Currently readless on villain in a $3.30 tournament on a 9 handed table
Blinds 15/30
Villain: UTG+3 (2980 in chips)
Hero: Cutoff (4660 in chips)
*** HOLE CARDS ***
Dealt to Hero [Jh Ad]
Villain: raises 60 to 90
Hero: calls 90
*** FLOP *** [Ts Kc 4h]
Villain: bets 90
Hero: calls 90
*** TURN *** [Ts Kc 4h] [Qc]
Villain: bets 202
Hero: raises 518 to 720
Villain: calls 518
*** RIVER *** [Ts Kc 4h Qc] [Tc]
Villain: bets 2080 and is all-in
Hero?
Comments
Personally, I would have folded after the flop. I would expect the villian to have some showdown value already, and I have A high, with a draw. If I had proceeded, and seen the turn, I'd naturally be ready to bet. The villain's raise is worrying. No flushes, you have the nut straight, so he either is looking for sets, Quads or a full house, even. He also may have the same hand as me. Although not EXACTLY the same. What if he has Ac Jc ? His betting would make sense on a straight / flush draw. On the river, he has the nuts.
He really only has 4 possible hands:
Nothing
Ac Jc (Explains alomst everything)
Ax Jx (If he thinks YOU have Ac Jc, why go all-in ?)
TT (This also makes a lot of sense. The inital raise. The small flop raise to keep his customer. The big turn raise to scare off any drawing hands. All-in when he hits quads and the straight makes it there.)
I'm going with TT and a second choice of Ac Jc - Everyone forgets about players have the 'same' cards.
I see your points, even if they are little too technical for me. Reading back, yes the post-flop fold is v. poor.
This may be naivety on my part, but it looks like we'd be risking chips we are able to win on the river card. Is that standard play, as it's not something I'd do ?
I'm still learning, so maybe it is.