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schnibbs

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About schnibbs

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  1. 10K hands isn't really a big enough sample size to draw any specific conclusions from. Also, keep in mind that when you are dealing with 3 different stakes, your money won will be skewed. You need to look for big blinds won rather than money won. For example, you may have stacked 3 people with JJ in 2NL, and assuming you were both 100bb deep, that would be only a $6 profit. You could easily lose $6 in one hand with JJ in 25NL where you weren't even all-in.What I would do is review all the hands that you had JJ, QQ, KK, AQ and make a note on hands that you were unsure whether you played the
  2. Against a guy with a 1 AF, I'd bet the river, and I'd bet it harder, like .40-.45 cents. He might check back the river with a small->medium flush, but he'd most certainly call a bet with most flushes. I'd only consider a c/r if he were more aggressive.
  3. I don't think a set or two pair are in either of the two villains' ranges on the river, except maybe a rivered A6 or 66. Sets and two pair hands raise or bet the flop or turn. I don't see any weird straight combo getting to the river either. The only 57 combo that calls the flop is 5h7h, and we have the 5h.I think weak Aces and flush draws are mainly in both villains' ranges. A passively played Ah xh hand could have gotten there. I like a bet of 500-600 on the river. We may get both guys to call with weak Aces. If we get raised by Ah xh, we only lose the 500-600 bet on the end.
  4. I was hoping to raise preflop and isolate the fish UTG preflop. I was surprised at CO flatting.I was a bit lost as what to do on the flop. I feel like UTG can have anything, including a 10, but also a ton of lower pocket pair combos. The pot was so bloated on the the flop, a pot raise would commit me to the hand. The fact that CO was still to act was on my mind, as well. There's a good chance that he whiffed the flop and will just fold out, however I felt like I couldn't flat this donk bet of .50 and allow CO to call behind with QJ or 78 and give him outs, too. There's also a possiblity
  5. UTG was running at 81/0/2 over about 30 hands. CO was running at 28/3 over about the same sample size. Not sure on CO's aggression factor. I was 5-tabling, but hadn't noticed him being extremely aggressive, though.PokerStars No-Limit Hold'em, $0.05 BB (8 handed) - Poker-Stars Converter Tool from FlopTurnRiver.comsaw flopUTG ($13.12)UTG+1 ($2.79)MP1 ($8.43)Hero (MP2) ($5)CO ($4.51)Button ($6.54)SB ($11.60)BB ($5.95)Preflop: Hero is MP2 with Q, QUTG calls $0.05, UTG+1 calls $0.05, 1 fold, Hero bets $0.30, CO calls $0.30, 3 folds, UTG calls $0.25, UTG+1 calls $0.25Flop: ($1.27) 9, 10, 10(4 pla
  6. Yuck at sitting at a table with 5 short stackers. I like OP's line so far. CO could be opening wide, even though he's short. SB could be 3-betting light. I'd 4-bet to at least $3-3.50 though, which would make the shove call much easier. I still think JJ is in good shape here.
  7. Good discussion! I like it.I haven't played much 6-max, only in home games. I've not played stakes higher than 5NL online, so I may be off on discussions about proper lines.So, with that in mind, I like the c/c turn, c/c river line for the simple reason of playing a small pot with a one pair hand, especially since this is a TAGish UTG raiser and we're oop. One can definitely make the argument that this misses value, though.
  8. I'm just trying to get straight in my what you're advocating. From the bolded above, it sounds like you're saying c/r the turn. Then if he 3-bets we can safely fold. We can make him make a mistake by flatting hands we beat, ie 88-JJ. I'm asking, if he flats the c/r on the turn, our plan is to v-bet the river, since he will make a mistake by flatting with worse?I'm not saying you're wrong, I'm just trying to get our plan for the rest of the hand set.
  9. So you think villain will most likely call the turn check/raise a majority of the time with 88-JJ? I might be mistaken, but I think Villain folds out most of the pocket pairs we beat if we check/raise. So, if all goes to plan in this hand, we c/r the turn and after he calls that, put in a v-bet on the river and hope to get called by his 88-JJ range that we beat, correct?
  10. I like this. Villain will most likely fire the turn with 88-JJ, AK. Check/call turn and judging by his AF, he'll probably fire out a river bluff. You'll also lose minimum if he shows up with a trickily-played QQ-AA with a c/c turn, c/c river line.
  11. I'm fine with the check/call on the turn and river, if we're fine calling off all of our chips to this guy, IF we think he's bluffing us. After the preflop action, our stacks are incredibly short. I'm not comfortable with just calling off all of our chips with such a small stack to pot ratio. I'm much more comfortable check/calling his bluffs if we're still very deep.Can this not be a value shove, too? A7, A5, A4, 76, 87, even maybe 45 are all in this "tricky" player's raising range. Since he's donked his chips, he may be steaming enough to call with a wider range, or overs.Edit: The mor
  12. I'd fold preflop. You might be ahead of the short stack shover's range, but since villain likes to call reraises with less than premium hands, he's most likely not folding, especially since he has position on you. You will have no idea where you're at on the flop, especially since you've had trouble getting reads on him. That's not even to mention he may even 4-bet you preflop. The reason for the limp preflop is to see a multi-way pot and set mine.Not only that, you have two other limpers behind you that could call or squeeze. As played, if my calculations are correct, the pot is $118 (3
  13. I'm fine with 3b preflop against a weak-tight raiser. I would check back turn after getting flatted on the flop. Shoving is definitely an option if we think he may fold over or his flush draw. What's our image on this table? If hero has been laggy, he may float the flop with a wider range, in which I think I'd shove the turn to let him know we're not kidding around.I like checking, although shoving is not a bad second alternative. Betting out without shoving would just be terrible.
  14. I figured AA or KK would 3bet the turn, but it's still possible that he has these holdings. I just downgraded the percentage of him holding AA or KK. My purpose for that post was to show my thinking during the hand, further trying to narrow his range given the action.It's possible he has 99, there, again I think he raises the turn with 99. Regardless, I'm not folding my set/boat. If he has 99, nh. . .I got coolered. My main question was how much value can I get out of this hand as played? Does an overbet shove call this with trip queens. I'm thinking it does, especially at 5NL.Trystero,
  15. I had my HUD running at the time, but I can't remember what his cb% was. I figured he'd bet the turn harder than less than 1/3 pot with his range. If he bets 50 cents on the turn, I can pop it up to 1.80-2 on turn and get it in on the river.
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