Q&A #78: Big Hands Deserve Big Pots
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Big hands deserve big pots. It’s a fundamental no-limit concept. When you flop a set, you want to build as big a pot as you can. Today, jamleeco flopped his set, but his opponent folded top pair before he could get it all-in. Let’s see if he could have played a bigger pot.
My stack 90bb, other main player has me covered.
3 limper to me in cutoff, I raise to 7bb with KK. I get 2 callers.
Pot(23bb) Flop comes Ac Kc 7s. It’s checked to me and I bet 8bb, EP2 cr’s it to 25bb, op folds. After I match it pot is 73bb’s. I go all in for 60bb’s, ep thinks awhile and folds AQ.
My thinking was if he has a strong ace he will call. With me all in a flush draw is gettting the odds to call so he would. If he has a strong ace and I just call a club might kill my market. Also, I was for the first time trying to ignore and not track my stack when playing nl and keep me from results thinking. Est. a little less, but figured small difference since my raise was less than pot size anyway. Should I have let him take the lead because I had POSITION. OOP I wouldn’t have 2nd guessed here, but did I not use my position to my advantage?
Position is so much more important in nl than in my limit history, I want to use it to my full advantage and I”m thinking I didn’t.
I like your solid preflop raise after multiple limpers with KK. Now let’s talk about the flop play.
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Tags: bet-chunking, big-hands, big-pots, flopping-a-set, no-limit-holdem, poker

Ed, I totally agree with this post. Slowplaying sets like this is endemic at low buy NLH and it allows thinking opponents to escape.
It’s worth repeating something that I’ve seen in a few different places: The vast majority of players would be better off if they never slowplayed another hand again in the rest of their poker careers.