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#1
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It Was a Smart Play
You correctly guessed that he was talking himself into a call and you took action. You kept your promise to show your hand. No apologies. As for saying, "I got you", you did not know his hand and vice versa. It goes without saying neither of you knew the exact hole cards so this is typical table banter. I hear these old timers say things like, "I don't think I can lay down this draw", then they push all-in with top set. No one goes apeshit on these oldtimers....
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#2
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Re: Did I angleshoot this guy?
Angle shooting? You mean like shoving with no hand and no draw? Angle shooting like that?
Look, everything a player does, doesn't do or tries to act as if they are doing (or not doing) is information for the other player to consider. You could just have easily sealed the call by your opponent, with your words, if he had thought to himself "This guy has said nothing up until now, hardly talks at all and just when I'm openly berating myself for even thinking about folding, suddenly now he throws me a life line? Are these the words/actions of someone who wants me to call or wants me to fold?" Unethical and mean would have been to say "I've got you and I'll show" and then tossed your hand into the muck after he folded saying "I'm not sure where you learned to play, but where I come from, you have to pay to see them". Besides, you didn't even lie, you had him, by virtue of his fold and you showed, just like you promised to do! Just because you normally don't do it doesn't mean it's unethical or even out of line. On the other hand, when your best friend admits to sleeping with your girlfriend, saying "Man, the way you love to get into people’s heads at the poker table I thought you would appreciate the guts it took to pull off such a deceptive play", try to be just as philosophical! Just kidding bro, you didn't do anything wrong and your buddy probably isn't either |
#3
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Re: Did I angleshoot this guy?
[ QUOTE ]
I am predominantly a live player these days and normally make it out to the casino to play 2 or 3 sessions a week. I am fairly quiet at the tables, rarely saying much more than "nice hand" or engaging in polite small talk. I almost never talk while in a hand, but yesterday I did something that I had never done before and I could really use your opinion on whether or not I crossed the line here. Here's the situation: Skip to post-flop action. I have A-10off on a board of 3-9-K rainbow. Villain leads out for $15 (1/2 pot) and I pop it to $40. He re-raises to $80. The guy had about $150 behind and I thought I had a read on the guy that he would fold to a shove, so I put him all in. I sat silent and motionless as is my SOP. He agonizes for literally 5 minutes and then starts saying things like "I don't think I can fold now" and "I'm a donkey if I lay this down." Basically, he starts talking himself into calling. I really feel like he is about to make the call when I do something out of character for me: I look at him at calmly say "I got you and I'll show you." He lays it down and I show him the bluff. He goes apeshit. He tells me I am an unethical "dickwad" and that I am a disgrace to the game, etc... I did not respond, but simply sat and pondered to myself whether what I had done had crossed the line. Thus, my question to 2+2 - Am I an angleshooting douchebag who should apologize to the guy next time I see him at the table or is what I did part of the game and acceptable strategy in trying to entice a fold? Thanks for your input. [/ QUOTE ] table talk is both fun and fine. what you did wasn't an angle shoot, and i have no problem with it. i wouldnt do it to someone i have a history with, someone that i play with a lot and enjoy playing with, but if i knew i could get some one timer to muck a better hand, then i'd say it too. [censored], tell him you thought he had a gutshot and that you really thought a-high was good. or just spike an ace when he calls with one pair. |
#4
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Re: Did I angleshoot this guy?
I wouldn't worry about it too much. Reminds me of one quick story. 1/2NLHE, guy raises to $15 with 10-10. I reraise to $40 with A-A. He's got about $120; I have him covered. He starts asking questions.
Guy: "Do you have a good hand?" Me: "Yes." Guy: "Will you show if I fold?" Me: "Yes." Guy: "Do you have a pair?" Me: "No." Guy goes all-in, I call, board bricks out, guy spends the rest of the day berating me while I laugh inside. |
#5
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Re: Did I angleshoot this guy?
Definitely not an angleshoot.
I got talked out of a call once - I think I had top pair on a coordinated board. Guy goes on about how I don't have odds to chase, he's there already, etc. He talks a lot, and somehow I put him on 2pr. He showed me AK (which missed) and I just made a mental note not to fall for that again, and played on - part of the game is what I thought. Just the other night, I saw a player next to me induce a call by making a big bet and then, when the guy starts to go into the tank, he calls "time". (He called it after like 3 seconds had elapsed) The guy says "tell me when it's down to one second," sounding annoyed, and right there I knew the bettor had a monster (and a great read on the victims mindset.) If a player really hates money, or feels bad for you, he'll show you the nuts before you call - which I've seen happen a couple of times, too. |
#6
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Re: Did I angleshoot this guy?
once a player starts stalling and or talking about the hand you are good to go with what you decide to say. its all table talk.
when you have a relationship with a palyer you must hold to it whateveer it is, as that will follow you forever. however your play of the hand was terrible. |
#7
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Re: Did I angleshoot this guy?
I have seen this play many times. In my experience the player who is on the fence seldom folds and the guy who said he has a strong hand is always telling the truth. Because of my experience if you had tried that move on me it would have worked. I would not have complained after though.
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