It's been a rough week. I'm running pretty awful and, as usual, making some dubious moves. Your fair criticism please for the following hands.
Hand 1) $100 PLO. Villain is GentleWarrior. He's playing all $100 and $200 tables and is -as usual- up about 3k for the session. He probably views me as weak tight but I've made some adaptations in my play against him and, for this session, am hanging in pretty well. I feel I'm raising him with the right frequency and otherwise I've tightened up a bit, so he's not making much money off me. I have $100, he has a monster stack.
I get AAKJds. EP limps, villain raises, I repot (part of my new strategy, reraising in position with strong hands), EP calls, villain calls.
Flop: 972r. EP checks, Villain checks, I check behind.
Turn: 3, giving me the nut flush draw. EP checks, villain pots ($38 or so), I push.
Pro: villain likes to pick up any pot which others don't seem to want and preys on weakness. He doesn't have a set or a big draw or he wouldve led the flop.
Contra: it's 50 for him to call in a $170 pot so he should call with any two pair or draw, since it's clear I don't have a big hand either.
Outcome: villain had T554, two hearts and hit on the river.
Hand 2) Same opponent, different table.
I have a double stack here, villain covers.
I raise in LP with AAT9ss with Ac. Villain repots from SB. I make it $48 (I realize this is pretty bad given the stack sizes but I did it before I knew it ), he quickly calls.
Flop: 67J two clubs. Villain instantly pots, I shove.
Pro: villain knows I have AA, and will pot any flop since he thinks he has enough FE. I must take a stand against this at some point and can't let him have every pot if I don't hit it hard. He likely has something, but I'm still ahead of his range here.
Contra: I can't make him fold by shoving, and he's getting the correct price to call with almost anything. Thus, I'm always the one making a mistake on this flop while he is always correct to call.
Outcome: villain of course called with 9TJKr and rivered a J.
Part of the problem in both hands is that I don't have any folding equity; once villain makes a bet or raise he will never fold as that would undermine his overall strategy. Therefore he is correct, and even forced, to take on small draws and play huge pots as an underdog.