This hand has bothered me!
$200 buy-in NLHE MTT at a Florida parimutuel facility. This facility has regularly been playing poker for about three years. Recently, Florida legislature expanded the rules to allow NLHE with $100 max buy-in and slightly increased LHE games. There has been a tremendous increase in the number of players. Most players are loose, like to gamble and really not very tough. This is the first "large" buy-in tournament held at this facility.
150 players started and after about three hours down to around 50. I have about t10,000, which is the large stack at the table, with average stack size about t4,500. Blinds are t150/t300 and no ante.
Tight player in early position raises to t1,000 (has has about t9,000), one fold and I peek at AKo. There are five live players behind me three of whom are short-stacked. I decide to fold. As I muck my cards they flip over and everyone sees that I folded AK. Everyone folds behind me.
The player to my left is incredulous. A lady seated across from me says, "I can't believe what you folded; you should have at least called. You read the wrong book." I ignore them and sit there thinking about my fold.
Here is my thought process. I didn't call, because as a general rule, I don't like to call a raise with AK, since I hit the flop only 1/3 of the time. I don't mind raising big with this hand, but if I'm not first in, then I feel like I'm in a raise or fold situation. I didn't want to reraise, because I would have been pot committed. That aside, my real reason for not calling was the existence of the short-stacks behind me. I didn't want to call and either have to fold to an all-in reraise by a short-stack or call knowing that the EP raiser probably had a big pair and I was either racing for as much as half (or perhaps all) my chips or else I'm crushed.
In hindsight, maybe this was my spot to gamble, I ended up being card dead for the last two hours and having no opportunities to steal and busted out a few hands before the money.
All comments and criticism are welcome.
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