by Aisthesis » Fri Jul 15, 2005 5:10 am
I know it's aggravating to have everyone fold to your set, but what can you do?
I just finished one where I doubled up to the tune of $600 profit, then the field folded when I got another in quick succession. Ok, I could have mixed it up the second time, probably pulled a little out of it on a checkraise. But I have a set of threes from BB, and there's an A on the board, so, either no one had an ace or else they were just scared after my first big score.
Anyhow, I think you just have to live with folding the field sometimes. If it's a completely raggedy flop, you run a very high risk of getting straighted if you try checking it, and if there's a high card in there, someone may try to raise or at least call. Then there are the flush situations--and you can beat the flush on the river, where it takes a very good player to recognize the dangers inherent in a paired board. Still, you want a big pot.
The only real exception I might see is if you have an habitual pot-buyer somewhere in there who will just splash pretty much any pot, possibly getting some additional callers, but you're really even there more likely to just take it down on the flop on most boards. I think the checkraise actually makes it easier for some good hands to lay down.
If I can go into a little greater detail:
1) Raggedy flop. Let's say you have 55 on a board of 953 (rainbow or not). Well, you may have 67 in there who has no business folding and might raise. Also A9s is perfectly legit, and lots of people even play A9o. If the board is even more raggedy, you may have a made straight (the more compressed it gets toward the low side, the more likely this becomes), who's likely to give you a chance to pair the board if he isn't careful. Anyhow, my main point is that if no one has anything at all, the best you can really do anyway is just gain a little more from someone who decides to splash, and you risk getting outdrawn if you let the thing go too far.
2) High card flop. Say, A65 and you have 55. Well, AQ or even AJ really should try a raise to find out where they're at. 87s might try the same move (I would, although most players won't). Then you have a choice of flat calling the raise or re-raising, depending on what you put them on. AQ is in any case on a very slippery slope if you call (obviously) with your set, then bet the turn. It takes a very good player to lay down AQ to a turn bet in that situation.
Anyhow, my main conclusion is simply that a set is a good hand with which to invite opponents to do battle and where you do still have to watch how the board is developing. If no one has any piece of the flop, so be it. But the real issue is getting things set up where SOMETIMES you can take a full stack (and can lay down when you're beat). Getting these battles set up properly is imo worth the risk of just taking down a pot uncontested at times, even though it feels like you've wasted your set when the field just folds.
Also, who knows, you might have gotten runner-runnered by KK for the flush with an all-in on the flop where you were ahead. But, if so, all-in on the flop with set vs. big pair is clearly very +EV for the set.