Author Topic: Low stakes live cash hand  (Read 5607 times)

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pokerpops

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Low stakes live cash hand
« on: July 05, 2013, 11:26:09 AM »
Local casino and Matt Frankland is home for a visit and has been on a night out before joining the .25/.50 table. He appears sober and to be taking it fairly seriously. Sat with the max of £200 on a table where stacks ranged from £30 to c£350.
First time I"ve met him but his record and reputation are obviously good.
Two hands of minor interest so far, one where he called a preflop raise and checked to the river where he made a small bet (into a tiny pot) on the 4 river holding A4. Called by AK and good.
The second he called a river bet of £26 with third pair poor kicker and was again good.
He"s also flatted a couple of small raises and folded to aggression pre and opened a few pots himself.
As you"d expect he"s very comfortable with himself in this game.

Hand in question Matt opens to £3 from utg+2, I raise from BB with  Ac Qs playing just over £200 and we go to the flop HU
Flop   8c 6c 4s (£25)

I check, I wouldn"t always but I expect him to float most boards and OOP I don"t want a big pot to develop.

Turn is   5h I check again and Matt bets £13.75. Calling feels obligatory since I"d expect him to have bet any pair, set or two pair type hands on the flop. Few if any sevens in his range?

River  Tc  (£52.50)

Now, I have the  Ac, is leading here good?
Or check raising?

Or do we just check and give up?
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Fatcatstu

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Re: Low stakes live cash hand
« Reply #1 on: July 05, 2013, 11:42:02 AM »
Personally dont see the need to call his turn bet, you are basically trying to out play the best player at the table, no?

Get in as few spots with him as possible, and when you get in them ,make sure you have the equipment to fight back.

I check and fold.
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pokerpops

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Re: Low stakes live cash hand
« Reply #2 on: July 05, 2013, 11:54:48 AM »

Personally dont see the need to call his turn bet, you are basically trying to out play the best player at the table, no?

Get in as few spots with him as possible, and when you get in them ,make sure you have the equipment to fight back.

I check and fold.


If we don"t test ourselves occasionally we don"t improve.
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AAroddersAA

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Re: Low stakes live cash hand
« Reply #3 on: July 05, 2013, 12:11:07 PM »
As played check/fold the river.

I don"t really like how we have played this hand against this player. I have no idea who he is but assume he is a good thinking player who we are playing OOP too 400BB deep.

I assume there were no caller"s of his raise preflop. I would probably just call here as I don"t want to bloat the pot against this player OOP, have a look at the flop and go from there, if I hit I don"t mind check calling the flop and going from there. Also if he 4-bets me I have to fold (reverse implied odds Vs AK) and pretty much hate that.

If I do 3-bet Vs this player I am probably planning on betting the flop whatever and expecting to get called and also betting the turn mostly and expecting to get quite a few folds. It also depends on your table image and how he is seeing you. Is he going to believe the 3-bet really means a big hand? I doubt it and just a flop bet is not going to be enough to convince him. If so maybe I will give it up on the turn but this would be very read dependant, my default setting is bet flop and bet turn. Fold if he raises either levelling wars OOP are just bad.

When you check to him twice, his bet feels like he pretty much has to bet here (I would bet ATC obviously) but I don"t see what we can do about it, we have nothing and he can have all kinds of hands here. The flush draw is in his range, although I would have expected him to bet it on the flop really, but you would have bet it if you had it as well so I am certainly not putting you on it if I am him. I think once we have checked twice we have effectively given up and should fold. I know we can potentially get worse hands to try and bluff and in certain spots that is fine but that is just to complicated here. We just have no idea where we are. As played I am folding the turn as I am going to have to check the river and he can easily bluff me off the pot.

Our hand does not look like a flush draw or an overpair to me on the river.

If we had flopped an overpair then surely we would have bet the flop. Same if we had floped a big flush draw. Not really any flopped sets in our range and even if we did flop a set we would have to protect it on that board with 88. We could be playing it cute I suppose but the check on the turn pretty much makes that almost impossible. Our hand now looks like what it is. When we call I guess we could have a little mid type pair or a flush draw of some kind but the flush draw is such a small part of our range (I assume he is seeing you as a thinking player here as actually flush draws do get played like this quite often but I doubt you would play one like this).

