@Tests, he cold called bet and raise after the flop, and on the turn raised all-in, what do you expect him to have? KJ? Plus a player behind you that played flop and turn aggressively
After the straddled goes all in. With 2 players in front. It’s hard to put him on a draw. He either has a set or he has the unlikely 6-4. I just don’t see many hands AA beats there, Let alone you have another player to act as well. Maybe it was heads up. But multiple players who both are betting. Not that hard a lay down.
Can't blame the guy. Had an open ended straight draw. Only betting $35 was a mistake. And once he hit his straight it was game over. I have no problem folding A/A once he pushed All in. Either he had 2 pair or possibly 3 of a kind at that point
I played poker professionally in the early 2000s. I havent played a hand in at least 10 years. Your videos are making me want to get back into poker again.
That dude that raised under gun was pretty smart for that. He was masking to make it look like his range was pretty good until that other guy shoved. He read him instantly, in your case I would’ve mucked the pocket rockets seeing that.
Given the amount of players, I felt like it was right to re-raise when I saw the flop for the first time, just to discard worst hands than can do that in the turn or the river.
Your first mistake was limping in for a $25 raise on a straddle pot. I would’ve bet minimum $40 pre-flop. And probably $60-$80 on the flop. If you want to chase a straight or flush draw against me, you’re gonna have to pay for it.
When people raise you after flop it usually means trips , 2 pairs , straight draw or flush draw. But I guess $400 more with aces is hard to let go when the pot is that big already..... good hand but I think all in when he raised you was the move tho