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CerchioInterno's picture
One of my worst leaks in game

Situations like this one arise quite frequently playing at 11$.My instincts say to snapfold, my reasoning says to fold, but my fingers are always clicking the call button just because "I've got to stick to the plan".Any hints on how to force myself to do the right thing? Hand converted by the official HUSNG.com hand converter BTNchenzybaby1350  BBHero1650  Effective Stacks: 27bb Blinds 25/50 Pre-Flop (75, 2 players) Hero is BB chenzybaby calls 25, Hero raises to 150, chenzybaby calls 100 Flop (300, 2 players) Hero bets 250, chenzybaby calls 250 Turn (800, 2 players) Hero checks, chenzybaby goes all-in 950, Hero calls 950

ratex's picture
just go all on the river and

just go all on the river and be happy. You'll never click in the call button again =]

fuseo's picture
You need 35% equity to beat

You need 35% equity to beat folding.It is pretty tight. If I had to guess I'd say you would miss that by a couple percent on average. 

RyPac13's picture
Since over 10 minutes have

Since over 10 minutes have gone by in the match, I think reads will confirm or change your decision pretty clearly most of the time.I would say folding here is more commonly correct than calling, but a few reads on your opponent can easily change that to a call.

fuseo's picture
I agree with rypac, what

I agree with rypac, what would make it a call for me is If I had reads that he liked to float in order to take it away on the turn or river. The flop really dosn't hit a limp raise range (especially if you infrequently do it), and a near full pot c-bet kind of screams over pair. A 9 wouldn't normally flat that flop (unless they also had a pair) with such a large bet, they would just shove. He also knows you rarely have a 9.What did he have?