I've found that in most instances, if beginners hit the flop after raising/calling a raise, even if they have bottom pair, they'll call. Anything.
I would've folded Q7 off anyway (he raised, wtf), but calling your all in raise on the flop was certifiably insane. I doubt he would have put you on trips, at best a K, maybe he figured he had a pair and a live card... wanted to get lucky.
He was already in for 1800. How much did he have left after that, more than you?
Just bad luck Dave.
Here's a similar story from the Kingsford on Friday night. We had the honour of having two beginners join us, a husband and a wife. Its first break and I walk over to watch Shaun's table, the final hand before break. Here's what happened:
Note: I may have a few of the chip raises wrong here, but the effect is the same.
Player A (skilled player) raises to 1000 preflop. Player B (skilled player) calls, Player C (beginner 1, the wife) and Player D (beginner 2, the husband) calls.
Flop: K 5 2 (no flush draw). Player A bets 200. Everyone calls (Player C took ages to workout how much that was).
Turn: 3. Player A bets 800. Player B calls, Player C asks how much that is, table responds, she calls. Player D calls.
River: 2. Player A is now looking worried. He goes all in for 1500 or so. Player B folds. Player C thinks for a moment. She has the chips to call. She shows her cards to her husband, who says that she should call, so she does.
Yeahhhh. Player A objects. Player D calls.
Cards are revealed.
Player A: Pocket Js. Ended up with Js and 2s.
Player C: 2 4, offsuit. Ended up with trip 2s.
Player D: 6 7, offsuit. 7 high.
Player A is understandably pissed off. He swears and leaves the table. Player C is ecstatic ("I won!?") and reels in her chips.
In the end, Player A complained, and everyone got their chips back (so it was like the hand had never been played).
I'm telling this story to show that if an NPL beginner has hit, on the flop, they'll call anything. But then again most of you should already know that
