Anyway, the guy who shoved for $110
says, "I missed," and turns over Ace-Jack, off. All he had was Ace-high. Surely the other guy could beat that, right? Nope.
He said not a word and just mucked!
Whenever I see something like that, I
can't help wondering what the hell he had.
Even if he was 100% sure his shove would get the last two players to
fold, he was still risking $110. Even if
he suspected the other guy might have been shoving light, he couldn't be doing
that with nothing, right? You'd think at
least a pocket pair—but no. Ace-King or
Ace-Queen would have won the pot. A crummier
Ace? King-Queen? Just so strange.
In late position I limped in with
Ace-6 of diamonds. No raise and six of
us saw a flop that was Queen-high, but all diamonds. Sweet. A guy bet $10 and I just called. I dunno why
I slow-played that, I guess I figured no one would call my raise on an all
diamond board. As it was, I was the only
caller. The board paired the queen and the guy shoved his last $35 or so. Of course I snap-called. The river was a brick and he showed
King-Queen for trips, my flush was good.
I had Jack-8 in the big blind and
there was no raise. Only seven of us saw
a flop of Jack-Jack-9. I bet $10 and got
one call. The turn was a Queen and I bet
$15, he called. The river was a 5. I bet $25 but no call.
I raised to $15 with Ace-Jack of
diamonds and had four callers. So when I
completely missed the flop, I just check-folded. Then I got pocket Jacks. I raised to $15 and
it was four-way. The flop was
Queen-Queen-5. A lady lead out for
$50. Now this lady, early in the session,
had flopped a boat with pocket 5's and won a big pot. I'm pretty sure she hadn't played a pot since
. So when she led out like that, I was
pretty sure she had a Queen. I folded as
did everyone else.
Now I was down a little from my $300
buy-in. In the big blind, I had pocket
7's. A woman who had recently joined the
table opened to $23. Apparently she didn't
get the memo that we didn't open that big in this game. She had a $300 or so stack. Then another player called the $23. He had a big stack too, more than the $300. He had been very willing to put chips in
play. So I figured it was worth putting
another $20 out there to close the action and see the flop. The flop was Jack-8-7, rainbow. I checked but unfortunately it checked
around. The turn was a Queen, no flush
possible. I bet $35 and they both
called. The river was an 8, giving me a
boat. I bet $100, but didn't get a
call. Did I bet too much or did they
both miss draws? Oh well, it was still a
pretty nice pot.
And that was I for the session. I ended up leaving up exactly $100. Not bad for the amount of hands I actually played.
Million dollar question do I bet out with a monster or check it and hope someone takes a stab at it. The other issue is when you do bet out, what amount will get people to call or possibly raise.
ReplyDeleteThanks, CB. Yeah that is the Million dollar question.
DeleteHi Rob Happy Holidays I have noticed some of the players going all in at my local casino just play a wilder version of no limit poker. Its starts as a 1-3 NL with $300 cap but you can buy in for the biggest stack at the table. I mean calls and raises with any A are not uncommon so you just have to adjust to the players at the table. I mean you better be prepared to get your money in light and do not be surprised what constitutes a winning hand. If you like to play gamble, gamble, all in poker than this is what it becomes. Good luck for the coming year.
ReplyDeleteThanks, ed. Good luck to you too.
DeleteWhen I bluff I like to have nothing. Otherwise I am just looking to check down or value bet. Sometimes I have a monster but that is a different scenario where I hope the villain has a hand or is trying to push me off a pot.
ReplyDeleteYeah, not a good idea to bluff with a hand that has showdown value. OTOH, every now and then you do find yourself bluffing with the best hand!
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