Big Laydown

Full Tilt Poker, $5/$10 NL Hold’em Cash Game, 5 Players
LeggoPoker.comHand History Converter

Hero (BTN): $2,517
SB: $1,000
BB: $1,888.75
UTG: $5,702.90
CO: $1,017

Pre-Flop: A T dealt to Hero (BTN)
3 folds, Hero raises to $30, SB raises to $90, Hero calls $60

Flop: ($180) K A K (2 Players)
SB bets $180, Hero calls $180

Turn: ($540) K (2 Players)
SB bets $540, Hero folds

Results: $540 Pot ($3 Rake)
SB mucked and WON $537 (+$267 NET)

I knew nothing about this player, but I don’t really ever expect a random to be bluffing here. So basically I’m either chopping or losing to quads/Aces full, and a chop isn’t that much more likely.

4 thoughts on “Big Laydown”

  1. Not sure what you mean. I do think Ax in his range. There are two Aces and one K in the deck, which makes it close, if I assume that he always plays Ax this way. Mix in the possibility of AA and the fact that I think Kx is more likely than any given combo of Ax, and I found a fold.

  2. Oh, I understand that. I was specifically referring to this part of your original post:

    “I knew nothing about this player, but I don’t really ever expect a random to be bluffing here.”

    I guess this means that you were weighing between a semi-bluff (Ax) and quads, but you had ruled out a total bluff (say, QQ)? And if so, why?

  3. Most people, even a lot of regulars, are simply too timid to make a huge double barrel bluff with air. It’s also significant here that this turn bet was much bigger than it needed to be. A player who was going to bluff here would probably bet 60-80% of the pot at most. Hitting the pot button again is something overexcited donks do. Given what I said before about people being afraid to bluff, I definitely don’t think a random is going to be cavalier about betting more than necessary even if he were bluffing.

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