by Aisthesis » Mon Jun 13, 2005 6:59 am
Well, first, to Kenny's hand: If I'm QQ here against a good player, I make the raise and, if called, am done with the hand unless I hit a Q.
To get this thread even more "hijacked," I had one the other day that got me thinking. Good player with QQ (he says, and he was probably honest) raises to my 55, where I hit a set. I bet pottish ($100) into his overpair, and he just folds!!! Well, this guy is asking for trouble imo. I'm not going to do it very often (he only shows up once in a while), but I'm going to bluff this player to a raise occasionally (and checkraise a real set--maybe check-call or minimum raise).
To ice: Very nice hand on this subject. My real question would be whether this guy has ever seen you make unusual moves like this. Also, (and I guess with your inclination not to raise AK, it's probably a particularly bad read on you) I've seen some players try to bet their little pairs into a possible missed AK, which does work once in a while. I used to do it on occasion (really more of a bad "frustration play" than anything else, I think), but it's just not good imo (maybe if you're really struggling for minimal edge sometimes).
Anyhow, I really think the way to go on that one (don't know what kind of battles you have against this guy) is to obviously lay down unimproved AK to the bet, but, in the given situation, fire out $320 or so. I really wouldn't depart from ABC play against that guy for quite a while in this kind of situation. And, by the way, he doesn't stack you with his 33 here when he does hit, because if he calls the $320, you're done without improvement (or at least I am).
I really think raising the overpair is just necessary, whether or not they have a set, for bluff prevention. It essentially makes the bluff into a very expensive experiment if it fails. I guess I should say one additional thing about the "done with the hand" part. If you start suspecting him of bluffing, then I don't think it's necessarily bad to move in on the turn once in a while, too. But I also don't think a tight player is normally going to get involved in that kind of nonsense. I think he'll just fold it on the flop pretty consistently (as he should)--and donated an additional $80 here for no real reason.