Hi, I've just been in a situation where I flopped a set on a very draw heavy board, in fact with 3 cards to a straight I could have been behind a made hand already. In this instance I played it fast which previously I felt was correct, though in this case paid my opponent off on the river.
I took down a few thoughts on the hand afterwards, which I've pasted bellow. Could anyone give me some feedback on how I played the hand, and on my hypothesis that playing this more cautious, especially on the flop, hoping to avoid a scare card on the turn would have been a better option, considering the limits I play.
I accept my pay off was horrible, no way I could be sure he didn't back door a flush here.
As usual thanks for any feedback xxx
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The very first hand, I find 44 and call the BB. I was tempted to fold here, has I feel I’m often too willing to try and flop a set with small pairs early on in the sit-n-go’s, but being on the button I decide to call.
The flop is the worst I could ask for, giving me a set, whilst offering a flush draw and 3 cards to a straight. Its more likely my opponents are drawing here, then they have a made hand, and even if one of them did flop a straight I still have outs to beat them, so I make a pot sized raise hoping to take the pot down here. Instead I get two callers. The turn doesn’t bring any relief and piles on more pressure, I elect to lead out with a large bet, and get one call and one fold.
The river is a nightmare and completes four cards to a flush, to make things worse my opponent pushes all-in. I don’t rush to the decision, and eventual call to find he made a flush on the river.
Here’s what went from my mind at the time. If he’s got the flush I’m out of the tournament, obviously, and with four to a flush there was a reasonable chance he back doored a flush here, this was looking like a fold. However, I had put almost half my stack on the line here, and with a precedent in folding in these spots in that past, I would expect to not make the money without picking up a hand sooner then I would usually need with only $870 left if I fold. I was beginning to steel feel like folding was the best play, because if I did it a hand before the blinds reached 25/50, I’ll still have a shot at the money.
What changed my mind though was the action of the hand, I begun to feel like he was trying to pick up a got shot, and missed, and a push on the end was a defiant steel attempt. I’ve seen this pattern enough, and felt sure enough in my read that a call here was correct.
I’m disgusted with what he turned over, but he took the chips. On the flop, he was likely calling to try and pick up an ace or a king, instead he picks up a flush draw on the turn.
In hindsight, I could have handled this better :
Firstly, I had a strong hand, but on this board it was very vulnerable. In this instance I took a protective line and tried to make draws pay. At this limit though, and maybe higher too, I feel now this was a mistake on this board. If someone had flopped a straight and intended to slow play it I was drawing thin so should have kept the pot cheap. Also if someone was on a straight draw or especially a flush draw, very few of my opponents would fold, even if I pushed all my chips in. So playing it cheap allows me to avoid committing half of my stack into a situation where I could be beat on the turn, if the turn was blank I could then raise out any draws.
http://www.pokerhand.org/?2024365