Okay, in the spirit of growing a pair of balls, I'm going to post a hand that I KNOW I'm gonna get flamed over on so many levels. Truth be told, I made some...ahem...rather questionable decisions, and did get lucky to win a huge pot. However, I also think I did some things right, for a change! I'll post the hand, followed by analysis/desperate-rationalizations.
Party Poker 3/6 Hold'em (10 handed)
Preflop: TW is MP2 with
,
.
4 folds,
TW raises, MP3 calls,
1 fold, Button calls,
SB 3-bets,
1 fold, TW calls, MP3 calls, Button calls.
Flop: (13 SB)
,
,
(4 players)
SB bets,
TW raises, MP3 calls, Button calls,
SB 3-bets,
TW caps, MP3 calls, Button calls, SB calls.
Turn: (14.50 BB)
(4 players)
SB checks,
TW bets, MP3 calls, Button calls, SB calls.
River: (18.50 BB)
(4 players)
SB checks,
TW bets, MP3 folds, Button calls,
SB raises,
TW 3-bets, Button folds, SB calls.
Final Pot: 25.50 BB
Results in white below:
SB has As Ac (three of a kind, aces).
TW has Td Jd (flush, ace high).
Outcome: TW wins 25.50 BB.
Okay, so we begin with the open-raising of JTs from MP2. Obviously, a well-thought-out, strategically planned maneuver, based on my image and reads of the opponents remaining to act, right? NOT! I'll admit that, if anything, this type of open-raise usually only has merits in one of the final positions. But oh well, I'm a loose, undisciplined bastard, so I raised it anyway.
Okay, so clearly, not everything goes to plan, and I get two callers and a 3-bet. Ugh. But the flop brings hope, giving me a gutshot, a flush draw, and two VERY questionable overcards; the ten, in particular, can't really be considered an out at all. Okay, so SB bets out, and I raise; my feelings here were that the pot was growing quite large; if I could knock out hands like KJ or QJ, I would greatly increase my equity if the preflop 3-bettor happens to have AK.
Boy, that didn't work! Both call, and I get 3-bet, so now I'm almost certain I'm up against a big pair in the SB. But, I still do have a buncha outs, so I cap it for value! If those other two already called two bets, I figure they'll call two more, and they don't disappoint.
The turn brings a jack, which I know isn't good. But it does provide 2 more outs that'll probably give me a win. I also am about 95% sure a ten would beat the SB, but I know it'll probably make a straight for one or both of the other callers, so clearly, that can't be counted. Nevertheless, I'm figuring upon a solid 14 outs (9 diamonds, 3 non-diamond 9's, and 2 jacks). I also figure nobody's gonna drop for one more big bet, so when the SB checks, I decide to value bet again. I found that pretty interesting, because it's rare that you can still continue to value-bet a draw on the turn. The river plays itself, and turned out to be the perfect card for me.
Okay, there's a lot of things I'll probably get criticized on for this hand, but hey, I'll take my lumps! Rip away.
-TW