Quote:
Originally Posted by pokerfan655
I do like betting the flop and turn albeit smaller sizing - this is really a two street value hand at best and your range is the widest on the flop and turn. I think once he raises the turn you have two options - call the raise and call the river jam, or fold. The problem with calling the raise and river jam is your range is uncapped and yet he's still betting aggressively into you. He would have to be turning something like 66 into a bluff, or JTs/T9s/etc but of course you block a lot of those combos.
To those saying check the turn - your hand is faceup when you bet the flop, check the turn, and then vbet the river. It's obvious you have TT+ but not Qx+ so unless he's braindead I don't like it. The one thing you could do is bet the river smaller to induce a bluff raise to snap off if he's aggro enough.
Brain-dead is a bit harsh but exploitable is a good epithet. Delaying river is an exploit
And the same issue of getting not much/nothing worse to call is just as much in play on turn than river. You're not being consistent if you think he'll station small on turn (which is clearly an exploitable sizing with him having so much JJ-; why would IP's AA KK Qx ever use a small sizing?) but fold all the time on river
Face up?
AA, KK, QQ, KQ-/QJ-, AK all in there for IP--plenty to create exotic probing strats for OOP
-huge sizing with Qx and AK; small sizings; god luck snapping 100% of AA or KK when he pumps 35bb into the pot
-Small sizings with KK, trapping QQ
-Something in between with AA
-Something teeny-tiny (1/8th -1/6th pot) with JJ
-No reason to always barrel every Qx since OOP can have QQ, 66, AQ and IP's Qx are not always getting to showdown and need no protection; we should draw out probes from AA and KK plenty often