Another common flop that lends itself to bluffing is when there is a flop with no bet and the highest card on the flop pairs on the turn. Because of the fact that the top pair on the flop will be bet 95% of the time, you can usually be sure that the paired card on the turn did not make someone trips.
For example, the flop is J* 7v 3* and the turn is J*. This is one of those rare times when you can bet knowing you're beat but won't be called. Anyone holding a Seven or a Three will usually fold it, not wanting to risk the possibility that you have a Jack and checked it on the flop. They will consider the possibility that you were going to check-raise if there was no bet on the flop. As funny as it sounds, you can even show your A* Kv to a player holding a Seven and he'll still throw it away, because of the pot odds.
11. Faking a Rush
After you've beat a certain player several times with the nuts, you can consider bluffing him on the river in the near future. You've conditioned him to seeing the nuts from you and he'll give you considerably more respect than he would the other players. All you have to do is act like here we go again and he'll be more likely than usual to throw his hand away. After all, is his mind, you're on a rush against him. If everything's working for you and you're really lucky, he'll throw away much better hands against you than he would against the other players.
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