22
22
22
22 (1st) $90
33 (2nd) $81
22 (2nd) $54
22 (2nd) $54
I got doubled up early on in a few of them by some mega-donks with big hands. Those donks make me want to keep coming back to SNGs. Like I had AA and raise 5x after two limpers. I get two callers. Flop comes
![The Queen of Diamonds [Qd]](https://pofex.com/images/smilies/Qd.gif)
![The Jack of Diamonds [Jd]](https://pofex.com/images/smilies/Jd.gif)
![The Five of Hearts [5h]](https://pofex.com/images/smilies/5h.gif)
![The Eight of Clubs [8c]](https://pofex.com/images/smilies/8c.gif)
One time I actually played post-flop poker with 33. His bets were telling me "overcards", I felt confident in my read, so I check-raised all-in. I think it was Kenny who told me one of the most important traits for NL cash is having confidence in your reads.
The hand played out like this:
Blinds 25/50, everyone around average stacked, 8-handed.
I open-limp in MP with 33, BTN raises 5x BB. Folds back to me and I decide to call. At the $22 SNGs on FullTilt I've noticed bigger raises pre-flops are much more likely to be big cards than big pairs. Flop comes 652 rainbow, I'm not confident he has overcards yet, so I check to see what he tells me. He bets exactly full pot fairly quickly. Now I think it's far more likely he has overcards than an overpair. Most players would not full pot an overpair on a flop like that. And my gut told me I was ahead. Usually I would just fold here to conserve chips, but I was very confident this time. I was surprised he called my c/r all-in with just AT-high (he wasn't pot-committed), but I was happy when he turned it over.