No Limit Holdem Tournament • 2 PlayersHand converted by the official HUSNG.com hand converterBTNKoningL1880 BBHero1120 Effective Stacks: 56bbBlinds 10/20
- Pre-Flop (30, 2 players) Hero is BB
KoningL raises to 40, Hero raises to 130, KoningL calls 90
- Flop (260, 2 players)
Hero bets 140, KoningL raises to 340, Hero goes all-in 990, KoningL calls 650
- Turn (2240, 2 players, 1 all-in)
- River (2240, 2 players, 1 all-in)
- Final Pot: 2240
- KoningL shows
- Hero shows
- Hero wins 2240 ( won +1120 )
- KoningL lost -1120
Villain was a REG LAG type player, playing solid lag style 58...58 with a 2.0 AF and 3 Bet of 25% over 75 hands, the dynamics started right of the bat, from hand one with 3 betting 4 bet bluffing and a CR bluff flop dynamic going on 3 hands when I folded to 2 of his CR on wet flops and he folded one when I 4 bet him light on dry flop. This hand was in the bottom of my 3 range but I don’t know if the flop 4 bet bluff shove was the best given our dynamics of the match so far? Some feedback would be great to stop me leaking in this spot if it was bad and some advice as to play correct in this spot in the future. Thanks Jacob
No need to answer this question I’ve just read Spmazors interview articles, and I have just realized it doesn’t matter if I shove or not on the flop as it’s not a common spot so ill just concentrate on spots that come up all the time which make a long term difference.
Thanks Jacob
Hate to break it to you but getting raised on this board will happen a lot... 3bet shoving here with a gut shot, one over, the wrong flush draw and probably almost no fold equity is not good.
I think I am going to disagree given the dynamics and what he’s folded before, I’m not sure how you can have the wrong flush draw, I think it’s just a back door flush draw over card and gut shot which has some equity when called and I think I have a small amount of FE given he’s raised folded before on the flop in a 3 bet pot.
You don't have a backdoor flush draw and i can't see you having any FE on this flop with how much he has left behind... Also I don't think you should get creative 3 betting hands like this at the $15 level.
Sorry your right, I don’t have back door flush draw I just assumed that from your comment “the wrong flush draw” without looking at the hand again, as regards to getting creative against regs I think I will get run over playing ABC and I feel you have to take regs out of their comfort zone.
Ya that comment of mine wasn't phrased very well. I kinda just meant there was a flush draw out there which could mean some of your outs aren't even clean outs, and you also have no way to make a flush... Why would you want to build a pot OOP against a guy you say is aggressive and kinda crazy with a hand that flops well?
You have chosen the wrong spot here. 1. you want to be aggressive vs. him but aggressive without spewing.2. His raise is big and looking mighty strong.3. You have no fold equity against his big raise4. Against a value raising range you have only your gutshot. So very little showdown equity5. Your are pretty deep, enough time to get the money in in a better spot.6. I hate your 3bet against someone who calls lots of 3bets and attacks you postflop. How high was his fold to 3bet% ? , that info is crucial for your hand planning. You need to widen your value range if he calls 3bets alot but T7 is far too wide.
I agree looking back at it now T7s is to wide giving how much hes flating Thanks for the feed back guys.
Some of these comments will be repeating, but I'll try to keep it short and to the point.T7s is too loose against a loose aggressive player most of the time to be a good 3bet.If you had a flush draw the flop would be an easy reraise. You don't, you have a small amount of equity, and while I do believe you have fold equity, it's not enough to reraise here, as your opponent can certainly have plenty of legitimate hands that crush you.Now, if your opponent is apeshit crazy and you know he also slowplays hands like sets or 2 pairs a lot, then you can reraise here, but that is a very specific read (but realistic for some opponents). In that theoretical instance, you would know that your opponent both bluffs this flop a lot and also is not raising a lot of his strongest hands, making his raise often very weak.