1/3 game, hero is on the button with $600.
Unknown villain with around $500 limps in MP.
Fish with $200ish in next seat over wearing a ridiculous PokerStars hoodie and having made some pretty ridiculous plays throughout the night raises to $20.
I 3-bet to $60 thinking I want to GII vs the fish without scaring her out, and there's no way anyone is limp calling a 3-bet.
Except I get called in both places. And limper asks me my stack size before calling - legit question because I was sitting there a "tiny big stack" of mostly all $25 chips. I put him on a SC or small PP.
Flop comes 6s 8s 10c and checks around to me. I am not liking this flop but we need to bet, so I fire $100 into $180. (Too small on this coordinated of a board into 2 opponents, I know, should've gone at least $125.)
Limper raises to $225; a definite pot committing bet, so I know he had hit this flop hard. Fish folds.
Hands that crush us: 4 combos of 97s, 3 combos of 66. I'm not putting 88 and TT in villain's range given the limp-call pre-flop.
Hands that might make this move and are behind us: 3 combos each of 67s, 78s, 89s, 9Ts, and a few spade flush combos, definitely JT and QT, maybe 34, 45, 57, and maybe small suited spade aces with wheel potential like A2 - A5.
I think it's plausible that the raise was not meant as a please-call-me pot committing raise but rather an attempt to get a fold out of AK/AQ, particularly since my cbet was on the smaller side, so that's why I'm putting hands as weak as a pure flush draw in villain's range. But we can treat the raise as an all-in size because there is no scenario where the rest of the money doesn't go in. We're only folding or jamming, and if we jam villain is either snap calling or sigh calling but he's calling.
Number of combos definitely favour us putting it in, however hands that we are behind have us crushed to 2 outs or drawing to runner-runner, while hands we beat are only marginally behind us.
Do I put in my stack here or fold?
Last edited by GuitarDean; 12-15-2018 at 03:35 AM.