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Do you make this play?
Posted by veaner85 on August 2, 2020 at 2:51 pmRecPoker Home Game 07/31/20
Blinds 25/50 with 6 Ante
Note: Hero notices Villain A has been very aggressive on draws and has been over betting medium strenght hands.
Hero (3,032) in SB dealt TsTh
Villain A (6,272) in CO
Villain B (3,305) in BB
Folds to Villian A in CO, he limps 50
Villain B in BB, raises to 175
Hero in SB calls 175
BB folds
Villain A calls.
Pot 623
Flop 2h 9c 6h
Hero donks 350
Villain A raises to 1673
Villain B folds
McVean re-raises to 2851 and is All In.
Villan A calls.
Turn: 7d
River: 3c
Villain A shows 8h8s and Hero takes the 6,325 pot
steve-fredlund replied 4 years, 4 months ago 4 Members · 4 Replies -
4 Replies
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I love it… I mean his limp/call preflop screams something like 22-99 or KQ/KJ/JT type hands; maybe some AT, A9, A8 or random suited aces. You are crushing that range so unless he flopped a set you should be in great shape.
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I would add that you can check your equity against parts of your opponents range.
Bottom Set
TT vs 22 — 3 combos
Over-cards and Flush Draw
TT vs KQhh — 1 combo
Top Pair Over-card
TT vs A9 — 12 combos
Over-cards
TT vs QJ – 16 combos
You can build the range by counting combos and then looking at the equity for each grouping.
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love this approach by @ARW in fact I was thinking abut this in another post today about a monotone flop and how to respond with 2pr to a biggish donk. Portions of the range are a great way to think about equity comparisons, because they also make it easier for you to add different weight to different parts of the range, instead of having to discount them entirely.
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genius
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