
mariussica88
Legend
Platinum Level
Well I just did the math and proved, that its probably a call and certainly not an "easy" fold. But whateverEasy fold, even in a bounty tournament.
Which is fine. Then we just play a "flip" with him in the side pot against his KJ or whatever. The way to win money in bounty tournaments is to "go strong or go home" not to be risk averse and try to min-cash for usually not even the buyin.BB covers you and may push also because he covers all players in the hand, even if he is a nit statwise.
I agree it's not an easy fold (I was assuming the bounty stuff is negligible, but it's a bigger factor than i realized, so I concede it's close). But I don't think it's a call. You've only had one more percent than you needed, and you had several simplifying assumptions that work for you, likeWell I just did the math and proved, that its probably a call and certainly not an "easy" fold. But whatever![]()
This is a fair point. Getting called by 88+ for all our chips will happen around 3,5% of the time and result in a loss of around 120k chips in the side pot as well as a worse situation in the main pot. The chip loss from the side pot alone is 4.2k, which is more than 1% of the 3-way main pot of 300k. So 77 is probably a fold, while 88 might then be the worst pair, we stack off.these will change the result by more than 1%, specifically the BB. If he calls it's just a disaster because he'll have an overpair most of the time.
First of all we are never just calling here for 30% of our chips and allowing the BB into the pot, so its a jam or fold spot. According to your other hand history the starting stack is 50k, and the all-in player has a $5,94 bounty, which is then worth at least 60k chips at this stage. If the original raiser comes along, you can also win his $4,93 bounty, which is worth at least another 50k chips. And I think, we need to assume, he almost always call, because he can also win the $5,94 bounty.
For sake of simplicity we can assume, that BB fold. It does not matter than much, because if he call, we are usually flipping with him in a side pot. He only has 88+ 3,5% of the time, and occationally he might even call with hands, we dominate, because he want to win 3 bounties. So lets just ignore BB and assume, he fold, which will also be the most common outcome, if we jam.
Now we can pull out Equilab and assign them some ranges. The all-in player should be on a tight range, because he need to expect, that he almost always get action and often multiway action, since he has a juicy bounty, which everyone can win. Lets say he jam 6% of hands. Lets also say, the original raiser open 16% of hands. That seems realistic with 6 players behind him.
Just to make the math easy we can say, you are risking 100k to win 300k plus bounties worth 100k so 400k all in all. This means, you need 25% equity in Chip EV. According to Equilab you have 26%. So its not a big deal either way. Personally I tend to take close spots in PKOs to try to build a big stack, but its also ok to pass on this one and fold.