#21
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Re: Hand caught in the Cookie Jar
I think you should bet the river, throw down your hand face-up and say "ship it" and tip the dealer $1. Hopefully he'll misread your hand and muck.
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#22
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Re: Hand caught in the Cookie Jar
[ QUOTE ]
He isn't folding a better hand on the river. I usually put in somewhere between 467 and 468 bets on this flop. [/ QUOTE ] By 467 and 468, I hope you mean 4 to 6 because by that time your hand turns from a probable coin flip to about a 3:2 dog. Garland |
#23
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Re: Hand caught in the Cookie Jar
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] He isn't folding a better hand on the river. I usually put in somewhere between 467 and 468 bets on this flop. [/ QUOTE ] By 467 and 468, I hope you mean 4 to 6 because by that time your hand turns from a probable coin flip to about a 3:2 dog. Garland [/ QUOTE ] No, the 468th bet on the flop isn't for value anymore, its for a free river card if you miss! If you only flat call the 467th bet, your opponent will still donk any safe turn, which is -EV. |
#24
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Re: Hand caught in the Cookie Jar
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] [ QUOTE ] He isn't folding a better hand on the river. I usually put in somewhere between 467 and 468 bets on this flop. [/ QUOTE ] By 467 and 468, I hope you mean 4 to 6 because by that time your hand turns from a probable coin flip to about a 3:2 dog. Garland [/ QUOTE ] No, the 468th bet on the flop isn't for value anymore, its for a free river card if you miss! If you only flat call the 467th bet, your opponent will still donk any safe turn, which is -EV. [/ QUOTE ] you're wrong. It's to increase our implied odds when we hit. By going 467 bets our opponent has to put us on middle set, so we're gonna get 350-400 raises in on the turn or river if we make a straight or a flush |
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