obs 0 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 Villian is tight agressive. PFR is fairly high too. Around 14%.Party Poker 2/4 Hold'em (7 handed) converterPreflop: Hero is SB with J:diamond:, J:club:. 3 folds, Hero calls.Flop: (9 SB) 2:heart:, K:heart:, A:heart: (2 players)Hero bets, CO calls.Turn: (5.50 BB) 5:diamond: (2 players)Hero bets, CO calls.River: (7.50 BB) 7:club: (2 players)Hero checks, CO checks.Final Pot: 7.50 BB Link to post Share on other sites
Petoria 0 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 I don't see why you don't check the turn, you'll probably save a bet that way. If he's tight aggressive, he has AA, KK, AK, AQ, QQ. I doubt he has AA, KK, AK he would raise the flop to see where he was. It's probably Q Q. If he checks the turn behind you, you might be able to pick it up if a heart doesnt hit, but not often will that happen. Shut down after the flop. You gain more information by knowing what he does on the turn if it's checked to him. Link to post Share on other sites
obs 0 Posted April 14, 2005 Author Share Posted April 14, 2005 On the turn I fully intend to fold to a raise. Why don't I check? Because there is a good chance if I do he will bet no matter what. Then do I call a bet or fold. If I plan on calling, then betting is better as it costs the same. I'm not ready to give up on this pot yet without him showing any aggression on the flop. Link to post Share on other sites
Vade 0 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 Actually, bet the river tooYou have fold equity on a Q or a K or similar hands, and you've shown aggression all the way, without a playback on the turn Link to post Share on other sites
wrto4556 0 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 Check/fold the turn. Link to post Share on other sites
Vade 0 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 Check/fold the turn.Also true, but my advice is prudent since you bet the turn Link to post Share on other sites
Absolute 0 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 I would actually check/fold this flop. Link to post Share on other sites
wrto4556 0 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 I would actually check/fold this flop.I thought about that, too. You're probably right. Link to post Share on other sites
Rocketwadster 0 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 Villian is tight agressive. Â PFR is fairly high too. Â Around 14%.Party Poker 2/4 Hold'em (7 handed) converterPreflop: Hero is SB with J:diamond:, J:club:. Â Â 3 folds, Hero calls.Had to do what you did. Â Either that, or fold. Â capping is the way to go methinks.Flop: (9 SB) 2:heart:, K:heart:, A:heart: (2 players)Hero bets, CO calls.Had to do what you did. Â Can't give him a free look here, plus if he has no hearts you put the fear in him. Â I hate when I chicken out to the overcards after it was capped pre-flop, so I try NOT to do just that.Turn: (5.50 BB) 5:diamond: (2 players)Hero bets, CO calls.Since you bet the flop, you have to keep betting here also. Â He hasn't raised you back, so he is probably chasing a flush (I put him on pocket queens with the queen of hearts)River: (7.50 BB) 7:club: (2 players)Hero checks, CO checks.Since you bet the flop and the turn, I think you have to bet here. Â If you check, and he bets, are you going to call? Â If yes, then why not spend that call in the form of a bet, giving you a chance (albeit slim) for him to fold. Â If he has queens (with the heart), he may save that last big bet on the river since the flush didnt come.Final Pot: 7.50 BB Link to post Share on other sites
wrto4556 0 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 Rocket,the jacks are no good. Why keep spewing chips? Link to post Share on other sites
KDawgCometh 2 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 Rocket,the jacks are no good. Why keep spewing chips?especially w/ the COs PF cap, no stealer is capping w/crap there Link to post Share on other sites
Rocketwadster 0 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 Rocket,the jacks are no good. Why keep spewing chips?especially w/ the COs PF cap, no stealer is capping w/crap thereYou say the jacks are no good, but don't say when to give up on it. You have to at least take a stab at it after the flop though do you not? The lack of a raise to my betting after the flop tells me that they are not so sure that their hand is best (based on the pre-flop capping that you were able to deliver). The way I showed it being played, you have put in one small bet and one big bet already, so one more big bet for you on the river isn't going to break you, and you have a chance to take it down right there (if they were on a draw and missed). When they checked it down on the river, it tells me that they have shyte, but that shyte may be better than your jacks. :wink: I have given up on so many pots just like this one by not playing agressive, and when it was all said and done I would have won a fair number of them (impossible to put a % on them) had I taken those stabs at it. Do they add up to more than I would have saved had I quit on it after the flop, hard to guesstimate. :? Link to post Share on other sites
