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| View Poll Results: You're in a burning building -- do you save the two-year-old, or the petri dish of five blastulae? | |||
| I save the 2-year old. Duh. Easy choice. |
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44 | 91.67% |
| I would have to pause to think for a moment, but I think I'd have to save the kid. I'd be very conflicted though. |
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1 | 2.08% |
| I'd decide to save the blastulae, but it would be a very tough decision at the time. |
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0 | 0% |
| I save the blastulae. Five lives vs one life. Easy choice. |
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0 | 0% |
| I refuse to answer this trick question. It's like asking me whether I'd save a two-year old or my grandma, knowing that my grandma has less time to live but the two-year old is a stranger to me. Very unfair. |
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3 | 6.25% |
| Voters: 48. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#1
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That's a generally question that I'm curious about (in different positions, raised into, ect.). Here's the hand that prompted this: WSEX $5k guar. mid way through
Seat 7 is the button. Small Blind $75, Big Blind $150 SB, amount $500 BB, amount $5,500 Player 1, amount $1,750 Player 2, amount $1,250 Player 3, amount $2,750 Seat 4 (playing) : Player 4, amount $2,500 Seat 5 (playing) : KQs, amount $5,250 Seat 6 (playing) : Player 6, amount $3,250 Seat 7 (playing) : Player 7, amount $3,250 SB: Small Blind ($75) BB: Big Blind ($150) Player 1: Fold Player 2: Fold Player 3: Raise ($450) Player 4: Fold KQs: Call ($450) Player 6: Fold Player 7: Raise ($1,000) Player 8: Fold Player 0: Fold Player 3: Fold KQs: xxxxx? Reads: Player 3 is pretty solid, and I put him on a low pair (he has bluffed some big pots and has been selective on his starting hands). Player 7 has not been in many pots yet, so he is tight. Blinds start at $20, so only the better players are left now. Player 3 took a while to fold, which made me think it was definetly a pair. My table image is good, but I've obviously won a few bluffs. I'm playing about the same number of pots as player 3. |
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#2
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Well, you have to call preflop now. 550 into 2K+ pot.
You're in an interesting spot if you just flop top pair. If you check, he probably shoves and you'll have to decide whether to call with top pair/decent kicker. If you bet out and he shoves, you'll have to call because it won't be much more to call. Since he re-raised to 1000 and now only has 2250 left, you have to believe he's getting the rest of those chips all in with a pot like that regardless of what hits on the flop. I think an open-shove would be an okay idea if you flop top pair. Put him to a decision because if you don't, then he'll do the same to you. So, if you flop top pair, your top options are check/fold or open-shove. |
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#3
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BTW, what do you think of the initial call in this position? I think it's too early for a good push, to likely to get trapped all in. But then this happens...
I like calling in this position, however. But if I get a K or Q on the flop, I'm pushing all in most likely, or check/call his all in, actually, given as you said, 'he's pot committed to an all in'. I don't raise KQs in early position, but in mid or late, I would probably make a raise of $1k or so if there were 2 previous caller of large bets, hopefully to take the pot down or get the one caller (lessen the chance of trips). iH8poker |
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#4
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I voted fold b/c I fold KQs the first time it is raised from EP.
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#5
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Well...I was holding back for the 'grand finale' but I agree with folding if you are in early position to a raise...given the small raise, it's a tough fold but, either way, I decided there are better pots to play in. Early position KQs is not that good really, even early AQ is though.
The reraiser had AA and the flop had two of my suit. He won and I busted a little later. I pushed all in preflop. iH8poker |
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#6
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Fold to the first raise, but if you call you have to call when he raises to 1k, pushing is so bad here.
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#7
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Hate it. KQ is a nothing hand. You cannot stand a reraise In a raised pot it needs help on the flop and the majority of time it will miss. Even if you hit you could be dominated by AQ or AK. I would rather have a suited 65.
regards Ross |
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#8
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It's a trap hand following the raise. Dump it preflop.
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#9
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[ QUOTE ]
It's a trap hand following the raise. Dump it preflop. [/ QUOTE ] That's pretty much what I'm thinking. This was by far my worst hand of the tourney, obvious tilt. I often tilt when I play only one table at a time after an hour or two. Fortunately, as it turns out, I lost an all in a few hands later that I was highly favored to win, and then lost AK in late position after button called. A on flop, he got trips. I was all in preflop BUT if I had more chips, they certainly would have been lost here...so this mistake cost me little in the end. But no more! At one time people were putting KQs with AQo, but in EP both these hands kinda suck. You can get trapped easily...but generally you're not against AA [img]/images/graemlins/blush.gif[/img] if pushed / trapped. Well, that's how NOT to play KQs...I would like to see some big hands made off of this starting hand (and not a miracle hand, preferably). iH8poker |
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#10
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only against a super conservative player would i fold. against any other i would call to see a flop simply based on the pot odds. if you outdraw him, the implied odds are good that you can now take control of the table with a the big stack, and if you muck post-flop when you hit nothing, you still have decent chip position for now.
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