Quote:
Originally Posted by shmoo101
^ Pot when he calls is about 430. 65/430 is 15%. 4 outs is 8.5%. So he loses $32.50 in EV. 5 outs is 10.6% so he loses $19. He more than makes up for this with implied odds when he gets it in on turns with 70%+ equity in just the side pot. Only reason I can think to flat is if you intend on folding to his shove.
Hmmm...not sure where you are getting $430.
I do actually have the flop pot incorrect. I add the flop pot to be $101: $1 (SB), $2 (BB), $4 (UTG Straddle), $4 (caller 1), $4 (V1), $4 (V2), $30 (Hero), $26 (V1), $26 (V2).
Doesn't matter though, $97 is close.
If Hero just calls the V1 shove, pot is $101 (pot)+$45 (hero bet)+$45 (V1 call)+$110 (V2's remaining stack after he called $30 PF - he started the hand with $140)+$65 (Hero's call of $110) : $65 (Amount V2 needs to call). So that's $366:$65 or 5.6:1.
Anyway...could you explain what
"So he loses $32.50 in EV. 5 outs is 10.6% so he loses $19." means? I don't understand what this means. I understand were you get 5 outs equals 10.6%, but how does "he" (who is "he", hero?) loses a certain amount of money.
By raising to almost 70% of the effective stack, we are only getting V2 to fold the hands we beat, and call with the hands that are beating us. Also if we raise this much and V2 shoves on the flop, are we going to fold? We probably should not after putting in 70% of the effective stack.
You also stated,
"Only reason I can think to flat is if you intend on folding to his shove" Do you mean if we flat on the flop and V2 shoves into us on the turn?