2/5, I turn the nuts 5 ways
2/5, the hand immediately after this hand.
$10 straddle is on. First Villain limps from EP. Loves suited cards, called a raise with Q7s and flopped a flush to beat my big Ace earlier.
Second Villain limps from my immediate right. Is probably having a good night because he has several $500 chips and everybody else doesn't.
I limp from the cutoff with Q♠ 10♠, one of the blinds calls, straddler knocks and we're five ways to the flop.
Flop ($50): J♥ 9♣ 7♣
Straddler bets $20, everybody calls.
Turn ($150): K♦
Checked to me. I'd like to get my middling stack of $400 or so all into this pot, but how hard do I push?
1 Reply
2/5, the hand immediately after this hand.$10 straddle is on. First Villain limps from EP. Loves suited cards, called a raise with Q7s and flopped a flush to beat my big Ace earlier.Second Villain limps from my immediate right. Is probably having a good night because he has several $500 chips and everybody else doesn't.I limp from the cutoff with Q♠ 10♠, one of the blinds call
I'd raise pre, especially if it's raked. Calling is fairly bad if raked, OK if not. Another issue is that you are pretty short,
Flop, OK. If your draw was stronger I would raise, but would suck to get it in vs a much better draw.
Turn, there are SO many made hands and draws they can have. Given that everyone is acting after the flop bettor, it's unlikely anyone has 2p+ but they will have lots of pair plus draws and so forth. I'd go 175+. All in would be OK.
Weirdly enough, I don't hate the opposite route if you are short on money or something. With so many players, you could bet like 45, and probably get 3 callers or something and just hope for a clean river. If a club comes and someone bets big, you still charged $135 total. 1-2 people would probably call drawing dead or to a chop and you'd save some money when outdrawn.