AK in late stages of a NLHE tournament, gets re-raised by Villain (6 Viewers)

What do you do after the three-bat by villain?

  • Fold

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Flat

    Votes: 15 35.7%
  • Raise (but less than jam)

    Votes: 2 4.8%
  • Jam

    Votes: 25 59.5%

  • Total voters
    42
I'd flat. I don't care if I get a few raised eyebrows for not going crazy pre-flop if it comes to a showdown.
You're not particularly desperate.
No chops? Was it home or online?
 
Home game, paid 6. once we got down to 8, a "chop" was suggested to get 7th and 8th their buyins back.

No other chop discussion was mentioned. 3-handed, all of us had the chip lead at some point.
 
Jacks are way behind QQ while AK is flipping, and JJ also has less equity against KK than AK. Everything else is kinda the same. AK also blocks AA and KK and JJ does not.
Yeah, I get the pros and cons, but I tend to play both the same way. It depends a lot, I mean a lot, on my reads on my opponents. It’s easier to shove, but more times than not I play both hands conservatively until I’m sure I know where I stand, either in my read or when my draws hit.
In this particular case, with a ladder up in play, I’d def not shove and I’d wait out the shorter stack if nothing else. Even if you win here it’s not a lockup. But the ladder would sway me here.
 
Short stack has nearly 20BB so I don't think I am planning to fold to ladder up ever in this spot. I think I just jam.

I don't hate calling either especially in position. If I take this line I am going with it if I flop an ace, king, or the nut flush draw.

The only upside to a raise is if you are planning to call a shove and you think this path gets the chips to the middle more effectively than just jamming. (Meaning villain is going to fold to a jam too frequently.)

Fold is out here. If the short stack was under 5 bigs only then would I even think about a fold.
 
Yeah, I get the pros and cons, but I tend to play both the same way. It depends a lot, I mean a lot, on my reads on my opponents. It’s easier to shove, but more times than not I play both hands conservatively until I’m sure I know where I stand, either in my read or when my draws hit.
In this particular case, with a ladder up in play, I’d def not shove and I’d wait out the shorter stack if nothing else. Even if you win here it’s not a lockup. But the ladder would sway me here.

My analysis of AK vs JJ is specifically for this spot, where it’s likely Villain will call only with QQ+, AK, and maybe not even all his AK. As unbelievably as it seems. I think he folds AQ and JJ. I’m assuming he’s ICMing as well…

In other occasions, I also treat JJ similarly to AK, but with aggression and not the other way around. JJ can fold hands that flips with it, or get called by lower pairs.

When in doubt, to me, aggression is the way to go.
 
I d seen the same happen to a buddy of mine over and over with AK and we d had this exact discussion. Sorry you blanked out, but it does happen many many times like this. It really depends on how you’re running that day.
 
My analysis of AK vs JJ is specifically for this spot, where it’s likely Villain will call only with QQ+, AK, and maybe not even all his AK. As unbelievably as it seems. I think he folds AQ and JJ. I’m assuming he’s ICMing as well…

In other occasions, I also treat JJ similarly to AK, but with aggression and not the other way around. JJ can fold hands that flips with it, or get called by lower pairs.

When in doubt, to me, aggression is the way to go.
I don’t disagree at all, but I don’t play infinite numbers of tournaments either.

I can say I’ve seen so many AK killed by AQ or any other two random cards that I don’t feel bad about calling an all in and then seeing all my opponent has is AK instead of a pair. The mindless, drunk, “further in a tournament than he’s been in a while” guy seems to win more times than not, and he will call your AK every time too with ATC after 5 minutes of thinking and poking fingers out and then declaring “the math says so”.

Aggression is more fun for sure, but it’s so common nowadays that trapping or releasing after the flop seems to me to be better for tourneys - reward for less risk - but a cash game would be different for sure. I’d aggro every perceived advantage then
 
The whole concept of a made hand is bogus. It’s about the equity of your hand vs your opponents range.

THANK YOU!

Standing ovation!

standing ovation GIF
 

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