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Jimcs50
06-19-2012, 09:37 PM
Went to Vegas this weekend for my annual WSOP tourney(played in 1500 buyin) Got busted out in 4th level with two suckouts on river within 20 mins of each other. Oh well, that's poker.

Here is my question:



I was playing at my hotel poker room(Venetian) Sunday. I won $1360 on Sat night, so was feeling pretty good Sunday.

I play in the 2-5 NL holdem game. I lost my first buy-in($400) on a huge draw that missed(open ended straight flush draw). I reloaded for $1000. I got my stack up to $1900, so was up $500 at the time of this situation:

This player who was playing with with me all day was getting pretty drunk, and three times that day, he went all in preflop with AA, AA, and QQ, only winning minimum pots, so he was just a so-so player at best.

Anyway, there was a straddle, so it was $10 to go. He was in middle position, and he makes it $45, the player to my right (a pro from Holland) calls, I look down at 8 6c, so I call on button, because I'm putting him on Queens or Kings.

Flop:

8 6 5

:wow


I am turning cartwheels in my head.

To my surprise, he moves all in for $1130.00

The pro folds.

Now I go into the tank. I go through all the hands that are possible given my previous info on player and the fact that he raised in pretty early position to $45. My first instinct is big pair(10s, Js, Qs) and he is trying to chase away drawers.

I think of hands that beat me, 88, 66 or 55, I pretty much eliminate 88 and 66, just because I have both of those cards, so 55 is possible.

I ask myself if I had raised to $45 and flopped a set, I would probably try to look like I had an over pair or AK, and bet probably about $90, and hope someone would call or even raise with a draw or two pair.

Now I only have $45 invested so do I want to risk $1130 on a call?


What would you guys put him on, and what would you do in this situation?

Jimcs50
06-19-2012, 09:44 PM
fold

What do you think he was holding?

SpurinDallas
06-19-2012, 09:47 PM
I'm thinking being drunk he raised with crap pre flop and got lucky as hell with his 7-9 suited

MannyIsGod
06-19-2012, 09:51 PM
Not enough info on how he plays but if its a rainbow flop really the only 3 things you should be worried about are the sets which are even more unlikely since you have top two. Then again, if you're going to fold with top two then you probably shouldn't call preflop.

My first instinct is that a fold here is weak. You should probably know what you're going to do in this situation before you even call though. You're ahead of everything except a flopped flush, straight, or set. The sets are unlikely, the straights even more unlikely unless he's loose (in which case his range probably opens up enough to call anyway), and I don't have info on a flush. AKs on a flush draw is a possibility too.

Don't know, my first instinct to call but then I saw how much you had behind and I thought I'd probably fold but then I thought back to call. I probably need to know how he plays. Most 2-5 players are garbage but I can't just know that for sure with this guy.

Good hand to post though, Jim. I haven't "thought poker" in a while (when I go to the casinos here I pretty much play very tight and very straight forward because its easy money) so its nice to think about it a bit again.

Jimcs50
06-19-2012, 09:59 PM
Not enough info on how he plays but if its a rainbow flop really the only 3 things you should be worried about are the sets which are even more unlikely since you have top two. Then again, if you're going to fold with top two then you probably shouldn't call preflop.

My first instinct is that a fold here is weak. You should probably know what you're going to do in this situation before you even call though. You're ahead of everything except a flopped flush, straight, or set. The sets are unlikely, the straights even more unlikely unless he's loose (in which case his range probably opens up enough to call anyway), and I don't have info on a flush. AKs on a flush draw is a possibility too.

Don't know, my first instinct to call but then I saw how much you had behind and I thought I'd probably fold but then I thought back to call. I probably need to know how he plays. Most 2-5 players are garbage but I can't just know that for sure with this guy.

Good hand to post though, Jim. I haven't "thought poker" in a while (when I go to the casinos here I pretty much play very tight and very straight forward because its easy money) so its nice to think about it a bit again.

Rainbow flop, so flush draw is out of question.

The 2-5 game at Venetian is probably 25% pros. I had 4 of them at my table.

As I said, the only three times, he went all in either preflop or on flop he had AA or QQ. He flopped a nut flush once and stacked me on that hand I had open ended straight flush draw, he checked the flop and just called my bet and another call. He moved all in on turn that hand, not flop.

DPG21920
06-19-2012, 11:41 PM
You have to call. If you go in pre-flop with garb and you hit top 2, there is no other option IMO.

