I'm on the button with a $130 or so stack with
![The Ace of Hearts [Ah]](https://pofex.com/images/smilies/Ah.gif)
![The Queen of Hearts [Qh]](https://pofex.com/images/smilies/Qh.gif)
Flop $7
SB (bad lag after 95 hands) has $30ish after the raise and the flop is:
![The Ace of Spades [As]](https://pofex.com/images/smilies/As.gif)
![The Three of Spades [3s]](https://pofex.com/images/smilies/3s.gif)
![The Eight of Spades [8s]](https://pofex.com/images/smilies/8s.gif)
he leads for $2, BB folds, I raise to $6, he smooth calls.
Turn is
![The Queen of Diamonds [Qd]](https://pofex.com/images/smilies/Qd.gif)
he leads for $6 I move in.
This board is intimidating, but my gut and read is saying I'm ahead by at least 4:1. That the worse i'm looking at is Ax with a big club. I can't see laying down top two to this yahoo ever.
It is plays like this that either lose me some money or win me a stack, I'm pretty confident in my hand reading skills, as well as playing this guy, who I've already started making plans on how I would like to spend his bankroll. I'm also far more prone to making these types of plays when beating the game buy over a buy in, I know that I can get it back with interest in a hand from the guy I loaned it to in the first place. Or at least I feel that way when reasonably confident that I outclass every opponent at the table by a landslide.