by Aisthesis » Fri Oct 07, 2005 1:14 am
Well, I also did an analysis from the perspective of MP, but it got lost since the server was apparently down. I decided that I'd really prefer to just fold this hand on the flop, for whatever it's worth (I assumed it was 65s, which I would have played to begin with).
Anyhow, I'd also like to do a little analysis if LP had JT on this board. There's almost no better hand to illustrate the critical importance of raising with the nuts in this situation.
Actually, I'd like to analyse it first under the assumption that MP isn't in the hand--i.e., it's HU with droq. The additional player, who is basically dead money, changes the situation significantly. What I'm really interested in is whether it's better to make just a serious raise or to raise all-in from the get-go.
Ok, with just droq in the hand, here's the way it goes: He bets $90 into a $90 pot, so the raise is to $360, and I assume droq calls (I assume droq folds to an all-in, so we have an EV of $180 there, that's easy).
Now, droq has 7 outs on the turn with 45 cards left in the deck. So, 7 times I just lost $360 ($2,520), and 38 times, let's just say something else happens. Basically, I have an EV of -$56 on the times droq fills up on the turn.
Ok, if droq misses on the turn, then he checks, and JT bets maybe $500 into the pot of $810. Well, droq is making a bad call here if he calls, so I'll just assume he folds.
That means that on the 38 misses, you make $450 each time for an EV of (38*450)/45 = $380. Yep, it clearly beats the EV on the all-in.
I think it's also obvious that raising to $450 or so with the MP dead money in is even better. I don't know whether droq really needs to call or fold here given the dead money from MP. What probably in point of fact happens there is that droq folds but MP calls. True, if droq makes his hand on the turn, he wins, and it's fairly reasonable to assume that this particular MP is going to call almost always. But if 3 players call the flop at $450, I think JT is clearly all-in on the turn barring a paired board or the flush (which MP in principle might have the way he's playing, but if the flush card does hit, LP again has the advantage of finding out where he's at before making a decision). Objectively, I think that forces droq to fold the flop before getting in insanely deep to a raise to $450 (??).