I am not 100 % SURE he doesn't have an 8 or an T but his betting strongly suggest he has neither. As I said I had watched this guy a lot and every time he betted that strong it was a complete bluff. You would think he could do so with strong hands also to mix it up, but the few times he was called down he showed stone cold bluffs only. When he bets to try to steal/value bet the pot on the turn I have a specific reason to just call him. He's bet on the turn COULD be a legitimate bet, but because he´s icredibly sore style of play I will know for sure at the river. The king at the river is a perfect card.

When he immedietaly bets all-in it follows his pattern. Why should I be afraid to call him down? Because it is a big bet? Because it is a "strong" move? As I said, following his usual pattern that bet means he is really really weak and just want to take the pot down. Desperately. While I seriously doubt a strong player would ever play like that, a better player would at least try to mix up pulling of this "desperation" bets with some legitimate hands. Theres a but here, and the put is that I by no means have the stone cold nut myself...

If my assumptions are incorrect and he tricked me to call him down, then I just lost 71 bucks. But I'd thought the odds of him betting a legitimate hand here was very very slim, and since I believed "I had the odds" to call him down. I think it´s really important to stick with your read when you believe you have the best of it. Players that are bullies are trying to do that all the time - Bully you! Don't let him do it... Regarding Les_Worm;s comment about the full stack, you are of course right. I always look to rebuy ASAP, even when Im only down a few dollars. I was quadtablin' though and after losing the previous hand I was involved in another and didn't make the rebuy before this hand came up.