Yes, but the question is whether you priced villain out of the draw, but he called anyway. If that is the case, then a moral victory.
Played a tournament tonight and I was berated for being lucky. Was I so bad? I had to call about 9,600 chips in a pot of approx 23,000. This was on the bubble–five survivors, four paid places.
I was about 39% to win or tie the hand with KJ suited vs AQ suited, so the odds are about right, I think with pot odds of 2.5 to 1, which is 29%, so at a discount.
Anyway, a few hand later, another spot of luck occurred. With 77 in the BB I called a raise to 2 BB, as one would, and ran into AQ unsuited. Here I am 55% preflop to win or tie, and the flop came nicely giving villain top pair with a set of 7’s for me and some backdoor draws for villain. Villain had made a number of bets where he had overbet the pot prior to this, and so I checked to see how many chips he would like to lose. All of them, it turned out. At the flop I am 97% to win, so I called off almost my entire stack, and villain failed to make his runner-runner broadway, runner-runner Queens, or runner-runner aces on the later streets.
At this point I realized that I was in quite a good position to win the tournament, and so it was and yet again all the villains were left believing that the game must be fixed in my favor. Maybe it is.