I would check it OTR and hope he checks and we are good. If he bets I insta fold. I think he would call a lead very wide here as other than an unlikely flush draw or very strangely played flopped monster I don"t see what we represent. A check raise might work but again it is a complex line, there are so many easier ways of getting to the same result.

What does he bet that we beat that folds to a check raise? Based on his previous bet it is possible but you would have to be right a lot to make this profitable.



Personally dont see the need to call his turn bet, you are basically trying to out play the best player at the table, no?

Get in as few spots with him as possible, and when you get in them ,make sure you have the equipment to fight back.

I check and fold.


If we don"t test ourselves occasionally we don"t improve.

I agree, but we are not testing ourselves here, we should expect exactly what we got. Why have we called the turn bet? What was the plan on the river? Thats why I fold the turn because I know I am check/folding on most rivers and I don"t see much other option. This is not a spot to test yourself. You test yourself by playing the entire hand against the player and making the correct decisions. I would have played the hand very different but as played I fold the turn and check/fold the river. Sometimes I will fold the best hand, so be it.
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mporter123

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Re: Low stakes live cash hand
« Reply #4 on: July 05, 2013, 12:11:34 PM »
I would probs just peel pre. Are we full ring? As we raised then would be betting the flop with backdoor clubs and overs. Some fun turn cards to barrel too.

As played then once we check the flop then just check fold the turn.

As played river might be a check fold. Prob just check call in game though.

dwh103

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Re: Low stakes live cash hand
« Reply #5 on: July 05, 2013, 12:24:59 PM »
Definite contradiction in saying you don"t want to bloat the pot OOP on the flop...but you"ve 3bet pre with a horrible hand to 3b OOP with. Only serves to let him fold all the hands you have dominated and he"ll peel anything with decent implied odds, most of which you"re not massively ahead of.

As played, cbet flop, fold turn, and a donk to rep a flush doesn"t really hold much weight given you"ve checked flop. Had the hand played out differently there"d be no harm in trying to play off the older gentleman stereotype (;)), but you just can"t rep anything.

For the river I"m most likely to check/fold, I might find a hero depending on mood/Villains bet sizing - your range is so weak it"s a comfortable bet with all his air.
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AMRN

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Re: Low stakes live cash hand
« Reply #6 on: July 05, 2013, 12:31:32 PM »
What was the reason for 3betting preflop?  I can"t see that it serves any purpose other than to bloat the pot out of position against a good player.

If we are doing it to take the initiative and the betting lead in the hand, why would we then give that away by checking the flop?  If we"re only c-betting the flops we hit, 3betting out of position preflop is spewy.

Against this player and in this situation, I prefer to call pre, and check/fold the flop.  Surely there are better spots at the table to get involved than oop against a good player??   ............And yes I get your comment about testing yourself to improve, however that doesn"t mean we should just give the better player our money, which is what"s going to happen most of the time in this spot. Would much rather test myself against him when I have the button.

Fatcatstu

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Re: Low stakes live cash hand
« Reply #7 on: July 05, 2013, 13:21:38 PM »


Personally dont see the need to call his turn bet, you are basically trying to out play the best player at the table, no?

Get in as few spots with him as possible, and when you get in them ,make sure you have the equipment to fight back.

I check and fold.


If we don"t test ourselves occasionally we don"t improve.


If we call OOP with marginal/bad hands against a good player, we lose money 90% of the time.

I"m all for playing creatively, but surely part of being a good player is picking spots surely? This spot is horrendous IMO.

Out of interest what range do you put him on having called your 3bet?
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pokerpops

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Re: Low stakes live cash hand
« Reply #8 on: July 05, 2013, 14:40:46 PM »



Personally dont see the need to call his turn bet, you are basically trying to out play the best player at the table, no?

Get in as few spots with him as possible, and when you get in them ,make sure you have the equipment to fight back.

I check and fold.


If we don"t test ourselves occasionally we don"t improve.


If we call OOP with marginal/bad hands against a good player, we lose money 90% of the time.

I"m all for playing creatively, but surely part of being a good player is picking spots surely? This spot is horrendous IMO.

Out of interest what range do you put him on having called your 3bet?


when he flats I gave him pretty much any pair below queens and a few Ace+Broadway cards, with maybe the odd randoms thrown in - sexy connected cards and suited stuff. He was playing "socially".

