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First, losing to 4 of a kind is very rare. Don't let it affect your play.
Second, a decent analysis of this hand requires ALOT more information. Was it raised preflop, how many people saw the flop, what was the pot preflop, what was the action after that, was it bet and raised, who bet when, what position, what was their table history, how many hands had he played postflop in the last hour (in an SnG early you don't know this), what was your table image, where you pushing the betting or limp calling, what was the pot after the flop betting, turn betting, etc, what % of the pot was bet or raised.... there could be twice this many questions easily. NL poker is very simple and very complicated based on the situation. First hand of an SnG, AA all-in preflop called with KK - very simple. Your hand falls into the more complicated arena.
Oh, and what were your cards?
Based on the information you gave I'll make a couple of observations.
1. Trips are good even with 3 of a suit on the board alot of the time, unless you "declare" that you have the flush with a really large bet, then he's not folding.
2. He could have had a larger flush, I don't know what your cards were. (I know he Didn't have the flush, but that's another reason he would stay in the pot and possibly beat you.)
3. If he thought you had the flush he still had a number of outs on the river, if the board pairs + his trips = full house.
With that said, again refer to all the different factors in the first run-on sentence. They all matter.
Everything someone does at the table gives information about their hand: what they've done in the past counts, position counts, betting amounts count, etc. It's not only information you can collect, but there's also information that you GIVE. If you were playing it slow to win more chips and got beat on the river, then oh well. If you wanted him to fold the hand before that, then you should have made it incredibly expensive for him to catch that last 7.
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