by droqqa » Fri Aug 12, 2005 11:19 am
I think you misunderstand situations in which fold equity applies. When you make a big all-in raise - you win one of two ways -
1) He calls and your hand wins the showdown
2) He folds, you take the pot.
As a result of option 2, sometimes this can make calling incorrect, but pushing correct. This most often occurs when you have a big draw. Say you have a 12 out draw. Your opponent bets the pot. You are about 60/40 to win by the river, but a 3:1 dog to make your hand on the turn. If you call, without implied odds, its -EV. But if you push, you win 40% of the time + what ever % of the time he folds to this bet. (Multiplied by the amount you win) This is fold equity. It pushes a slightly -EV move to a +EV move by getting your opponent to fold.
In your case, if he calls you are in deep poo. Against QJ, you have a 3 outer, with one card to come. You are only about 8% to win. This means your opponent is going to have to fold a significant amount of the time, easily more than 60% for this to be a +EV move.
This type of move is usually made with big draws, and on the flop. But it can be made on the turn, if your fold equity is high.
D