DeadlyDynasty
06-20-2012, 12:08 AM
^
Yeah, unless a pair was flopped (for an obvious set, depending on the player's bet), you can't fold.

DeadlyDynasty
06-20-2012, 12:09 AM
^
Yeah, unless a pair was flopped (for an obvious set, depending on the player's bet), you can't fold.

DMC
06-20-2012, 12:09 AM
Since you're playing NL, you have to call imo.

What he has is irrelevant. He probably had an 8 5, flopped top pair, didn't put you on it and got a full boat on the turn or river.

And you didn't fold, else you wouldn't know what he had and probably wouldn't start a thread over a small button call.

DPG21920
06-20-2012, 12:12 AM
This.

JamStone
06-20-2012, 12:52 AM
You said the other times he bet all in preflop he had big pairs. But he didn't go all in preflop in this situation so I'm thinking like you he had a medium pair 88 to JJ or ace with a relatively strong kicker. I'd personally eliminate the possibility he raised preflop on crap and caught a straight even with the all in call. I'd still put him at something like JJ or 1010 or ace with a decent kicker (above top card on the flop, 8).

I'd probably have folded though because where your money was at losing $45 doesn't seem that bad.

MannyIsGod
06-20-2012, 01:09 AM
Hands he might have that you beat:

AA-JJ (Maybe TT and 99)

Hands you're losing to

88,66,55 Don't really see much else in his range that you're behind on a preflop raise. I suppose there's a chance that he has 79 but I find that extremely unlikely.

88 and 66 are less likely due to your hand but they are possible so you can't eliminate them from the range. Judging by that range you should call. I think its closer, though. I'm too lazy to do the odds, but with you're calling ~950 to win 1100 so if you can win 50ish percent of the time the call is fine.

For me this would really depend on the player, but I probably end up calling most of the time.

JamStone
06-20-2012, 01:24 AM
Now I'm thinking he raised preflop with A8 and saw he caught his kicker pair as the top card on the flop. You called and he caught an ace on the turn or river.

Jimcs50
06-20-2012, 08:48 AM
I called.

Wish I had folded

He raised $45 with 4-7 offsuit, and the 8 6 5 flop gave him the 2nd nuts.

I still had 4 outs, but no 6 no miracle 8 came on turn and river, I was toast.

The guy just jumped up and celebrated like he won the WSOP, and danced around holding up all my hundred dollar bills and shaking them in the air. I felt like an idiot.

:depressed


How did he know some donkey like myself would call off $1130 0f he stack, that is why I am asking. I would have tried to get some value(Oh he got value all right) and bet 50% of the pot. That is why I did not put him on straight.

So I asked the two pros sitting right next to me(on my left and right) what I should have done, and they both say I should have folded. I only had $45 invested, so the risk was too great for the information that I had at my disposal.

I guess that is why I do not play poker for a living. :lol


I have so much to learn

MannyIsGod
06-20-2012, 09:00 AM
The amount you have in the pot is irrelevant. The size of the pot compared to your next bet is what matters. If everyone had called around the table you would still only have 45 dollars invested but you'd be staring at a much better situation.

They might have advised a fold based on the way he was playing (the information given on the other player really thin) but to say based on what you had in the pot is bad. If he had been raising the kind of hands that put 47 in his range then making a fold is a better option but if his range was actually closer to what I listed above then you don't need to fold.

If you really want to learn something, learn not to base your play off results. You think you should have folded in that situation and maybe you should have. However, you should not have folded based on the outcome of this hand, you should have folded only if the range of hands your opponent could have on that push is a range you do not beat ~60% of the time. If you win about that percentage of the time then you'll still make money on the hand. But you will still LOSE ~40% of the time. Making proper decisions in poker has nothing to do with winning or lose on one particular hand but rather how you do in the long run.

PS I overbet the shit out of pots live. The people at the live games here play terribly and call a lot. If I have the nuts on the flop, I try to get as much money in on the flop as possible (I'm not pushing like your villan but I am not betting 50% of the pot either. I'm over betting that pot).

MannyIsGod
06-20-2012, 09:00 AM
Hey Jim you ever read Caro's book of Poker Tells?

I couldn't care less about tells when I played online but I read the book anyway and its actually pretty good against the average person in a live game. The simple stuff, anyway (the quick glances at chip stacks is SO good, IMO).

SpurinDallas
06-20-2012, 09:06 AM
I called.

Wish I had folded

He raised $45 with 4-7 offsuit, and the 8 6 5 flop gave him the 2nd nuts.

I still had 4 outs, but no 6 no miracle 8 came on turn and river, I was toast.

The guy just jumped up and celebrated like he won the WSOP, and danced around holding up all my hundred dollar bills and shaking them in the air. I felt like an idiot.

:depressed


How did he know some donkey like myself would call off $1130 0f he stack, that is why I am asking. I would have tried to get some value(Oh he got value all right) and bet 50% of the pot. That is why I did not put him on straight.

So I asked the two pros sitting right next to me(on my left and right) what I should have done, and they both say I should have folded. I only had $45 invested, so the risk was too great for the information that I had at my disposal.

I guess that is why I do not play poker for a living. :lol


I have so much to learn

I was somewhat right, I had him on 7-9 suited. It's easy to say fold after the fact, but like you said, the guy was drunk, he was all over the place. I had AA cracked at the game I play at here in Dallas and lost all my stack too.

I was in the big blind and got Pocket Aces. There were 4 limpers and then on the button, this idiot raises 25. Small blind folds and I call. The 4 limpers all fold as well. The flop comes out 7-8-10 and I lead out with a 35 dollar bet and he goes all in which was about $425. I thought about it for about 2 seconds and called and he turns over 6-9 offsuit. Of course the other donkey's are praising him with the "nice hand" bullshit. I tried to give him some credit by saying thats why it pays to gamble on the button and he said he only played it because it was 69. Fucking douchebag.

MannyIsGod
06-20-2012, 09:08 AM
I was somewhat right, I had him on 7-9 suited. It's easy to say fold after the fact, but like you said, the guy was drunk, he was all over the place. I had AA cracked at the game I play at here in Dallas and lost all my stack too.

I was in the big blind and got Pocket Aces. There were 4 limpers and then on the button, this idiot raises 25. Small blind folds and I call. The 4 limpers all fold as well. The flop comes out 7-8-10 and I lead out with a 35 dollar bet and he goes all in which was about $425. I thought about it for about 2 seconds and called and he turns over 6-9 offsuit. Of course the other donkey's are praising him with the "nice hand" bullshit. I tried to give him some credit by saying thats why it pays to gamble on the button and he said he only played it because it was 69. Fucking douchebag.

:lmao

I hate to tell you this but thats actually pretty damn good from your opponent. He played it pretty well against you. You're in a 6 handed pot OOP with AA facing a late position raise and you don't raise pf? That is the definition of terrible play.

SpurinDallas
06-20-2012, 09:10 AM
:lmao

I hate to tell you this but thats actually pretty damn good from your opponent. He played it pretty well against you.

Yeah, I thought about it afterwards whether I should have folded. The only hand I really had him on was maybe 9-J. The guy got lucky to hit his flop, I just ended up paying him off.

Heath Ledger
06-20-2012, 09:41 AM
spurindallas,

where do you play? please invite me.

SpurinDallas
06-20-2012, 09:43 AM
spurindallas,

where do you play? please invite me.

I'll send you a PM with the details. Where in DFW do you live?

Heath Ledger
06-20-2012, 09:46 AM
jimcs thats a tough spot to be in. but im not surprised you made the call. the results were bad but thiking through the hand logicially its pretty hard to put him on a nut hand or set there. For such a huge amount of money with only $45 invested I probably fold there I've just seen too many sick situations to make a hero call like that for $1000. I would be looking for a better situation to get my money in.

MannyIsGod
06-20-2012, 10:18 AM
spurindallas,

where do you play? please invite me.


I'll send you a PM with the details. Where in DFW do you live?

:lol

SpurinDallas
06-20-2012, 10:19 AM
:lol

Not sure why this is funny

O.J. Simpson
06-20-2012, 10:20 AM
Not sure why this is funny

There's a reason you're a waitress.

SpurinDallas
06-20-2012, 10:22 AM
There's a reason you're a waitress.

:lol I waited tables for 9 months 4 years ago. Fuck off.

Jimcs50
06-20-2012, 10:30 AM
Yeah, I thought about it afterwards whether I should have folded. The only hand I really had him on was maybe 9-J. The guy got lucky to hit his flop, I just ended up paying him off.

I think Manny was saying that the bad part of your play was not 3 betting him preflop. If you make it $85-$95 to go, he probably goes away, unless you both have over a grand in front of you, because he was not getting the correct implied odds to call if you have KK or AA.

Jimcs50
06-20-2012, 10:32 AM
:lol I waited tables for 9 months 4 years ago. Fuck off.

Hey, I put myself through school working in restaurants for 10 years, nothing wrong with that.

:toast

SpurinDallas
06-20-2012, 10:34 AM
I think Manny was saying that the bad part of your play was not 3 betting him preflop. If you make it $85-$95 to go, he probably goes away, unless you both have over a grand in front of you, because he was not getting the correct implied odds to call if you have KK or AA.

Yeah, after that on the way home, I knew should have gone over the top, and risk winning a little rather than lose it all. Lesson learned.

SpurinDallas
06-20-2012, 10:35 AM
Hey, I put myself through school working in restaurants for 10 years, nothing wrong with that.

:toast

I know, I had to do it while I was out of work for a while. OJ is just an asshole

Jimcs50
06-20-2012, 10:41 AM
Speaking of cracking aces, Let me tell you about a hand I played earlier in that same session.


New guy comes in buys in for $400, he sits and does not play a hand for 10 mins, there is a straddle, I have Jd 9h, I call the straddle, this new guy raises to $55, there are two callers, so I call, because I am putting this guy on a monster and I'm getting over 3-1 to call right now.

Flop:

7d 8d 10d

:elephant

Unless someone flopped a flush, I have the nuts and a draw to uber nuts.

First player bets $65, I raise to $225, the guy who was preflop raiser goes all in for $345, the first guy who led out folds, I snap call.

The guy shows Ah Ad, turn is a blank, river is 9d

The guy whoops, and I say, sorry, I have the straight flush.



They guy stares at the board and gets up and leaves.

:p:

SpurinDallas
06-20-2012, 10:45 AM
Speaking of cracking aces, Let me tell you about a hand I played earlier in that same session.


New guy comes in buys in for $400, he sits and does not play a hand for 10 mins, there is a straddle, I have Jd 9h, I call the straddle, this new guy raises to $55, there are two callers, so I call, because I am putting this guy on a monster and I'm getting over 3-1 to call right now.

Flop:

7d 8d 10d

:elephant

Unless someone flopped a flush, I have the nuts and a draw to uber nuts.

First player bets $65, I raise to $225, the guy who was preflop raiser goes all in for $345, the first guy who led out folds, I snap call.

The guy shows Ah Ad, turn is a blank, river is 9d

The guy whoops, and I say, sorry, I have the straight flush.



They guy stares at the board and gets up and leaves.

:p:

Sick :lol

It happens to everyone from time to time.

Jimcs50
06-20-2012, 10:54 AM
Sick :lol

It happens to everyone from time to time.

Yeah, that hand played itself, He is not folding with his hand, he could not just call my raise on flop, he had to shove all in and look at two cards, he probably had idea he was beat, but he had draw to what he thought was nuts, and there was a ton of money in pot to scoop, if he won the pot.

I just wish he had a grand in front of him.

:p:

JamStone
06-20-2012, 11:02 AM
The amount you have in the pot is irrelevant. The size of the pot compared to your next bet is what matters. If everyone had called around the table you would still only have 45 dollars invested but you'd be staring at a much better situation.

They might have advised a fold based on the way he was playing (the information given on the other player really thin) but to say based on what you had in the pot is bad. If he had been raising the kind of hands that put 47 in his range then making a fold is a better option but if his range was actually closer to what I listed above then you don't need to fold.

If you really want to learn something, learn not to base your play off results. You think you should have folded in that situation and maybe you should have. However, you should not have folded based on the outcome of this hand, you should have folded only if the range of hands your opponent could have on that push is a range you do not beat ~60% of the time. If you win about that percentage of the time then you'll still make money on the hand. But you will still LOSE ~40% of the time. Making proper decisions in poker has nothing to do with winning or lose on one particular hand but rather how you do in the long run.

PS I overbet the shit out of pots live. The people at the live games here play terribly and call a lot. If I have the nuts on the flop, I try to get as much money in on the flop as possible (I'm not pushing like your villan but I am not betting 50% of the pot either. I'm over betting that pot).


I look at gambling a few different ways, and my uncle (who was a drunk and a pretty good gambler) told me that different people gamble different ways:

1. Some people play their opponent/s
2. Other people play the cards and the odds
3. And other people play based on their stack

Now you have a combination of those as well. When you're a professional gambler, you mostly play your opponents by reading them while using odds as a loose baseline for decisions. Amateur gamblers with big pockets will often and can play the cards and the odds because they can afford losing those all-in type hands. Now for a lot of us who are just recreational gamblers who play for fun, I think it's wise to at least heavily consider playing your stack or your money and making that a factor in your decisions. Even if Jim had a 50/50 chance of winning the hand or better, you're talking about losing $45 versus the possibility of losing $1130 and even if he had a 75% of winning, all of us who have gambled before know that there's still the chance that the 25% can still win and god knows how often that happens to bite you in the butt anyway.

You can read your opponent all you want to and you can calculate the odds to the thousandth percentile, gambling is still gambling and you can still lose. There are times, especially for amateur, recreational gamblers, where it's imperative to play your stack versus your opponent or the cards. People who consistently play the odds have a better chance of winning big but also have a pretty good chance of losing big.

The guy being drunk meant little to me because I know some good drunk gamblers. Maybe they're louder, more obnoxious, and maybe they're even riskier than usual. But it generally doesn't mean they just forgot how to play. I would have never pegged him to have preflop raised on crap and then catch the straight on the flop. But Jim still had several outs that could have knocked him out. And let's be real, even though two pair is nice on just the flop, it's not like he flopped a flush or a full house where your hand can justify confidence on an all-in call. This is the type of situation where you have to look at your stack imo. Didn't the risks of losing $1130 versus $45 have to play a role in the decision? I believe it should have. Maybe it's just me.

I don't begrudge or disparage you if you gamble differently, but I do think there are certainly other approaches in how you play that situation that make complete sense.

Fabbs
06-20-2012, 11:18 AM
I look at gambling a few different ways, and my uncle (who was a drunk and a pretty good gambler) told me that different people gamble different ways:

1. Some people play their opponent/s
2. Other people play the cards and the odds
3. And other people play based on their stack

Now you have a combination of those as well. When you're a professional gambler, you mostly play your opponents by reading them while using odds as a loose baseline for decisions. Amateur gamblers with big pockets will often and can play the cards and the odds because they can afford losing those all-in type hands. Now for a lot of us who are just recreational gamblers who play for fun, I think it's wise to at least heavily consider playing your stack or your money and making that a factor in your decisions. Even if Jim had a 50/50 chance of winning the hand or better, you're talking about losing $45 versus the possibility of losing $1130 and even if he had a 75% of winning, all of us who have gambled before know that there's still the chance that the 25% can still win and god knows how often that happens to bite you in the butt anyway.

You can read your opponent all you want to and you can calculate the odds to the thousandth percentile, gambling is still gambling and you can still lose. There are times, especially for amateur, recreational gamblers, where it's imperative to play your stack versus your opponent or the cards. People who consistently play the odds have a better chance of winning big but also have a pretty good chance of losing big.

The guy being drunk meant little to me because I know some good drunk gamblers. Maybe they're louder, more obnoxious, and maybe they're even riskier than usual. But it generally doesn't mean they just forgot how to play. I would have never pegged him to have preflop raised on crap and then catch the straight on the flop. But Jim still had several outs that could have knocked him out. And let's be real, even though two pair is nice on just the flop, it's not like he flopped a flush or a full house where your hand can justify confidence on an all-in call. This is the type of situation where you have to look at your stack imo. Didn't the risks of losing $1130 versus $45 have to play a role in the decision? I believe it should have. Maybe it's just me.

I don't begrudge or disparage you if you gamble differently, but I do think there are certainly other approaches in how you play that situation that make complete sense.
Amen.
On the hand discussed i agree with yourself Heath and Jim himself now acknowledges in retro.
Better to have saved the All In or Major In call for another hand.

On a related subject, cheating. I believe it happens. A lot.
Lets have that on another thread.

Jimcs50
06-20-2012, 11:30 AM
I look at gambling a few different ways, and my uncle (who was a drunk and a pretty good gambler) told me that different people gamble different ways:

1. Some people play their opponent/s
2. Other people play the cards and the odds
3. And other people play based on their stack

Now you have a combination of those as well. When you're a professional gambler, you mostly play your opponents by reading them while using odds as a loose baseline for decisions. Amateur gamblers with big pockets will often and can play the cards and the odds because they can afford losing those all-in type hands. Now for a lot of us who are just recreational gamblers who play for fun, I think it's wise to at least heavily consider playing your stack or your money and making that a factor in your decisions. Even if Jim had a 50/50 chance of winning the hand or better, you're talking about losing $45 versus the possibility of losing $1130 and even if he had a 75% of winning, all of us who have gambled before know that there's still the chance that the 25% can still win and god knows how often that happens to bite you in the butt anyway.

You can read your opponent all you want to and you can calculate the odds to the thousandth percentile, gambling is still gambling and you can still lose. There are times, especially for amateur, recreational gamblers, where it's imperative to play your stack versus your opponent or the cards. People who consistently play the odds have a better chance of winning big but also have a pretty good chance of losing big.

The guy being drunk meant little to me because I know some good drunk gamblers. Maybe they're louder, more obnoxious, and maybe they're even riskier than usual. But it generally doesn't mean they just forgot how to play. I would have never pegged him to have preflop raised on crap and then catch the straight on the flop. But Jim still had several outs that could have knocked him out. And let's be real, even though two pair is nice on just the flop, it's not like he flopped a flush or a full house where your hand can justify confidence on an all-in call. This is the type of situation where you have to look at your stack imo. Didn't the risks of losing $1130 versus $45 have to play a role in the decision? I believe it should have. Maybe it's just me.

I don't begrudge or disparage you if you gamble differently, but I do think there are certainly other approaches in how you play that situation that make complete sense.

That is why the two pros who play every day fold that hand. Yes, you can win a nice pot, but if you call and are wrong or if the guy does have over pair and he hits his 5 outter on turn or 8 outter on river, you still lose the hand.

It takes a lot of good play to make up for that $1100 loss, and no time at all to make up that $45 that I put in that pot preflop.

I guess, being a thought of as a pussy was factored in after I showed my hand( I showed it during my thought process to try to get a read off the guy)

I did not want players to know that I could be pushed around. But after I asked the two pros, I guess they would have actually given me more respect if I had folded.

Fabbs
06-20-2012, 11:31 AM
Originally Posted by Jimcs50

.....was saying that the bad part of your play was not 3 betting him preflop. If you make it $85-$95 to go, he probably goes away, unless you both have over a grand in front of you, because he was not getting the correct implied odds to call if you have KK or AA.


Yeah, after that on the way home, I knew should have gone over the top, and risk winning a little rather than lose it all. Lesson learned.
Lots of different ways to play AA but I'm down with Doyle on his stance. AA is usually good for one of two outcomes. Winning a smaller pot or losing a big one.

I've been doing a lot of slow playing AA and KK and I've gotten some hellacious payoffs. Arrived at 2/5 table with 400 and 1st hand under the gun. Slow played KK. About 7 callers and then big blind very aggressive player bumps to 45. I merely call, knowing the rest of the table would most likely fold around. They did, heads up. Flop was Kd 9h 2c rainbow. He jacks it to 150. I figure he hit his King and so i call. Turn was whatever, he goes 75 i go all in he calls. Boom my stack is 800+.

Not 20 minutes later I'm in middle position with AA. I slow play again pre flop. Dealer button raises to 45. Early position guy reraises to 100. I know the dealer button guy chases flushes and straights so i do not want a three way pot. I 3 raise to 300. Dealer button hymns and haws with Q7 suited (i kid you not, i said he is aggressive) and folds. Early postion guy goes all in for 900 more (has me covered) with his 10/10. I do the "duh" call. He does not suck out however Q7 flush chaser would have. Anywho badabing badaboom i double up again to 1700.

Not saying it's gonna happen that often but for me the payoffs from slowing AA and KK have outdone the losses. Provided of course you can lay it down when the flop misses you and hits them. Hard to lay off AA KK after the flop but one has to learn how to do it fo sure.

SpurinDallas
06-20-2012, 11:37 AM
Originally Posted by Jimcs50



Lots of different ways to play AA but I'm down with Doyle on his stance. AA is usually good for one of two outcomes. Winning a smaller pot or losing a big one.

I've been doing a lot of slow playing AA and KK and I've gotten some hellacious payoffs. Arrived at 2/5 table with 400 and 1st hand under the gun. Slow played KK. About 7 callers and then big blind very aggressive player bumps to 45. I merely call, knowing the rest of the table would most likely fold around. They did, heads up. Flop was Kd 9h 2c rainbow. He jacks it to 150. I figure he hit his King and so i call. Turn was whatever, he goes 75 i go all in he calls. Boom my stack is 800+.

