people 3-bet JTo with high frequency in SB vs BU, but I'm not sure how often you have that hand.

    JT with one or two clubs is still quite reasonable for bluffing, probably better than 87 on the river, and DEFINITELY better than 87 if you consider the compound turn-river play. 87 is a horrific semibluff on the turn, as it draws to a bluff catcher, and betting the turn strengthens his range to such a degree that I'm almost certain you wouldn't be able to c/c a river 7. The only function betting turn has with 87 is that you block A7/77, and in a GT sense you fold out lower equity hands that would make you fold your best hand, such as KJ/KT. You also fold out chop sevens and 88-JJ which may have peeled the flop.

    I think all your low club hands such as 5c4c 8c6c etc are reasonable bluffs on the river. Not quite as good as 87, but they had much higher EV building the pot up to this point. Not only do you need to justify betting river with 87, you need to own the turn play as well.

    Anyway, sorry about the epic-length post. I'm okay with the flop cbet. I think there are some runouts that will be very profitable for your hand, but I think the board pairing turn is a pretty thick give-up. It is possible that without betting hands like 87, you will not have enough bluffs, but I am not so sure. You have KT/KJ and high clubs that make leveraged turn bets but give up on the river, and you have JT and low clubs to follow up on that leverage. Remember that his indifferent bluff catchers will block half of your value range, so its pretty easy to bluff too much even when you have all the big Ax to bet.
    Last edited by Renton; 03-31-2015 at 12:39 AM.
  3. #3
    Renton's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Posts
    8,863
    Location
    a little town called none of your goddamn business
    Oh and I didn't want to go too crazy on it, but the 3-bet size seems theoretically unsound with a linear 3-betting range from the SB. I think you expose yourself too much to 4-betting, and since your range isn't polarized, it actually has much worse EV against a tighter BU defending range. I make it 8 here, but i'd 3-bet to 9 or 10 from the BB facing a 2.5 button open, for the same reasons.
    Last edited by Renton; 03-31-2015 at 12:43 AM.
  4. #4
    Appreciate the detailed response. I like how you broke down his calling range into definite, probably, and maybe categories.

    Given your range analysis, it would seem that the more 4bet happy villain is with his Axs hands, the more likely it would be that overbluffing in this spot would be +EV
  5. #5
    Renton's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Posts
    8,863
    Location
    a little town called none of your goddamn business
    Quote Originally Posted by Micro2Macro View Post
    Given your range analysis, it would seem that the more 4bet happy villain is with his Axs hands, the more likely it would be that overbluffing in this spot would be +EV
    Once you enter the realm of explo you need to identify the leak you're trying to exploit. The low suited aces are his indifferent calling hands. If he overfolds, then you'd rather those were in his range, and vice versa if he over-defends. So yeah vs a sticky player who calls down too much, that statement would hold.
  6. #6
    kmind's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    5,612
    Location
    Not Giving In
    Awesome posts, Renton!

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •