#1
|
|||
|
|||
Donking the flop
Hay guyz, I just read a threat (The one about TT on a J-high board) where a response said he might have tried donk-betting the flop.
Do you ever donk the flop? When? Do you feel like this will ellicit a raise from ATC? |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Re: Donking the flop
1) If my opponents are weak-tight I donk with ATC on dry flops. Not always of course, but I definitely do it a lot. And I feel it works very well.
2) If my opponents are maniacs I donk with sets etc. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Re: Donking the flop
[x] Second before ban
[x] I donks the flop all the time [x] I hates c/r. [x] Last |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Re: Donking the flop
No you're not.
You hate being check-raised? |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Re: Donking the flop
No. I just think a c/r is inherently wrong unless there is something seriously wrong with the opponent.
It folds out all the worser hands he might otherwise have called several streets on. It makes him play cautiously all the worse hands he might otherwise raised us with. It takes away his ability to "raise a donk" and bluff us with ATC. It gives villain a free card if he is drawing. It does nothing to disguise our marginal hands. The only uses for a c/r I can see is multiway with a very good relative position on the pfr and on the river. Basically when psr gets really low, like a flop c/r when villain is a shortie or a turn c/r when the pot is bloated from OOP and villain will be getting like 4 to 1 to call. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Re: Donking the flop
lock'd
|
|
|