Not 20 minutes later I'm in middle position with AA. I slow play again pre flop. Dealer button raises to 45. Early position guy reraises to 100. I know the dealer button guy chases flushes and straights so i do not want a three way pot. I 3 raise to 300. Dealer button hymns and haws with Q7 suited (i kid you not, i said he is aggressive) and folds. Early postion guy goes all in for 900 more (has me covered) with his 10/10. I do the "duh" call. He does not suck out however Q7 flush chaser would have. Anywho badabing badaboom i double up again to 1700.

Not saying it's gonna happen that often but for me the payoffs from slowing AA and KK have outdone the losses. Provided of course you can lay it down when the flop misses you and hits them. Hard to lay off AA KK after the flop but one has to learn how to do it fo sure.

I agree 100%. I often slow play those premium hands similar to how you described and more often than not, I get paid off, big time. This one time, it bit me in the ass. In the grand scheme of things, I'm still ahead when playing these hands.

I just hate losing to a frat boy douche who admitted he stayed in that hand because he says he always plays 69. :ihit

JamStone
06-20-2012, 11:41 AM
One other thing I should have emphasized more was Jim's hand. He had two pair. Now getting two pair on a flop is nothing to scoff at. But when an opponent calls all-in that requires you to risk a big part of your stack, you still have to consider that two pair is still the third worst hand in poker. It only beats high card and one pair. That's why I also mentioned that it might be different if Jim had flopped a flush or a boat. That would instill quite a bit more confidence in calling the all-in than just two pair. Even though you could eliminate flush hands, there were still several hands out there (at least as possibilities with two more card draws) stronger than two pair.

Fabbs
06-20-2012, 11:48 AM
In the grand scheme of things, I'm still ahead when playing these hands.

I just hate losing to a frat boy douche who admitted he stayed in that hand because he says he always plays 69. :ihit
"Reward a Retard" style like 69boi played happens far too often and yes it slays me too when the table praises someone for the very low percentage call that ends up sucking. :ihit

Some think it's proper to compliment the suck outs or be a zombie if you're the losing hand. Frankly i have no problem getting reasonably angry when someone pulls that kind of crap and hope i never turn zombified or kiss up to such players. Yeah yeah i know Caro says to compliment them as you will make it back from them in the long run. News flash Caro, chances are better you won't even be in the same hand with same person ever again. I watched Caro try his complimentary schtikk at the WSOP and it came across as soo phony.

SpurinDallas
06-20-2012, 11:54 AM
"Reward a Retard" style like 69boi played happens far too often and yes it slays me too when the table praises someone for the very low percentage call that ends up sucking. :ihit

Some think it's proper to compliment the suck outs or be a zombie if you're the losing hand. Frankly i have no problem getting reasonably angry when someone pulls that kind of crap and hope i never turn zombified or kiss up to such players. Yeah yeah i know Caro says to compliment them as you will make it back from them in the long run. News flash Caro, chances are better you won't even be in the same hand with same person ever again. I watched Caro try his complimentary schtikk at the WSOP and it came across as soo phony.

Only thing that made me feel better was I got to watch the rest of the Spurs game at the poker house when they were putting on OKC in OKC amongst a bunch of Mavs "fans".

Then when I got up during a commercial break to check on that table I got busted out on, 69 boy was in the process of losing every single chip he had won, before walking out empty handed. Justice.

O.J. Simpson
06-20-2012, 11:55 AM
I know, I had to do it while I was out of work for a while. OJ is just an asshole

:lol

Jimcs50
06-20-2012, 11:57 AM
Originally Posted by Jimcs50



About 7 callers and then big blind very aggressive player bumps to 45. I merely call, knowing the rest of the table would most likely fold around. They did, heads up.

.


This table and a lot of tables I play would have probably had 3 or 4 more calls of that $45, then you are going up against 4-5 players with KK. Your odds of winning are probably about 35%. If you isolate that guy, then your odds increase dramatically.

What do you do if you had 3 or 4 other callers and if the flop is 6 7 J, and one of players who limp called check raises you? Does he have AJ? JJ? 67? 89? 66? 77? You have no idea.

That is why you should always re-raise with AA or KK, not only to get to heads up or also to get more information prefop. Had you made it $125 to go, you will get 66, 77, 67 to fold. Now JJ will still stack you, but it is much better odds of winning.

