Posted 14 April 2010 - 08:52 PM
Your call on the flop is burning money. There are only a few turn cards you want to see (6x and any Kx except for the Kc), and about 20 cards you don't want to see. If any club, any overcard or any card that completes a possible straight draw straight hits the turn, you'll have to fold to a turn c-b. Also, if a blank hits the turn and villain c-bets, you are probably behind as well, since villain probably won't bet <MPGK on this board texture. Bottom line: you might be ahead on the flop a decent percentage of the time, but due to the insane amount of scare cards on the turn, it's better to fold.
Turn check is fine, and I like your riverbet. However, your call to his overshove is ridiculous spew. I couldn't find any stats in your post so I'm going to assume villain is unknown. @ The micro, low and low-mid stakes, there are very few people that blufovershove and even fewer people that C/Rovershove. Therefore, your sizing @ river is fine, since you want to represent a missed draw, but you should always fold to his shove.
I don't know what the pre-flop action was, but let's assume there were no limpers, since you didn't mention any. The pot @ the river = 18. Villain shoves for about 186 (please post a handhistory?!) after your riverbet, so you have to call 186-36=150 for a pot of 186+36+36=258, with your call 408, which means you need to win about 36,75% to break-even. Villain is never ever shoving worse holdings for value here, so you are basically assuming that villain is bluffing here about 3/8 times, that's redonkulous!
An important rule in poker is: never go broke in limped pots. People often have marginal starting hands that turn into monsters post-flop. Yours just isn't one of them (on this board).
Note: Normally, villain shouldn't be playing a boat/straight/flush this way, but people do strange things and this isn't the spot to hero-call. I also must admit that I haven't played rush-poker yet.