Think one of the Biggest mistakes I see is chasing to much trying to get your straight or flush. Trying to really understand pot odds, blockers and outs. I see a lot of players doing this. It was one of my biggest mistakes. But learning from you and over time I think I fold a lot more than I have before not trying to chase when the odds are against me. I do understand implied odds as well. But if I see that they aren't playing deep and it's not worth it. I'll just fold. Don't get me wrong I do it here and there still. Guess it's just human nature. But I do fold a lot more. Thanks for the tips and content.
Considering clean outs is one of the biggest ways I like to determine whether I chase or not. I find this is a very nice way to not chase too often and to maximize gains and minimize losses in big pots.
While the overall aspect of poker isnt gambling, there are gambling aspects, and you are very correct on it being awful winning those, because then you have a false sense of value in that position when you get lucky @dharryg
Excellent content. Thank you!! I must say you are an excellent teacher. I agree 100% about all except number 5. I’m not sure about defending the blind. ??????. In my experience I have seen a lot of people lose a lot of money simply because they too often defend their blinds. I trust what you say and maybe it’s just that I don’t play poker often enough to fully understand the concept of #5. 🤷🏻
I think he was talking about games where there is an ante in play so you have to defend very wide more than people are used to. If there is no ante and its a game with rake then the range should be tighter.
These videos have helped me a lot. I only play very small tournaments (up to $65 buy in in my small town) and consistently make FT/the money. I see all types of players doing all kinds of things, but they often just dont make it
One of the mistakes I see and have occasionally been guilty of is showing your hand at Showdown when you don't have to. It's basically free information. Or just showing too often in general
I agree , but if the whole point is to shore up mistakes to in order to improve to start playing the bigger games then you might as well work on everything.
@@nicholaslynch8213 if ur good enough to play at highers stakes i still wouldnt worry about it cuz u should be adapting to play styles so showing ur hands also dont mean much.
At small stakes, I think it's actually good to show cards at times. Show a couple bluffs or nutted hands, and since most people don't pay enough attention, they will remember just that, so can get away with the opposite for awhile. Even then, a lot of people do not pay attention. Was playing really tight one day, since I wasn't getting crap. Raised one hand, and the one guy paying attention said something about how I must have a huge hand since I've barely played, which I did. Very next hand I have AKs, raise and get 5 callers. People are oblivious most of the time.
@@nicholaslynch8213 In small, fun games with lots of bad players i sometimes show when i do not need to and sometimes even explain some things about the lines that were taken, because its fun for the other players. I still win, the EV loss is not as bad as you think, and the losing players see that they get extra learning opportunities. It depends on the table and the context. In some games i never show when i do not need to, in other games i want to be the nice, friendly guy so they do not mind having me there as a strong winning player.
Biggest poker mistake I made was yesterday in a huge pot against DK where he told me he had an ace and then started dancing on the table at Hustler when he was talking about this BMI challenge he won. These guys dressed as Disney characters walked in and started screaming at me to fold so I did. DK showed 7 high.
Important tip for defending the big blind, this advice mainly works in tournaments where the raise sizes are low! In cash games where people are opening to 4+ BB, the concept of defending really goes out the window because you dont have the odds you would have vs a smaller size.
Even then, the correct calling range may be larger than you expect because you undervalue the big blind you already have in, and you can also undervalue the fact that you close the action and WILL see a flop. So it does not go out the window, the range gets smaller but may still be bigger than you think. In his example the correct calling range is enormous, in your example there are still factors at work widening your range.
@kurtilein3 Sure, you're still closing the action and all of that is true. However, I would argue that the range is a lot tighter than most would expect, since many people learn poker from GTO charts that assume 2.5x raise sizes or from YT videos like this one where J Little assumes the villains aren't raising that large. For example: BB vs LJ 200BB deep vs a 4BB raise. You're supposed to be pure folding hands like KJo and decent suited hands like Q7s.
@@kurtilein3 statistically playing from SB or BB is very EV negative (more so in cash game where the preflop raises are on the larger size). you flop a big hand very rarely and even if you manage to flop a draw 1/3 of the time - so what. you're out of position against an aggressive player who is not letting you see the turn for cheap
@@ikrenji8125 Overfolding the big blind is negative EV. You need to know how to play marginal hands out of position against agressive players. I recently played at a table that was so agressive that i won a lot by simply check-calling out of position with some draws and marginal made hands.
Seen so many people get mad when their min raise pre flop late in a tourny gets called by the BB with any non garbage hand. I personally will call any min bet in the BB besides unconnected and unsuited cards (that aren't broadway cards). 1 BB to win a min 5, you miss oh well, just fold. Hit and can win decent, if not huge. Unless really short, it would be dumb to fold for 1 BB at that point.
Yep, hero calling here is often self-deletion. It sure is 'paying to see it' when a known tight player is value betting the river at small stakes mtts. Thanks.
My mistake in poker is having such a good time... I mean, I'm always drunk when I play and play 99.9% VPIP and get everyone a round of drinks and end up racking up a bar bill bigger than what I buy in for. Then, I lose everything I bought in with. So, a $2/5 session, I buy in for $1,500 and by the end of the night and leave with -$3,000. I'm pretty sure it's -EV, but everyone else at the table seems to love it.
What about late reg. and specifically rebuying into the same tournament (online) 5, 6 or 8 times? I see a lot of people buying in to the same tournament a half dozen times. Some are seemingly profitable. Thoughts.
#2 I ran so bad for so long I had a college math wiz come watch me play at Texas Card House. After that night he looked right at me and told me I should quit and not look back. He didn't believe me until he saw me lose 3 all in's that night. Worst odds was 85% to win the best odds was the guy had one out with just river to come. I still wish I could bet people who don't believe my luck :)
Guilty of #1 all the time. Even AA on a wet board becomes marginal and I overplay it. Just busted out of a small tournament last week b/c I defended the SB with J8o (not GTO) from CO raise (LAG player big stack), J73 rainbow, check raised his C-bet, he pushes all in right away and I called. He had QQ. Poor mistake.
Overthinking there's a pattern because some players on the table are winning with any 7 in the hole cards for the past 7 of 10 hands. So I think I need to play any 7 to win because 7's been winning. 😅 donk here
The hardest thing about poker is people are insane, especially at amateur and small stakes, throw what you think you know about poker out the window because it means nothing against these insane people.
Yes ego… stop wanting the rest of the players at the table to witness your tale of woe. Play as close to ideal as you possibly can every time you observe the opportunity.
The biggest mistake you can make in poker thinking that you’re going to win and that you can make a living out of playing poker if you’re not playing poker for fun you’re in big trouble
My biggest mistake in poker is to shove on the turn with 90% plus equity, and thinking I'm gonna win 90% of the time and lose more than 80% of the time.... Oh wait thats why I quit playing online poker. 🤣🤣
Defending blinds in cash games is beyond silly. $1-3 $2-5 so what they took the blind from you. If you wouldn’t play the cards on the button you shouldn’t 0lay them under the gun with a raise. That’s really bad poker advice!