Posted a bunch of stuff in the NL section, this hand in particular (I posted it as a question regarding bluffing as this spot really intrigues me).
Full Tilt No-Limit Hold'em, $2 BB (6 handed) Converter Tool from (Format: Bet The Pot)
SB ($545.25)
BB ($182)
UTG ($200)
Hero ($226)
CO ($73.70)
Button ($168.35)
Preflop: Hero is MP with
,
.
Hero raises to $7,
1 fold, Button calls $7,
2 folds.
Flop: ($17)
,
,
(3 players)
Hero bets $14, Button calls $14.
Turn: ($45)
(3 players)
Hero bets $36, Button calls $36.
River: ($117)
(3 players)
Hero bets $169 (All-In), Button folds.
Final Pot: $117
It intrigues me for a couple of reasons and we can probably even talk some game theory.
#1) I think the river is an awesome spot to bluff. Flushes/straights/two pairs are almost always raising the turn (if the draws don't raise the flop), so it's very unlikely he has a
Q beat once he calls the turn. The rivered K actually is very little from a total blank.
#2) That turn hits his flop calling range quite hard, giving him a bunch of two pairs and now pairs + straight draws if it doesn't flat out make his flush or straight.
So we've got two competing forces here. We know if we get called on the turn, we're going to be in a fantastic spot to bluff the river a very large % of the time. But we also know we're almost never getting folds on the turn, and raised a decent % of the time. So the turn card is saying "don't double barrel," but many river cards are going to be beautiful cards to triple barrel.
So we've got a couple options. We can widen are turn betting range so we have more hands to triple barrel the river with, and not just double barrel our draws (of which there are hardly any, just like JT and TT) and made hands. This will give us a bunch of crappy hands to bluff with so we can add a bluff component to all our made hands like AK or JJ or AT.
Or, we can take a bunch of our weak made hands like JT into a bluff to try to force him a off a queen, AJ, or a split.
Bottom line, if he takes the standard line on the turn and only calls with hands he'd be told to call with on 2+2 or BTP, he cannot call almost any of our river shoves. Yet if we take the standard line with all of our hands, we're not going to be left with almost any hands to turn into a bluff! We can't have the something like
x because we raised in mp, so any time we have the
it's already a made flush or straight. The worse it can ever be is AJ, which most people would not turn into a bluff on the river in a vacuum even if it's one of the few hands they can actually turn into a bluff since their range is saturated (is this a word you can use out of chem? oh well I'm a gangsta) with value hands. So yeah, the standard lines kind of suck here when you look at the hand as a whole and this is the kind of stuff I want to realize in game so I can ball it up at NL$1000 within a year or so.
The better player should win the race. Always.