Quote:
Originally Posted by Imaginary F(r)iend
The hand is OOP and we're playing against two players that both probably have live outs. By raising you push equity out. You're right that villains have a lot of equity and that's why I'm raising. If we were IP I don't mind calling. Getting something like AKQ to fold would be great.
The T just means that opponents have one less out and less likely to hold a good draw, T8 or QT combo.
If both villains were 100 bb deep, I would raising the flop. If one is 100 bb deep, I'm raising the turn. 300 bb deep I'm lost to be fair.
Yes, there are certainly equity denial benefits to a raise, but I think those benefits come at too high a cost given we're often dead to 2 outs when we get it in and even a massive lagtard will be unlikely to call it off on the turn with say top and bottom no draw.
The T does not just mean that. It means that they're a little less likely to have straight draws.
Against the profile of player, I would agree that raising the turn might be a good play at 100bbs - even though the turn bettor is the better player - but still probably wouldn't. At 300bbs, a stack depth I have a reasonable amount of experience with given I've spent ~half my career as a live player, I would suggest that getting it in on the turn with bare top two is a fairly big mistake.