This happened to me twice last night. First, in a 3 bet pot w KK. Very tough spot to be in with Kk, when villain check raise jams. I felt gross about my fold, but I learned a new way to use check raises on these flops. Thanks for sharing!
it s a nice video Gareth but really we need part 2, because what do we do when vilain call our check raise. If we dont know what to do next , we are going to loose lot more than only folding on the flop.
Just noticing you included the option for out of position player to donk flop, a lot of players simplify by always checking in those spots. How does that affect the c/r range? Thanks for the great content!
Great video! Thanks for sharing. What do you do on most turns once called on flop? Do you just shut down when it's a blank (i.e. an ace or something that's good for villains range, or a card that doesn't complete bdfd) Same question for rivers.
Always a pleasure to go through your theory videos mate :) One question : how did you manage to have the betsizes like BET 200 (33.3%); BET 362 (60,3%) ?
My preferred check-raise sizing from BB on these low paired flops tends to be ~2.5x whatever in position player bets, whether he bets 1/4 pot or pot, depending on stack depth of course. I think that's what I was taught. Is that what the solver prefers? It looks like you only gave it the option of 3.5x in this example.
I think percentage raise is better than multiplier because then you can use one size that changes depending on whether villain bets small or big. I used 47% raise size in the first example (take a look at the percentage in the box top right). If someone bets 1bb into 5.5bb (for example) and you only raise to 2.5bb, then the IP player will continue a lot, which is not what you're trying to achieve, right? You're trying to get them to fold some better hands, not continue with everything.