If you're 77 life is good obviously.
If you're AJ, his range consists entirely of sets and KJ, QJ, JT, mayyyybe T9, 98 for the gutshot. It's WA/WB, there are no decent draws on the flop. If you're ahead, he has at most 4 outs (T9/98). I don't mind playing it this strongly if you have him down as a CS who will stack off every time with top pair. But if he has the ability to wiggle off the hook with third-best type hands, then you need to slow down. AJ is the very low end of hands that most Cakers will play this strongly, if he's a thinking player at all, he most likely puts you on an overpair after your turn bet. 2 streets of value is plenty to get out of AJ here in a raised pot, IMO. So I'd check the turn.
EDIT: also, it seems dumb, but a few Cakers will play QQ-AA this way as well. Another tiny reason to slow down on the turn.Statistics: Posted by k3nt — Sun Jun 08, 2008 10:07 am
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