KDawgCometh 2 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 I'd give up on the turn. You have two overcards that more then likely hit the capper. so I'll take a stab on the flop, but the villian obviously hit so he's calling you down. The villian is takiing a way ahead/way behind line here, so why chip barf here Link to post Share on other sites
Rocketwadster 0 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 Until I see the results, I'm not convinced that the jacks are no good to a bet on the river. We will never know what the other guy WOULD have done to a bet ont he river (because the posted didn't like I was suggesting), but we will be able to see if there was a possibility (such as my prediction of queens with the queen of hearts). :wink: BTW, I'm no Nostradamus, and I'm certainly no poker pro, I'm just a guy who is giving his opinion on a possible alternate way to play when that situation comes up. As stated above, I've given up on them many times, some of those laydowns were the proper play, others weren't. 8) Link to post Share on other sites
wrto4556 0 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 Until I see the results, I'm not convinced that the jacks are no good to a bet on the river. Â We will never know what the other guy WOULD have done to a bet ont he river (because the posted didn't like I was suggesting), but we will be able to see if there was a possibility (such as my prediction of queens with the queen of hearts). Â :wink: Â That's a losing mentality. No offense, but thinking like that makes me money. Link to post Share on other sites
Rocketwadster 0 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 Until I see the results, I'm not convinced that the jacks are no good to a bet on the river. Â We will never know what the other guy WOULD have done to a bet ont he river (because the posted didn't like I was suggesting), but we will be able to see if there was a possibility (such as my prediction of queens with the queen of hearts). Â :wink: Â That's a losing mentality. No offense, but thinking like that makes me money.What part is a losing mentality? The fact that the poster may or may not have won the hand with one more big bet on the river? Limit poker can't be just about the math, can it? Is how you play the hand going to change based on what pocket pair you hold (say you had pocket queens instead, still no heart)? We don't know what level this is played at (could be $0.05/0.10, could be $1000/$2000.) Based on the math, it shouldn't matter, but based on how people actually play at the different levels, the pre-flop capping could have been with just about anything. I've seen pre-flop capping on $1/2 tables with hands as bad/good as 10 jack (they were suited), so the opponent could have just about anything here, which you must take into consideration. 95% of the time I would have layed it down after taking my one stab at it after the flop, but based on who I was up against I might take the approach I suggested. Didn't I hear somewhere before that poker is about everything BUT the cards (or something like that)? In our case, our cards aren't that great, so we need to either make them great in the eyes of our opponent (to try to win the hand), or just give up.Pardon me for thinking outside of the box. :roll: Link to post Share on other sites
wrto4556 0 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 This part: Until I see the results, I'm not convinced that the jacks are no good to a bet on the river"Until I see his AA I don't think my 99 isn't good." Link to post Share on other sites
Swift_Psycho 1 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 I would actually check/fold this flop.*stamp* Opinion approved by Swift_Psycho. Link to post Share on other sites
rog 0 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 Rocket...you can call it "thinking outside the box", or give it any other cute name you like, but your play is pretty wrong. If I read your analysis right, you have to take a stab at the flop because you have 3rd pair. That didn't work, but you cant slow down on the turn...or the river. You're basically making the decision to bet every street whatever comes before the flop. I want to sit on your left sometime.I dont like the raise on the flop. Check/fold is what I'd likely do. JJ is a strong hand preflop, but this is a very bad flop for you. If CO is a tight raiser, the cap preflop means you're behind and drawing to 2 outs after this flop, and that's ignoring the flush draw/redraw. Jh might be dead for you. If he's a loose raiser, you're ahead postflop maybe half the time here, and you're out of position.If you really want to push this hand, check/raise the flop to send a strong message now while the bets are still small. If he 3-bets the flop, folding cant be too wrong. You've got two overs and a flush draw on the board. You cant just sit there betting into a smooth caller on every street. That's not thinking outside the box, that's spewing chips.Anyone waiting to see the results before deciding what the right play is has NO understanding of what "correct play" actually means. Link to post Share on other sites
PestoSauce 0 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 I haven't seen anyone suggesting check raising the flop and then seeing his reaction. If he raises back, you're beat. If he just calls, bet the turn and check/fold the river if he calls. He MAY lay a KQs, or KJs on the turn. You never know. Link to post Share on other sites