Jimcs50
06-20-2012, 12:12 PM
One other thing I should have emphasized more was Jim's hand. He had two pair. Now getting two pair on a flop is nothing to scoff at. But when an opponent calls all-in that requires you to risk a big part of your stack, you still have to consider that two pair is still the third worst hand in poker. It only beats high card and one pair. That's why I also mentioned that it might be different if Jim had flopped a flush or a boat. That would instill quite a bit more confidence in calling the all-in than just two pair. Even though you could eliminate flush hands, there were still several hands out there (at least as possibilities with two more card draws) stronger than two pair.


What sucks in my hand is that the pro to my right said he had AQs, and he thought about re-raising preflop. I got pissed off at him in jest after he told me that because he would have saved me $1175 had he done so.

:lol

Fabbs
06-20-2012, 12:27 PM
This table and a lot of tables I play would have probably had 3 or 4 more calls of that $45, then you are going up against 4-5 players with KK. Your odds of winning are probably about 35%. If you isolate that guy, then your odds increase dramatically.
Oh this table too. It was not a table of tightie whiteys or inexperienced players. As Aggressive Guy on the button was raising to 45 i went with the "observe body lang" tells on the rest of the table. Raiser did the Large Stack in Hand but only dropped 45 and took the rest in his hand back. I watched them as it appeared he was going to drop way more if not all the chips he held in his hand*. Got a vibe that none of them were going to go. That's why i simply did the call. I agree with you 100% that most of the time with that many players behind 3-4 are gonna call the 45 and now you're in a real pickle post flop.


What do you do if you had 3 or 4 other callers and if the flop is 6 7 J, and one of players who limp called check raises you? Does he have AJ? JJ? 67? 89? 66? 77? You have no idea.
Being way out of position (1st to act) I'd fold. I've lone ago gotten to the point of laying down KK or even AA post flop with 3 and certainly 4 handed pots. It's still tempting tho no matter how many hands you've played. :lol

*btw this allowing of players to hold an infinite amount of chips in hand and then drop off a portion on the table and pull the rest back is total b.s. IMO. To me crossing the betting line should mean it's in, period.

Jimcs50
06-20-2012, 12:35 PM
Oh this table too. It was not a table of tightie whiteys or inexperienced players. As Aggressive Guy on the button was raising to 45 i went with the "observe body lang" tells on the rest of the table. Raiser did the Large Stack in Hand but only dropped 45 and took the rest in his hand back. I watched them as it appeared he was going to drop way more if not all the chips he held in his hand*. Got a vibe that none of them were going to go. That's why i simply did the call. I agree with you 100% that most of the time with that many players behind 3-4 are gonna call the 45 and now you're in a real pickle post flop.


Being way out of position (1st to act) I'd fold. I've lone ago gotten to the point of laying down KK or even AA post flop with 3 and certainly 4 handed pots. It's still tempting tho no matter how many hands you've played. :lol

*btw this allowing of players to hold an infinite amount of chips in hand and then drop off a portion on the table and pull the rest back is total b.s. IMO. To me crossing the betting line should mean it's in, period.

They have a betting line on the tables at Venetian, so if it goes past line and is left on table, it is in. However, the chips that are in his hand and he is just putting out stacks with the one hand, he is allowed to pull back leftover chips.

DMC
06-20-2012, 07:45 PM
One thing I've learned is a lot of people who call themselves pros don't actually make a living playing the game.

DMC
06-20-2012, 07:48 PM
Speaking of cracking aces, Let me tell you about a hand I played earlier in that same session.


New guy comes in buys in for $400, he sits and does not play a hand for 10 mins, there is a straddle, I have Jd 9h, I call the straddle, this new guy raises to $55, there are two callers, so I call, because I am putting this guy on a monster and I'm getting over 3-1 to call right now.

Flop:

7d 8d 10d

:elephant

Unless someone flopped a flush, I have the nuts and a draw to uber nuts.

First player bets $65, I raise to $225, the guy who was preflop raiser goes all in for $345, the first guy who led out folds, I snap call.

The guy shows Ah Ad, turn is a blank, river is 9d

The guy whoops, and I say, sorry, I have the straight flush.



They guy stares at the board and gets up and leaves.

:p:
Online player no doubt.

slick'81
06-20-2012, 07:49 PM
scared money dont make money

Jimcs50
06-21-2012, 08:06 AM
scared money dont make money

True. I do not put in front of me what I can not afford to lose. That does not mean that I want to donk it off. :lol