|
 Originally Posted by profnabeshin
I am OOP and put my Villan on an overpair to the board, most likely to Jam the turn.
Likely and definite are two different things. How likely? This is where his range is important. How many combos does he call? How many combos does he fold?
Our 900 bet is a semi-bluff that wins 1.5k when he folds. Therefore, if he folds to this bet half of the time, we make 300 chips before we even see the river.
When he shoves, we now have to call 1.6k to win 4.9k with 15 outs, so we're making money by calling, but only a little bit, just like when he folds half the time we make a little bit.
Basically, if he's folding 50% of the time, we're making a small amount of money. Therefore, we can afford for him to continue a little more often than 50%, but not much. The bet must induce folds at least some of the time, probably around 45%, to break even. (Does anyone know how to calculate this figure accurately?) If we think he continues more often than 55%, we should check and either fold or call based on the size of his bet. And we determine how many hands he folds or continues with based on his range and tendancies. If he has, say, QQ+ AK and we figure he folds all AK except nut flush draw and shoves QQ+ AK nfd, and we have no blockers (we have JTs for argument's sake), then he has 18 combos of QQ+ and one of AK nfd, giving him 19 shove combos, compared to the 15 remaining AK combos that he folds. In this example, he folds around 44% of the time, very close indeed. So really we'd need him to have more fold hands in his range before such a bet can become profitable, perhaps AQs
|