opposing poker bluffs

wilpinsi

wilpinsi

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you'll get a good feel for opposing poker bluffs in the medium to long term
your own hand does not matter, but it can be assumed that you hit a bluff.
In the first hand, you and your opponent play at $ 1 / $ 2 blinds and each have $ 200. Your opponent raises to $ 8, and you and another player call, folding the small blind. On the flop come 10 8 Q. You check, the opponent puts $ 20 into the pot with currently $ 25, you call, the third player gets out. On the turn, the 5 comes in. You check, the opponent places $ 30 in the $ 65 pot. After your call comes on the River 6, you check back and your opponent bets $ 55 into the $ 125 pot.
Your opponent has bet before the flop, then on the flop against two players and on turn and river as well. On the flop the bet was almost the pot size, on the turn half the pot. On the river it was even less than half the pot size. After the river, no flush is possible, but two strights through the cards 4, 7, 9, J. All in all, the board is not very scary and should be beaten by a strong hand like AA, two pairs or a treble ,
You can tell from the opponent's placement behavior that he wants to be paid out with a finished hand. He did not bet much on the turn nor on the river, most likely not to knock you out of hand. Which hands do you play with? Very likely only with one hand like AQ or stronger. The opponent can have QQ-AA and he could have gotten a set or two pairs on the flop or turn. Even J9 is played by some very aggressive players like that, after all he had a straight draw on the flop. Since all of these hands explain their opponent's style of play, they most likely have one of them. Therefore, you should fold before you run into a strong hand and lose a lot of money.
my hand was QQ, trying to extract the maximum of my opponent, did not notice the flop, where it could be defeated, as it happened,
QQ VS J9
QQQ VS 89TJQ:mad::mad::mad::eek::eek::eek::eek:
 
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