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Nikolay246's picture
ST, river: all in or call?

What should I do in situations like this versus unknown opponent? Is it jam for value or call? why? (It's 15$ st sng)No Limit Holdem Tournament • 2 Players • PokerStars Hand converted by the official HUSNG.com hand converter BBarm018018490  BTNHero510  Effective Stacks: 25bb Blinds 10/20 Pre-Flop (30, 2 players) Hero is BTN Hero raises to 40, arm018018 calls 20   Flop (80, 2 players) arm018018 checks, Hero bets 40, arm018018 calls 40   Turn (160, 2 players) arm018018 checks, Hero checks   River (160, 2 players) arm018018 bets 160, Hero calls 160   Final Pot: 480 arm018018 shows Hero shows Hero wins 480 ( won +240 ) arm018018 lost -240 

pseudo26's picture
I would raise but not jam.

I would raise but not jam.  raise to 2,5-3x so u can get called by weaker hands like two pairs or TP.

Melvis's picture
it depends if villain can

it depends if villain can call you with worse. On the 3suited board probably not, but I am with pseudo thinking that he can call 2pair or something worse to a small raise.

RyPac13's picture
I often call here against

I often call here against opponents, the thinking is, aside from QJ or Q9 possibilities, there aren't a ton of two pair combos they likely have, and the big bet really doesn't always gel with 2 pair hands from a lot of opponents on this board (they often make a smaller bet or check).  So a lot of times I think they have bluffs or flushes in their range, and many more bluffs.Of course, that's villain dependent.  Readless in micros I might shove, readless vs competentish avg opponent in higher stakes I might just flat.  But I would look at identifying the types of hands they play, starting preflop and also how they bet various hands, because that's where the "gold" is, so to speak, you can really find a huge difference in the correct decision vs a lot of opponents (for example, a guy that value bets very wide, a shove is almost always going to be better, a guy that bets much smaller in these situations with hands as strong as 2pair, but also bluffs, a call is almost always going to be better).

RyPac13's picture
And of course if you had a

And of course if you had a read that your opponent would flat hands like A2, or slowplay pre and post hands like AQ/AA/QQ, with QJ/Q9 hands in their range, you'd most likely shove the river here (aside from stuff like "small bets non nuts on scary boards for value").But I think a lot of opponents will 3bet a lot of 2 pair and trips hands on this board, raise A2 on the flop (or call and lead the turn), and have a lot more bluff/flushes in their range on the river when they pot it than 2 pair or slowplayed TP (often slowplaying Ax on the flop doesn't translate into a pot sized river bet either).

Nikolay246's picture
Thank you for the detailed

Thank you for the detailed analysis of the hand, RyPac!