Quote:
Originally Posted by bigoilboomer
I feel like I should still raise the turn though because SB tends to bet too light. I'm slightly concerned by the pot-sized bet even though it's a limped pot.
If SB's bet is simultaneously looking weak + strong, that sounds like he is polarized: we either dominate him or vice versa
So what does raising accomplish against SB? Is your table image so bad that he will call out of position with a worse hand? It feels like most of the time you will fold out hands you hope will bluff on the river, and value-own yourself while dominated.
BB being in the hand complicates things. Why is LAG #2 calling out of position? His hand smells very speculative: open-ended, middle flush draw, low 2p.
So I would be inclined to raise-fold not because of SB, but because against both villains together there is enough draw potential we want to deny equity.