Swift_Psycho 1 Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 I haven't seen anyone suggesting check raising the flop and then seeing his reaction. If he raises back, you're beat. If he just calls, bet the turn and check/fold the river if he calls. He MAY lay a KQs, or KJs on the turn. You never know.We didn't suggest it because it's not a good idea, just chip spewing. Do you really think the guy has K-Q or K-J and capped it pre-flop? Link to post Share on other sites
RISEorFall 0 Posted April 15, 2005 Share Posted April 15, 2005 what if you had pocket 3's here on the flop? do you bet? then do you keep betting trying to push your opponent off his hand? If no, then why do it with Jacks? It sounds good and they look good, but on this flop, they're no good. Don't keep betting just because you have pocket jacks. Link to post Share on other sites
Absolute 0 Posted April 15, 2005 Share Posted April 15, 2005 This part:Until I see the results, I'm not convinced that the jacks are no good to a bet on the river"Until I see his AA I don't think my 99 isn't good."lolthats funny Link to post Share on other sites
Rocketwadster 0 Posted April 15, 2005 Share Posted April 15, 2005 You guys aren't looking at the possible holdings we are against here, and how the play is indicating what we are most likely up against. Depending on the level we are playing at (do we know this yet?), I think we have to give it a pretty broad spectrum:Aces, Kings, Queens, Jacks, Tens, Nines, AK, AQ, AJ, A10. After the flop of 2, King, Ace of hearts, we bet and got called. If the CO had pocket aces or pocket kings, I believe they would have raised us here, so I rule those two hands out. Same with Ace King. Ace queen through to ace 10 is a possibility here, as are pocket queens, Jacks, tens and nines. :? After the turn of the 5 of diamonds, we bet again and got called only. The lack of agression tells me that this person is on a draw, so if they have one of the hands I have indicated in the paragraph above, they have the Queen, Jack, ten, or nine of hearts, with either an ace (to make top pair) or a queen (pair of queens), jack (pair of jacks), ten (pair of tens), or nine (pair of nines). :? After the river, we checked (which I don't necessarily agree with), and the CO checked. Why would they check the river? Because they have what appears to be a weak hand to them. Weak hands to them (in my opinion) would not be ace queen, ace jack, or ace ten in this case, so I put them on a pocket pair with the heart, most likely queens, and maybe even jacks (wouldn't that be something!). :!: Not sure why this has all of a sudden become a personal attack against me, as I am simply trying to put forth another way of looking at the hand. So there are two overcards on the board...who cares. For one more big bet, I think it is worth it to put in a bet on the river, possibly getting the pocket queens or jacks to fold (you are saying that we should fold our pocket jacks, so would the same logic not apply to their jacks and queens?) :wink: Link to post Share on other sites
Absolute 0 Posted April 15, 2005 Share Posted April 15, 2005 You guys aren't looking at the possible holdings we are against here, and how the play is indicating what we are most likely up against. Depending on the level we are playing at (do we know this yet?), I think we have to give it a pretty broad spectrum:Aces, Kings, Queens, Jacks, Tens, Nines, AK, AQ, AJ, A10. After the flop of 2, King, Ace of hearts, we bet and got called. If the CO had pocket aces or pocket kings, I believe they would have raised us here, so I rule those two hands out. Same with Ace King. Ace queen through to ace 10 is a possibility here, as are pocket queens, Jacks, tens and nines. :? After the turn of the 5 of diamonds, we bet again and got called only. The lack of agression tells me that this person is on a draw, so if they have one of the hands I have indicated in the paragraph above, they have the Queen, Jack, ten, or nine of hearts, with either an ace (to make top pair) or a queen (pair of queens), jack (pair of jacks), ten (pair of tens), or nine (pair of nines). :? After the river, we checked (which I don't necessarily agree with), and the CO checked. Why would they check the river? Because they have what appears to be a weak hand to them. Weak hands to them (in my opinion) would not be ace queen, ace jack, or ace ten in this case, so I put them on a pocket pair with the heart, most likely queens, and maybe even jacks (wouldn't that be something!). :!: Not sure why this has all of a sudden become a personal attack against me, as I am simply trying to put forth another way of looking at the hand. So there are two overcards on the board...who cares. For one more big bet, I think it is worth it to put in a bet on the river, possibly getting the pocket queens or jacks to fold (you are saying that we should fold our pocket jacks, so would the same logic not apply to their jacks and queens?) :wink:you are being a bit paranoidso, to put it politely, i think you need to check/fold the flop. Link to post Share on other sites
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