$400nl on stars. I think i'm still the only one in the world playing full ring.
UTG is running about 30/20/2.5. very aggro preflop, likes to both raise and reraise, especially in position. he's run his stack up to about 1200 before i sat down. I ran mine up to 1200 over the course of 2 hours.
His post flop play seems decent. He seems to calm down a bit on the wild aggression, and it seems slightly more controlled, though he's still probably the most aggressive player at the table. These 2 hours i've sat with him at 4 or 5 tables are the extent of my history with him.
He opens to 16 UTG and gets called by a player in MP. I call in the CO with
[4c]. everyone else folds.
3-handed. $51 pot. flop comes
[As][4d]. Villain leads out for $40. MP folds, I raise to $100. He reraises to $225.
I assume at this point that we can all assume he has an ace. I guess maybe an outside shot at
[2d]/[5d][3d], but i haven't really seen him going wild with flush draws, especially not on paired boards. either that or he thinks he's trying to rebluff me with something like TT.
At this point, what's the best play? Bear in mind that we're both starting the hand just over 300 BB's ($1200 a piece).
Do you:
A - smooth call, trying to represent a flush draw, and hoping he leads out on any non-diamond turn, looking to get it in there barring some sort of scary paint.
B - flat jam the flop. this push would be ~$950ish more to him (too lazy to look up exact #'s).
C - make a smaller reraise, maybe in the realm realm of $400?
And, just to make this hand a little more fun, lets assume that you're the villain. What's your reaction to whatever decision you've made for me assuming you're holding an ace? TO make it tougher, lets assume you hold AK in this spot.
Also, whatever your decision for me is, what other hands would you play the same way? if you say you're flat jamming the flop, are you doing that with AK as well here?