by Danhdan » Thu Jan 06, 2005 8:21 am
You you should get caned for being cute and smooth calling...ok, caned is kinda tought, so maybe cropped. BTW, somewhere along the line, you have villian #2 named villian #1. This is probably supposed to hurt my read of the situation somehow, but yeah, like villian #2 would say, "fagedaboutit!"
I think that smoothcalling preflop was horrible, not just the usual horrible, but a tirading Bill Walton "HORRRRRRRRIBLE!" I think I raise preflop to $90, to a) see where button villian is, see if I can lesson the group by eliminating UTG villian, and to see if raise to $30 was for real or just raising to isolate the idiot $10 raise kid.
On the flop, I am not too unhappy with it, and I try to see where I am, probably make a bet of $120 to see if anyone hit the flop hard.
Now, after checking the flop, and seeing once person bet $80 and the button call, I am suspicious of a good hand...possible set. I will have to play this cautious because the pot size is getting pretty big. But, more than that, I really need to know where I am at...if I should escape now with my chips or take it down now. I would raise here after the flop and after the two calls...but Bob has a point. Any raise here will have to be in the $250 or above range which is a bunch of your chips...and are you willing to play for the rest? I don't like the position you put yourself into...letting the pot get built up and not figuring out what kind of strength your opponents have...
I like this story so far...it sucks just to think about an answer...sometimes second hand experience is better than the real thing...like drugs, driving drunk, jumping off of moving vehicles, getting a mortgage...
My answer is: don't call. I can't completely support raising here and I can't hardly support folding in this situation...so, in conclusion...yuck.
"Million dollar play, ten cent finish."
"My mind is a raging torrent, flooded with rivulets of thought cascading into a waterfall of creative alternatives."
"Laugh and the world stares at you; cry, and the world stares at you."