Hand 1, you should be thanking your villain for a free pass through this hand and check to the river. He should be betting his outs, but he is allowing your showdown value to currently be ahead in the pot. Betting accomplishes almost nothing here except maybe folding out someone who caught a 6, or 77-99.
As played, shoving is terrible, you must now fold.
Hand 2, the huge mistake is on the flop, just fold. You do not need to win every single pot. The turn is debatable as played--the As does give you additional equity, but it is a bad card to bluff because it does not really weaken any hands that called you on the flop. If JJ is bad enough to call on Axx, it is certanly bad enough to call on AAxx. The river is an easy check/fold.
Hand 3, the mistake is raising to so much when you may not want to commit with AK. Against this villain, it is OK to flat a
reasonable 3bet in position against a wide 3bettor, but your open to $150 and his subsequent 3bet to $650 puts you in a shove or fold situation. I would actually go against the crowd here and advocate folding AK in this spot--that 4bet size is fishy-big and almost screams KK+. Against someone you can legitimately put on JJ+/AK, go ahead and get it in, but these players are few and far between without history.
Quote:
Originally Posted by firefoxmaz11
flatting the AcKc hand and then checking the turn, thats like the easiest lead ever
QFT. I almost laughed when I read what this villain had...maybe he wants to bet his royal draw one time?