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Bottom set is good the vast majority of the time ANYWAY regardess of the nature of the pot. My point is that it is usually a stronger hand in a raise pot because isolation occurred preflop (e.g. less players and the hand we're heads up with a hand that is somewhat defined).
What exactly makes bottom set a stronger hand in a raised pot then an unraised pot, given the assumptions that the board won't flop made straight or made flush possibilities, AND that people aren't folding pairs preflop for standard raises? I'm speaking just about hand strength, not stack size or deception or whatever.
We don't intend to fold out pairs. If we raise with 22, they call with 33 and we both flop sets, we're probably not getting away from it. What we do fold out however is unpaired hands that make unlikely boats, like J7.
that make unlikely boats eh? What do you think the odds are that we'll hit an underful and an unpaired hand will hit an overfull? I have no idea what the answer is, but I can gaurentee you 100% that they are astronomical.
Also in a raised pot the stack ratios are much less deep when we hit our set. It thus becomes more "correct" for someone to stack off with top pair. Even a donk can often get away from top pair in an unraised pot because the effective stacks are so high related to the size of the pot on the flop.
agreed, although it's worthy to note, that against players like us, it's basically never correct to stack off with just top pair. period.
fwiw, I'm not really arguing that raising pairs is bad, but I think some of your reasoning is a bit faulty. Like in a 6max game where everyone has relatively healthy stacks, I'll open 22+ from all positions, and I'd much rather raise them then overlimp. Although in a FR game I think opening all pairs from all positions is a bit silly, particularly given the table dynamics of most middlish stakes games.
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