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Villain was a bit of a calling station: Hero is CO in the hand. PokerStars No-Limit Hold'em, $0.50 BB (6 handed) - Poker-Stars Converter Tool from FlopTurnRiver.com UTG ($23.45) MP ($26.65) CO ($58.30) Button ($54.20) SB ($30.10) BB ($48.45) Preflop: 2 folds, CO raises to $1.75, 1 fold, SB calls $1.50, 1 fold Flop: ($4) 9 , Q , J (2 players)SB checks, CO bets $3, SB calls $3 Turn: ($10) 10 (2 players)SB checks, CO bets $7, SB calls $7 River: ($24) 2 (2 players)SB checks, CO bets $17, 1 fold Total pot: $24 | Rake: $1.20
__________________ My Blog Stars: MXRider FT: MXRider Cake: eMeXe Level: 50nl and testing 100nl Winrate: getting better??? Last edited by mxrider; 09-30-2008 at 01:48 PM. |
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i would say that villian has a Axss or a mid suitded 56ss type hand. really hard to say what hero has as he is just firing. without seeing how he responds it is hard to put a tricky player on a hand. i would say AK, AQ, QJ, possibly KK. you can fire 3 barrels with a lot of hands here as the villian looks to have a draw. |
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| Playing our opponent, and my state of mind really isn't quite right today so I may be missing the objective.
__________________ My Blog Stars: MXRider FT: MXRider Cake: eMeXe Level: 50nl and testing 100nl Winrate: getting better??? |
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| It's just that hand-reading doesn't really matter after the hand is over.
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Hero needs a straight to be firing 3 streets here unless he's bluffing which is unlikely and would generally be a fairly bad play, considering villain is stationish. And villain probably had a spade draw or even 9T. But all this doesn't matter, does it? There's not much point in guessing what villain had when he folded to hero's value bet on the river. Betsizing wise I believe that villain has to fire bigger on that super wet flop, perhaps you just flopped the nuts and didn't fear getting outdrawn? The rest seems fine.
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