The way he played it, it does scream set. This is one of those hands where you'd like the option to run it twice.
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The way he played it, it does scream set. This is one of those hands where you'd like the option to run it twice.
I think with that push, and the fact that you know 5 hearts are accounted for, he's protecting a hand weaker than a flush, but potentially with a better flush draw... I'd put him on a set or 2 pr with one big heart in his hand. IMO, probably a bad fold at the time, but you might have dodged getting outdrawn. As the saying goes, a bad fold is only a small mistake.
Your analysis seems sound and the fold correct. Good job thinking it through and making a tough laydown!
I don't think he has too many combos of two pairs because he's never playing Q7, Q3, or 73. I'm starting to think his set percentage is much higher though. Perhaps 30-40% instead of 25%. I think he is showing up with non-nut flushes more often than sets still, just because of the fact that sets are still on a draw and non-nut flushes cannot improve.Quote:
I'd put him on a set or 2 pr with one big heart in his hand
Great thread. Glad to read that a lot of my thought processes is in line with high level thinking players that I look up to. Thanks for that NateVestQuote:
Tough Spot with Flopped Flush in Main Event
You really got to fold that spot that time to much risk not enough reward. U never dears unless he has ur str8 flush blocker with the ace. But even if u ahead and villain has naked ace heart u have to fade two streets for a lot of our stack. And u never want to be drawing to the one outer what till better spot. Best advice u might catch him kk over QQ
You flopped a flush and a straight flush draw but in all likelyhood he probably has the nut flush, which you don't have so I would suggest that you fold.
I personally hate low suited connectors so I probably would of just folded preflop.