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Who was right?

skeg01skeg01 Member Posts: 298
edited October 2013 in Poker Chat
Got into an argument during one of my tournys earlier. Blinds were 200/400 i had 6700 chips. The chip leader at the table raises utg to 800, button calls. I have AJs in the small blind and shove, and the chip leader calls with 56 of spades saying afterwards it was the right call mathematically but i disagreed and i stand by it, am i right or wrong here?

The pot was 8k after i shoved, the chip leader had to call about 6k more to win 8k with 56s is it the right call or not? haha
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Comments

  • oynutteroynutter Member Posts: 4,773
    edited October 2013
    You must consider in this scenario, that you could have been up against a flopwit flapheaded accountant, that is not allowed to gamble at work---- If he has put in 10% of pot, he has the odds to gamble
  • bearlytherbearlyther Member Posts: 1,757
    edited October 2013
    Of course he was right.  This is a snap call with 56 suited
  • GaryQQQGaryQQQ Member Posts: 6,804
    edited October 2013
    Mathmatical answer, this calculation assumes the villain knew your hole-cards;

    His 67s has 39% equity against your AJs

    So 61% of the time you win and he loses the 5,900 chips it cost to make the call. 39% of the time he wins the pot and profits by 7,900 chips (800 raise + 800 call + 600 blinds + your shove 5700)

    61% x -5900 = -3599 chips
    39% x +7900 = +3081 chips

    So on average his call loses 518 chips. If it's a Bounty Hunter you could argue a head-prize is worth more than 518 chips in which case it's a marginally +ev call.

    Obviously he doesn't actually know your exact hole cards before making the call. If he puts you on a wide range that's behind AJs then it becomes less of a mistake.

    BTW, there's no point in having arguments at the table whether you think his call is correct or not, poker is supposed to be a fun social game.
  • CraigSG1CraigSG1 Member Posts: 1,832
    edited October 2013
    The simple answer is no. He was wrong. He doesnt beat your shoving range in the slightlest and at best he has live cards or racing against 22,33 and 44. It is pure gambling and also bad tournament play. 
  • FCHDFCHD Member Posts: 3,178
    edited October 2013
    How big was the chip leader's stack? Surely his play will differ if he has 20K chips or 200K chips?
  • hhyftrftdrhhyftrftdr Member Posts: 8,036
    edited October 2013
    Over to you, DoubleAAA....
  • DoubleAAADoubleAAA Member Posts: 954
    edited October 2013
    In Response to Re: Who was right?:
    Mathmatical answer, this calculation assumes the villain knew your hole-cards; His 67s has 39% equity against your AJs So 61% of the time you win and he loses the 5,900 chips it cost to make the call. 39% of the time he wins the pot and profits by 7,900 chips (800 raise + 800 call + 600 blinds + your shove 5700) 61% x -5900 = -3599 chips 39% x +7900 = +3081 chips So on average his call loses 518 chips. If it's a Bounty Hunter you could argue a head-prize is worth more than 518 chips in which case it's a marginally +ev call. Obviously he doesn't actually know your exact hole cards before making the call. If he puts you on range that's behind AJs then it becomes less of a mistake. BTW, there's no point in having arguments at the table whether you think his call is correct or not, poker is supposed to be a fun social game.
    Posted by GaryQQQ
    Gary you need to calculate his 56s vs OP entire shoving range, not his specific hand, only then can we work out whether villian has the odds to call or not.  FWIW, I have not calculated whether he should call or not :)

    Edit:

    Villian needs to call 6.1k into a 8.9k pot, so villian needs to be good 40.6% of the time for it to be +EV.

    Let's look at OP shoving range:

    88+, AJs+, AQo+

    OP 69.5% vs 30.4%

    As we can see, villian only has 30.4% and has to fold.

    Now let's give OP a wider range and see what happens:

    Villian: 22+, A2o+, A2s+, KJs+, KQo

    OP 62% vs 37.9%

    Even with this absurdly wide shoving range, villian still is only 37.9% and cannot call.
  • GaryQQQGaryQQQ Member Posts: 6,804
    edited October 2013
    In Response to Re: Who was right?:
    In Response to Re: Who was right? : Gary you need to calculate his 56s vs OP entire shoving range, not his specific hand, only then can we work out whether villian has the odds to call or not.  FWIW, I have not calculated whether he should call or not :)
    Posted by DoubleAAA
    I made that clear in my post.
  • DoubleAAADoubleAAA Member Posts: 954
    edited October 2013
    In Response to Re: Who was right?:
    In Response to Re: Who was right? : I made that clear in my post.
    Posted by GaryQQQ
    Yes sorry didn't read that part, although against a range less than AJs it's still a fold. OP can shove any Ax and be far ahead of villian.
  • FCHDFCHD Member Posts: 3,178
    edited October 2013
    Without being on that particular table, how can you be sure about the OP's shoving range? What might be a shove to you might not be to him/her and vice versa?
  • hhyftrftdrhhyftrftdr Member Posts: 8,036
    edited October 2013
    Jesus, you really don't need maths or ranges to know it was a poor call!

