Flopped a Big Draw with 2♥3♥, what do you do here?

Flopped Draw with 23 optimized.gif

DECISION POINT: In a Tournament, a Middle Position player raises preflop and the Hijack calls. It folds around to you and you call with 2♥3♥. The flop comes 8♥4♥5♠. You are first to act. What do you do?

PRO ANSWER: A deep-stacked player makes a small preflop raise in Middle Position and a shorter stacked player calls behind them. In the Big Blind we are getting favorable pot odds AND we close the action with a speculative hand, making for a straightforwardly profitable call.

On the flop we hit a massive draw. We have an open-ended straight draw and a flush draw, giving us fifteen outs. It’s important to play our big hands and our big draws similarly both for balance and so that our opponents have a hard time putting us on a range of hands.

On a coordinated board like this we would generally lead out with our big made hands, like sets or two pair. We should do the same with our big draws. In addition to providing balance, betting with our big draws gives us two ways to win this pot. We can induce our opponents to fold and win the pot uncontested or we can hit our draw in a contested pot.

Continued below...

Check-raising would be a viable option if the opponents had different stack sizes. If a continuation bet is likely from your opponent and you can make a standard check-raise that is all-in or effectively all-in and still creates fold equity, check-raising may be a better play. In this case the shorter stack has too few chips and the original preflop raiser has too many chips.

Betting about half the pot or slightly less is the best play.

What would you do here?
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