Flopped top set OOP
1/3/5 Match the stack up to 2.5k
Saturday afternoon - rarely play this game because it plays too big usually. But due to a softer line up then normal and just terrible 1/2 games available H takes a seat.
H is effective stack of 400
V - young white guy unknown. Not a regular in this game. Has heaps.
Literally second hand since I sat down (first hand v raised 25 preflop, Cbet and took down a multiway pot)
V opens mp to 25, two callers in lp and h looks down at TT and just calls from sb (could get behind a 3b but what size makes sense besides all in). Straddler calls
Flop (125)
Td3d2h
H flops nuts and is oop and elects to x. Straddler x, v bets 30, fold, fold, h just calls? Straddler folds.
Heads up to a turn
Turn (185)
Td3d2h5c
H elects to x and v bets 75. H has about 355 behind. Do you just rip it in or elect to call to see if he stabs again on river, or raise to something stupid like 150?
7 Replies
make it big enough to where calling with an overpair on the river is trivial.
Just jam it, which isn't even a pot-size reraise.
I'm not a fan of setmining shallow OOP. Go 130 or jam preflop. Jamming and picking up 75 would be a fine result.
Flop is OK, you've got perfect action on flop and turn now rip it.
shove pre
Shove turn AP. Don't flat flop. I agree with jamming pre. TT making it like 125 pre is awkward.
Shove pre and over realize our equity. Call pre reduces us to a set mine.
Shoving preflop will help opponents play well, they will fold all hands you dominate and call only with hands that flip or dominate you, with a few possible exceptions (99 and ATo, maybe).
It is a lot of dead money though, which makes a shove very attractive even if it negates skill advantage. I think because there are two people who flatted, you should shove despite the above.
But in general, no calling with TT is not set mining. The chance to flop an overpair is larger than the chance to flop a set.