Don’t Be Afraid to Go for Full Value

The following hand took place early in Day 1 of the $3,500 buy-in Borgata Poker Open WPT main event. I was pleased to find myself at a table that should have been quite good for me because my opponents were clearly playing in a blatantly straightforward manner. Despite this, I found myself down to 24,000 from my initial 30,000 chip stack, mostly due to making a strong, but second best hands a few times in a row.

The blinds were 50/100. There were only 6 players at the table. A tight 60-year-old man raised to 200 from first position. A somewhat straightforward lady 3-bet to 500 from second position. Her 3-bet made me think that she likely had a very strong hand. I decided to call with As-3s in the cutoff seat, mostly because I did not expect the initial raiser to 4-bet too often and I thought I could win a huge amount of chips if I happened to get lucky to make a flush or straight. As expected, the initial raiser called.

The flop came 8s-6s-6c, giving me a flush draw. The initial raiser checked, the 3-bettor bet 1,100 into the 1,650 pot, I called, and the initial raiser folded. When she bet the flop, I thought she likely had either a strong overpair or two big cards. Either way, calling is the only play that makes sense because if I raise, she would never fold an overpair, resulting in me putting a decent amount of chips at risk with the worst hand, and if she had nothing, I would likely find a way to win the pot later.

The turn was the beautiful (8s-6s-6c)-2s, giving me a flush. She bet 2,600 into the 3,850 pot. At this point, I was fairly certain she had an overpair or perhaps a marginal draw, such as Ks-Qd. There was also a small chance she had 8-8, 6-6, or 2-2, which I lose to, but I did not think she would 3-bet those hands preflop. I decided that if I raised, she would fold most overpairs that did not contain a spade. While my logic may have been incorrect, it is worth noting that it is a disaster for me if she folds a strong hand that is drawing thin, especially if she would continue value betting on the river if I called the turn. So, I decided to call, forcing her to stay in the pot.

The river was the (8s-6s-6c-2s)-5h. She checked, leading me to think that she either had an overpair or nothing. Given I was fairly active in a few of the previous hands, I decided to bet 11,000 into the 9,050 pot. She instantly called, losing to my flush.

Most players would have bet much smaller on the river, trying to guarantee they get called. Since I thought my opponent had an overpair, I assumed there was almost no chance she would fold to any bet that was not gigantic. Notice that if she happened to have an unpaired hand, she would fold to any bet.

When your opponent’s range contains almost entirely strong hands or nothing, if you can beat the strong hands, you should tend to bet large because most players are simply not capable of making a huge laydown, especially if you have an aggressive table image.

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4 thoughts on “Don’t Be Afraid to Go for Full Value”

  1. Are greater than pot-sized river bets becoming more common? Back in the day that pretty much never meant a bluff.

  2. Thanks, Jonathan. To add this into your continuing discussion about equity and variance, I made the same play recently in a 2-5 cash game when I turned a full house (holding QdJd with a board of Js, Qs, Ah, Qc) after two opponents had already bet in front of me. I chose to flat the turn bets rather than raise and risk folding out players who were possibly on a draw that might hit, but which I would beat, or who had made hands that I had crushed. It was unquestionably the right play, but when the Ace came on the river, I had to fold to an all-in bet from one of my opponents. There were two aces in the deck that could hurt me on the river, unfortunately, I lost the 20:1 bet that time. But the play of raising the turn in order to try to fold out the guy with the marginal ace, which is the only hand that can possibly beat you, is a losing play in the long run. Thanks for all your great insight!

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