Bubble of a £10 DYM. Persephers is a very good DYM specialist and knows what he is doing
Hand History #565640570 (10:23 20/09/2012)PlayerActionCardsAmountPotBalancepersephersSmall blind 75.0075.004577.50JockBMWBig blind 150.00225.003520.00 Your hole cardsA3 xpussycatxFold safehands0Call 150.00375.001060.00SMITHY100Fold persephersCall 75.00450.004502.50JockBMWCheck Flop A10A persephersBet 150.00600.004352.50JockBMWCall 150.00750.003370.00safehands0Fold Turn 4 persephersBet 250.001000.004102.50JockBMWFold persephersMuck persephersWin 750.00 4852.50persephersReturn 250.000.005102.5
Comments
as for the turn-his clubs, possible Ax have you beat, 10Xc may barrel but hes worried about your A, and PP check- so i fold
In response to Dohh: Raising AI is suicide, how would villain play AA-limp it? Raising Ai is all risk with very little reward given the table situation and a very likely cash
I think that this is clever play and i see no reason why you shouldn't then reraise to reverse that test. You have the means. He shouldn't have pot odds for the flush draw and would only continue if he has AX unless he plays very trickily your raise will give you the answer you require. After all you can bet that he's got his eyes on that short stack too. So for me its raise the flop and get your answer at relatively little cost to your chances of success.
Now with that said; It seems to me that those people talking about raising against Persephers are missing the main issue in this hand and DYM play generally: If we have a big stack, we don't want to play against other big stacks.
In this hand, the only issue is the short stack. Both other players, if they are experienced DYM players, are playing only against him. The moment he folds the other two would generally expect to check it down against each other and should only continue betting with the nuts or near-nuts. This is because those two players do not need to build their stacks. As long as there are players at the table who are shorter than they are, they do not want to risk playing against someone who can bust them or make them short.
This means that when Persephers bets on the turn, after the shorty has folded, he should never have anything that JockBMW can beat. If Persephers is a very clued-up DYM player, he would never be putting chips into the pot here with a Ten or a draw because he would know that JockBMW would only continue in the hand against a big stack with a big hand. There is absolutely no need for either player to play against the other.
For this reason, even if people are wrong about Persephers and he is not such a good player, it is still the correct fold for JockBMW. Jock has little to gain from taking a chance on doubling-up here as long as other players are significantly shorter than him.
A point to make, though, is that the table seems to be five-handed so this is not the bubble. However, as long as one player at the table is limping for 150 out of a 1200 stack, we don't need to be getting ourselves in trouble against the other big stacks. We win the same payout if we finish third in chips as we do if we finish first.
It seems to me that Jock is absolutely correct to switch off once the shorty is out of the hand and snap-fold to any bet.