My opponent here is pretty tight and very straightforward. I've played with him a few times since moving up to 5-10, and I have him pretty much pegged as tight-aggressive-unimaginative.
Party Poker 5/10 Hold'em (6 handed)
Preflop: TW is CO with
,
.
2 folds,
TW raises,
Button 3-bets,
2 folds, TW calls.
Flop: (7.40 SB)
,
,
(2 players)
TW checks,
Button bets,
TW raises, Button calls.
Turn: (5.70 BB)
(2 players)
TW bets,
Button raises, TW calls.
River: (9.70 BB)
(2 players)
TW bets, Button calls.
Final Pot: 11.70 BB
Results in white below:
TW has 8c 9c (two pair, nines and eights).
Button has Ah Ks (one pair, kings).
Outcome: TW wins 11.70 BB.
Initially, I was pretty satisfied with how I played the hand. When he calls my check-raise and then raises the turn, I can peg him nearly 100% on AK, and my pot odds are pretty much exact to call in hopes of hitting my 5-outer, with a small overlay considering that I figure on making 1 more big bet if I hit. Now granted, my odds go way down if there's a significant chance he holds a hand like KQ or a set, but I was really pretty confident that he had the hand he did.
My main question is this; as I said, I had the odds to call his turn raise and hope to improve...but why was I betting the turn to begin with? Check-folding seems weak, but I really think it's the line I should've taken. I suppose there's some chance he folds something like JJ or TT (though I'm not even sure he would've 3-bet TT)...but was that bet just spewing? I really can't put him on a hand like AJ or AT, no way he 3-bets with those.
I guess the point I'm making is that my turn call was correct as far as pot odds, but only because I made it correct by making a bad lead-out bet to begin with...does that sounds about right?
Secondary question : does anyone go for a check-raise on the river (assuming that for some reason you made it that far
) or do you think leading out is best?
-TW