When he checks back on the flop it reduced the chance he had a set or indeed a pair and on the turn I actually felt there was a lot more likelihood he had A10/AJ/AQ than a 7 or a pair.

he bet £43 when I checked the river and I decided that even if I was right there was only one of those hands that I was beating.

I"d debate the "marginal bad hand" description here btw - his range for opening is wide enough to include him peeling a lot of stuff that I"m in good shape against as well as the obvious hands that he 4bets
The error, maybe, is not c-betting having raised pre.

@Rodders - Matt Frankland
http://uk.pokernews.com/news/2012/07/mathew-frankland-claims-number-one-spot-in-uk-ireland-rankin-8860.htm
http://iveypoker.com/mathew-frankland/

so yes, he"s pretty darned good
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dwh103

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Re: Low stakes live cash hand
« Reply #9 on: July 05, 2013, 15:12:32 PM »

I"d debate the "marginal bad hand" description here btw - his range for opening is wide enough to include him peeling a lot of stuff that I"m in good shape against as well as the obvious hands that he 4bets


I"d massively disagree with this - what range is he peeling with that you"re in good shape against?

This is a clear reverse implied odds spot imo.
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deanp27

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Re: Low stakes live cash hand
« Reply #10 on: July 05, 2013, 15:45:26 PM »
I posted on the other forum but will repeat here -  I much prefer flatting a reasonable strong hand OOP vs Mat than 3betting - he is gonna peel a vast majority of his opening range (he"s never folding his 54s etc) and make life pretty difficult for you on a number of flops. Just no need to take off against the guy at the table that hand reads pretty perfectly as opposed to the rest of the table.

Its ok saying he will peel worse (as he prob will) but it will be difficult for you to be able to cash in your advantage of having a strong hand preflop by the fact he is a good player who knows your likely range and has position on you.

As played you rep nothing by the river (not a flush, straight or overpair) and he is likely to call most bets with a single pair (or better) - i"d probably c-bet this flop if I was 3betting pre, but i"d just give up now vs Mat.
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WYoung83

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Re: Low stakes live cash hand
« Reply #11 on: July 05, 2013, 23:31:26 PM »
Not repping anything at all now imo, so a bet will get snapped off with any pair. I would of defently c bet on that flop though, have some big back door equity, and he will just fold a bunch of times. If you are worried about decant players owning and out playing u after the flop, then dont 3 bet with AQo because its hard oop to someone who is good, so maybe i would of just called his raise because u are closing the action and your hand is still very good.

Edit... i also think that having the Ac is not really a blocker or key card at all here, because you cant rep a flush with the line u have taken, and your never going to get him to fold much either.
« Last Edit: July 05, 2013, 23:37:14 PM by WYoung83 »

pokerpops

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Re: Low stakes live cash hand
« Reply #12 on: July 06, 2013, 16:55:08 PM »
I posted this hand elsewhere obviously and have posted this there too..


I obviously appreciate the advice and thoughts and take them on board but now I"m faced with being 6,000,000,000 levels below someone who many poker players haven"t even heard of, and to cap that, I"m old!  this referenced two replies received over there obviously

I dwelled on the river and eventually folded having decided that I was right with my read that Matt had a similar hand to mine, ie AQ/AJ/A10 and that I was only winning vs one of those.
I showed the Ac though and suggested that a shove would have been hard for him to call and he declared that he had the same hand as me with no clubs but that the club on the river was a good card for him to rep. He suggested that he"d have folded had I lead the river, or had I check raised.
He may have been fibbing.

It"s tricky because I won"t get many chances to play against people like Matt at stakes that I am comfortable with and I didn"t want to avoid him because if we don"t test ourselves we don"t learn or improve. I picked a bad spot to get involved though, should have just kept raising his BB from the cut off really, that might have been fun.
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Fatcatstu

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Re: Low stakes live cash hand
« Reply #13 on: July 07, 2013, 09:28:48 AM »
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Zozzy

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Re: Low stakes live cash hand
« Reply #14 on: July 07, 2013, 11:03:49 AM »
3 bet pre.
Jam all in on the flop and when he folds, show your bluff by slamming your cards face up on the table and shout "Eat That ! muvvafvcker!! "
and "who do you think you are sitting at our table!!!!!"



or call pre and check fold
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