You check the flop with most of your AJo. If you want to bet, the best candidate will be a hand with the A
because it blocks a significant portion of his calling range that contains A
and allows you to bluff on any
on future streets.
If you bet the flop with AJo, the standard play is to continue betting on high cards like Q, K, T, or any diamond, and give up on other cards.
If you check with AJo, then you x fold most of your AJo except those containing a diamond (A
J or A J
). AJo without a diamond is a standard x fold here. AJo hands with a
can be played bet/x call, depending on the player.
Once you check-call:
A and J turn cards are best for you.
are also good for you.
Cards like 8, 6, and 3 are okay for you. You can make some x call on these cards. bc they don't improve your opponent range significantly.
Any other turn is horrible for you, and you should give up.
OTR you should x fold on very scary cards like a
or maybe even 9 or 7, as these could improve your op range.
As played:
It's actually close. You could even find a fold against an OMC or if you have some reads. You only beat bluffs here. If the person is capable of bluffing -call, if not - fold