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I think that shoving is bad here. If his range is flushes and sets then yes we're behind. Shoving when behind is bad, we have enough equity to call the flop and re-evaluate the turn. If turn pairs the board then we can safely fold or semi-bluff shove as he will have many more flushes than sets. That would require history though and is a non-standard play. I think flatting flop is best choice given your range you assigned him.
edit*
EV calcs. I need to do as many of these as I can so lets see..
effective stacks are 93BBs
villain is 48/21 over 50 hands so that's probably closer to 35/15 in the long run. ill give him a flatting range of mostly suited connector types and PPs. (excluding QQ+ and AK as even most fish with raise those)
his preflop range is {22+,A2s+,K3s+,Q5s+,J7s+,T7s+,97s+,87s,A5o+,K9o+,Q 9o+,J9o+,T9o}
flop : 6d Jd 5d
if villain only x/r sets and flushes his range is now.
{JsJc,6h6s,6h6c,6s6c,5h5s,5h5c,5s5c,KdQd,KdTd,QdTd ,Kd9d,Qd9d,Td9d,Kd8d,Qd8d,Td8d,9d8d,Kd7d,Qd7d,Td7d ,9d7d,8d7d,Kd4d,Kd3d}
we have 30.3% equity vs that range.
villain starts with 93, calls 4.5 pre, x/r to 28 on the flop. his stack is 60.5. and we need to call 19 to win 51.5 ( 19/(19+51.5)) is 26%. we need 26% to make calling the x/r profitable. we have 30.3 so we should call.
turn is 4h
villain shoves his remaining 60.5 into a pot of 70.5 leaving us calling 60.5 to win 131.( 60.5/(60.5+131)) is 31%. we need 31% to call and only have 16%. we should fold turn.
if we shove the flop, were not folding out any of his range. I mean if he makes a specific play and his entire range is nutted then shoving is just burning money. bet/call flop and fold on brick turns is the correct play IF he is always nutted when he x/r. anything else is spew IMO
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