Quote:
Originally Posted by mongidig
3 players limp, CO raises(he's fairly tight pre and passive post. When he bets he's got it)
Folded to me in the SB...what does your suited hand range look like here? Connectors, 1 gap, etc.
The BB is a fairly loose defender.
I'm not a great player, but here are my thoughts:
First of all, it's somewhat significant that we have relative position. Since the CO was the PFR, if we do flop a set on a dangerous board we'll be in fairly good position to check-raise and force most of the field to call 2 bets on the flop. If we flop a big draw and hit it on the turn or the river we'll be able to force anyone still in the hand to call 2 bets and they won't be happy about it but won't be able to fold in that huge pot.
re-raise JJ+, AKso, AQso - I think this is pretty standard.
flat ATs, AJs, KQs, QJs, JTs, 66-TT, KQ. I think all of these hands have enough equity to see a flop out of position when there's minimal risk of a 3-bet.
I'm not thrilled about flatting T9s, KJs, KTs, QTs, 98s or 87s because we're playing easily-dominated hands out of position to 5 people in a bloated pot but I don't think I'd be disciplined enough to fold them. I don't think flatting any of these is a gigantic mistake as long as they're played correctly post-flop though.
I don't think I'd have the discipline to fold KJo or QJo here either, and I think calling with either one of them would be horrible. ATo, KTo and QTo I believe I would be smart enough to fold.
I think with 76s and below, J9s and below, Q9s and below you have to fold. If we were cold-calling 5 ways on the button instead of the small blind we could consider 65s+, 97s+ and T7s+, but OOP? We won't have control over the pot size.
Those are my thoughts.