Wow, this thread blew up. Appreciate all the input - seems like check/eval and fold to a sizable X/R or jam from original donker is the popular vote, which is not what I ended up doing...
Quote:
Originally Posted by au4all
Why would someone be more likely to have AQ/KQ than TT or AK? You were there so you can make any read you want, but that sounds odd.
If you type normal ranges into some tool (like ProPoker Tools) you're likely to win this pot about 50% of the time. Don't you think the times someone overbet donks is likely the 50% where you're not likely to win the hand?
You only have 3 outs to the nuts (and 3 additional outs to what is likely the nuts). Assuming your six outs are live, you're going to hit 12.8% of the time on the turn. You need 35.7% equity to call the overbet.
I figure most people would open AK and TT-QQ UTG pre. I thought maybe UTG would be more likely to limp strong non-premiums like AQ/KQ, but this might be me trying to convince myself I have more equity than I really do. I suppose if we discount sets and the nut straight, we have to discount a lot of pair/SDs as well.
I don’t think we necessarily need to improve to a straight to win this hand, as there’s several draws UTG could donk with that we are ahead of - T9dd, ATdd, KTdd, A9dd. We’re flipping with any 2 pair, only in bad shape vs 4 combos of 98s and 2 combos of K9s.
Quote:
Originally Posted by EastCoastHoosier
Definitely want to look at this more, but the combos of hands that you think V would do this with is where the answer is. The most likely hands are ones that have you beat:
K9 - 8 combos
98 - 16 combos
QJ/QT/JT - 9 combos each (probably discount JT)
You beat
AQ - 12
KQ - 6
"Flip" with AdTd 1 combo
Being that I'm supposed to be working I can't do everything I'd like but it looks like you would need to weight V to more made hands that have you at ~30%. Hopefully I'll be able to finish my thoughts later...
If I was to continue I'd probably flat and evaluate as we should have a clearer picture after the other 2 Vs act and then after the turn action. No need to fold out dominated hands on the flop.
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After thinking about this hand some more, I think this is a reasonable range for UTG:
4 combos 98s
2 combos K9s
3 combos QJs
2 combos JTs
2 combos QTs
ATdd, KTdd, T9dd, A9dd
1 combo TT (assume 1/3 chance of him limping this UTG)
If I was heads up, I’d have 39.7% equity against that range.
I think assuming he limps AQ/KQ and not AK/QQ/JJ is biased thinking on my part, trying to give myself more equity than I really have. He either limps or opens all those hands.
Quote:
Originally Posted by shorn7
Well, you have two others yet to really act after the PFR (which is you) so I think raising here is a big overplay (just because they "checked to the raiser" does not mean they don't have a big hand). It is just a crappy spot overall and I can see merit to both calling/evaluate (and folding to a backraise) or just folding now. I think we have too much equity to simply fold now, so I call and see what develops. Hopefully the other two either fold or call, but I am not willing to risk my stack until I see what they do.
So I ended up raising to 275 as an equity protection play, trying to get 2p and FDs to fold. I figure heads up against above range I have decent equity, but vs 2 players im probably behind vs at least one and drawing to at most 6 outs vs the other.
I can see how calling/eval turn might be better though, esp since I’m IP and there’s a percentage of the time I get a free card OTR to fully realize my equity for cheap. I just wasn’t sure what I’d do if blinds 3b jammed - didn’t feel good to call 120 then have to fold. In the moment I was comfortable just GII OTF.