    It's 6 high. Poker is a very simple game sometimes.
  • ajs4385ajs4385 Member Posts: 455
    edited October 2013
    Its his chips. Its right for him to do whatever he wants with his chips.
  • FlyingDaggFlyingDagg Member Posts: 4,146
    edited October 2013
    In Response to Re: Who was right?:
    Jesus, you really don't need maths or ranges to know it was a poor call! It's 6 high. Poker is a very simple game sometimes.
    Posted by hhyftrftdr
    +1 to this. But he's paid his money he's entitled to do what he wants with his chips.
  • Sky_PokerSky_Poker Member Posts: 2,715
    edited October 2013
    In Response to Re: Who was right?:
    Mathmatical answer, this calculation assumes the villain knew your hole-cards; His 67s has 39% equity against your AJs So 61% of the time you win and he loses the 5,900 chips it cost to make the call. 39% of the time he wins the pot and profits by 7,900 chips (800 raise + 800 call + 600 blinds + your shove 5700) 61% x -5900 = -3599 chips 39% x +7900 = +3081 chips So on average his call loses 518 chips. If it's a Bounty Hunter you could argue a head-prize is worth more than 518 chips in which case it's a marginally +ev call. Obviously he doesn't actually know your exact hole cards before making the call. If he puts you on range that's behind AJs then it becomes less of a mistake. BTW, there's no point in having arguments at the table whether you think his call is correct or not, poker is supposed to be a fun social game.
    Posted by GaryQQQ
    Wise words Gary.
  • skeg01skeg01 Member Posts: 298
    edited October 2013
    I'm not complaining about the call or anything, i did actually win the hand and double up but it was just that the guy was 100% adamant that it was the correct mathematical call whereas i was 100% adamant it wasn't haha. Started to doubt myself a little bit after he just kept going on and on about it, so i thought i'd post it on here to find out who was right once and for all. Knew i was right though :P
  • The_Don90The_Don90 Member Posts: 9,818
    edited October 2013
    depends on if your a lock pro or not
  • GELDYGELDY Member Posts: 5,203
    edited October 2013
    In Response to Re: Who was right?:
    Jesus, you really don't need maths or ranges to know it was a poor call! It's 6 high. Poker is a very simple game sometimes.
    Posted by hhyftrftdr
    but it was sooted

    and it isn't even maths, we are still at the level of arithmetic here.  But let's not forget that this isn't everyone's strong point

    and personally think it is a good thing to discuss at the table as one may learn something new
  • rancidrancid Member Posts: 5,947
    edited October 2013
    If villian wants to think it was the right call, why correct him ?


    don't tap...........
  • profman15profman15 Member Posts: 1,808
    edited October 2013
    Tbh its a poor mathematically speaking but its even poorer to be be telling them why. Just make a note that this player calls very very wide and leave it at that. Why bother giving tips to players you want to beat in future tournaments. 
    Mostly its due to ego and feeling they need to justify a play. By the way suited hands only enable a 2% swing equity-wise so is really less than you may think.
  • longman912longman912 Member Posts: 89
    edited October 2013
    In Response to Re: Who was right?:
    In Response to Re: Who was right? : Gary you need to calculate his 56s vs OP entire shoving range, not his specific hand, only then can we work out whether villian has the odds to call or not.  FWIW, I have not calculated whether he should call or not :) Edit: Villian needs to call 6.1k into a 8.9k pot, so villian needs to be good 40.6% of the time for it to be +EV. Let's look at OP shoving range: 88+, AJs+, AQo+ OP 69.5% vs 30.4% As we can see, villian only has 30.4% and has to fold. Now let's give OP a wider range and see what happens: Villian: 22+, A2o+, A2s+, KJs+, KQo OP 62% vs 37.9% Even with this absurdly wide shoving range, villian still is only 37.9% and cannot call.
    Posted by DoubleAAA
    surely you require extra table dynamics to make these sort of calculations. how active has hero been, has he shoved before, how many times etc.otherwise how do you put him on 88+?
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