#1
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100NL live: AA in SB
Playing some 100NL (2/2 blinds) live tonight. Had some huge hands and was up to over $400 when the following came up:
Couple of limpers, shortie goes all-in for $18. Crazy drunk guy to my right on the button min-raises to $36. This guy was just a crazy idiot, making tons of donk raises to $4 and $5 and often cold called raises preflop blind. He has about $400 behind as well. I look down at AA in the SB. I really do not want to take my hand OOP against him as he could have any two at this point, although even the drunk fools can wake up with a big hand. If I let him in cheap, he may outflop me and I doubt I can get away from an overpair, especially against this guy. I've seen him only call small all-in raises with marginal holdings. What's the optimal play here? |
#2
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Re: 100NL live: AA in SB
You have to get him to put in more $ pre-flop w/o him folding, Probally raise 2/3 pot or pot.
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#3
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Re: 100NL live: AA in SB
Make it 100 to go.
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#4
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Re: 100NL live: AA in SB
To me, 100 doesn't seem to work out quite well. It leaves us with a 1.5 PSB behind if he calls. The guy is a donk, but I'm not sure I'd have faith in him to call a big overbet on the flop, and betting a PSB or less leaves us with little on the turn, which seems just kind of weird. If we make it a little less, like $80ish, then we'll end up with 2 PSBs behind, and we might have better luck getting him to call a 2/3 PSB on the flop followed by our turn push. Plus, he's more likely to call the smaller raise. With deeper stacks, I'd be more inclined to go with 100.
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#5
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Re: 100NL live: AA in SB
We can bet just slightly more than half pot on the flop, then get the rest in on the turn.
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#6
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Post deleted by Ryan Beal
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#7
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Re: 100NL live: AA in SB
I don't think this is that hard of a hand. Raise to at least $80 or $90 and then up that as much as you think he will keep calling with the vast majority of his range. Then bet flop for 2/3 - 3/4 pot and put the rest in on the turn, regardless of what falls. (The only exceptions might be KKx, QQx, JJx boards where you might do better check/calling postflop to induce bluffs.)
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#8
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Re: 100NL live: AA in SB
[ QUOTE ]
I don't think this is that hard of a hand. Raise to at least $80 or $90 and then up that as much as you think he will keep calling with the vast majority of his range. Then bet flop for 2/3 - 3/4 pot and put the rest in on the turn, regardless of what falls. (The only exceptions might be KKx, QQx, JJx boards where you might do better check/calling postflop to induce bluffs.) [/ QUOTE ] |
#9
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Re: 100NL live: AA in SB
[ QUOTE ]
I don't think this is that hard of a hand. Raise to at least $80 or $90 and then up that as much as you think he will keep calling with the vast majority of his range. Then bet flop for 2/3 - 3/4 pot and put the rest in on the turn, regardless of what falls. (The only exceptions might be KKx, QQx, JJx boards where you might do better check/calling postflop to induce bluffs.) [/ QUOTE ] It's probably not but I was unsure of what to do exactly. This player is a known LAGtard by most people that play at this cardroom and literally he sat down, cold-called raises blind, and flopped the nuts. Obviously I wasn't so much worried about what he had, but MORE worried that he could have any two cards here and he has position on me. Instead of making a raise to $80-100, I just decided to get rid of him now and I pushed. He folded 99 face up. Board came like J-8-4-5-4. Afterwards, he chided me, saying he would have bluffed off chips postflop, blah blah blah. I basically said he'd been running so ridiculously hot (up $300 in a 2/2 game within an hour) I'd rather just not deal with him. Hopefully I will play it better next time, but I was so concerned about him flopping some random 2-pair and busting me that I just wanted him gone, and maybe he wakes up with KK and decides to call anyway. |
#10
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Re: 100NL live: AA in SB
Raise to $100.
You've killed any odds he has of drawing, so once you do you're committed to the hand. Get it in on the flop and turn and ride the variance wave. |
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