Quote:
Originally Posted by johnnyBuz
Did you read the OP? I’ve highlighted the relevant parts.
If you expand your thought process and analysis you’ll see that we are near the top of our BTN raising range. Flopping an overpair on the BTN and facing a x/jam on a wet board that misses our PFR range is a completely different scenario then opening UTG and facing the same action.
We started the hand 130 BB’s and 100 BB’s effective. Utilizing fairly standard population reads of euro combined with OPs read that he overshoves often it’s pretty obvious he’s going to be overweighted to draws. That’s a mathematical fact that can be proven with counting combos. It’s pretty damn hard to make a hand in this game. Combine that with the fact that the laggy villain that likes to gamble takes two minutes to decide what to do, gives hero the stare down and then doesn’t even shove his remaining $150 into the middle its pretty obvious he’s got a weak made hand.
Both villains played the hand very well and outplayed hero. Given the results and how wide both of these villains were it’s simply a fact that folding was a mistake. If you’re afraid to call off $500 here (technically shoving $650) with an overpair you’re playing scared money.
Appreciate the bolding. That being said, hero also denotes that overshoves are balanced and deeper villain is tight passive. Maybe I'm wrong, but where I play, tight passive tend not to overshove with low tp type hands. Heads up, you would have more of an argument. 3 ways, you just don't seem to be on the winning side often enough.
I'm aware this goes against 2p2's protocol of "omgbbqoverpairjamloldonk", but as a llsnl even if you're marginally ahead some of the time, you aren't likely to stay that way. I know the community is rather online leaning, but playing live your margins need to be more than they are online because the hph is so much lower.
Because the above is going to be taken it off context and as an effort to clarify... I'm okay with calling off against one opponent or hell, even jamming yourself against the right villain. Against 2 players, your equity essentially vanishes here with TT.