Quote:
Originally Posted by asmitty
The range you have for the flop raiser is far, far too tight. Among other hands you should potentially include: 33; 43s; 53s; A5s (not just hearts); A4s (not just hearts); 32s; 67hh; 86hh; 64hh. He may also have other flush draws. It's hard to construct a range because we have no idea where he limped from, but your stove shows you have poor equity because you gave the flop raiser an excessively strong range. Try building a stronger range and seeing what happens.
(Equity, Win, Tie)
Player 1: 11.24% 9.753% 3.130% {6c6s, 6d6s, 6d6c}
Player 2: 18.77% 17.38% 3.038% {88-77, 55-22, AhTh-Ah2h, 52s+, 42s+, 32s, 52o+, 42o+, 32o}
Player 3: 21.41% 19.91% 3.273% {55-44, 22, A5s-A4s, A2s, Ah6h, 8h6h, 7h6h, 65s, 6h4h, 53s+, 42s+, 32s}
Player 4: 33.52% 32.31% 2.657% {Ah3h, Kh3h, QhTh+, Qh3h, Jh9h+, Th8h+, 9h7h+, 8h6h+, 7h5h+, 6h4h+, 5h3h+, 4h2h+, 3h2h}
Player 5: 7.523% 6.678% 1.898% [??]
Player 6: 7.534% 6.687% 1.903% [??]
Board: [2h 4d 5h ? ?]
Deal To: River
Dead Cards: {}
Monte Carlo Simulation: 23002022 trials
In the above
Player 1 is me.
Player 2 is the bettor.
Player 3 is the raiser
Player 4 called the raise
players 5 and 6 are random
The action went bettor, random caller, raiser, called the raise, me, 1 or two randoms behind me.
I like these ranges. I like my fold. You all are awesome. pokerCruncher is awesome.