I was thinking this isn't poker, then I remembered the name of the show. But Feldman asking how he lost money was more ridiculous than the overall play of the table.
Hahahaahaha, I love how he looks around for sympathy and finds none. They must love the part owner joining in and losing all his money. It's like positive rake!
@@Lfggggggg I edited it to make it more understandable for you... Now look at your (incorrect) statement... You said "he (Ryan) chopped dude...." How tf could Ryan have chopped when he starts the hand with ~223k and ends the hand with ~165k.... That's not a chop fam... It's okay that you were wrong.. Just don't double down on your mistake.
Love seeing Ryan lose these spots. He seems like a nice enough guy but he's clearly used his influence to get himself into these amazing games with maniacs where he has no right being, so he deserves the pain.
isn't that how most people get on shows? they know people who know people. He's also not claiming to be the best player, I think he knows that he's an underdog there but still takes them on
Honestly, it would be more exciting to get rid of the multiple board nonsense, it's happening way too much. Just play at smaller stakes if the variance is too much for you to handle.
Lol the most dump coment j ever read this year, he is a pro he has more poker tables played than anyone on that table, u are not even knowing what are u talking about
He is talking as if he lost with AA. Bro I wouldn’t be excited to get in so much money in a cash game with AA that too multiway. He only had AK. Has he ever played online??
Why is Airball even in the game with only 57K? I get that he's lost chips, but it's a cashgame, isn't it? He should just be able to reload? Or is his bankroll empty now? He's getting so happy about winning 114K that it feels like he's actually almost broke now. The run-out however was indeed sick given the last card saved Keating.
I'm no mathematician, but here's what happened. They rounded up the numbers, but here's the actual numbers; and they didn't show the numbers for Alan. Nick was in for $57,900. He tripled up and profited $115,800. Alan and Ryan were in for $223,000, each - Nick's $57,900. $233,000 × 2 = $446,000 - $115,800 = $350,200. $352,000 ÷ 2 = $175,100, which is what Alan profited.
@@ianshirreffs5604 Keating didn't profit. He lost money. How would he have profited? He lost both main pots to airball. He lost the first side to Ryan and won the second side. He lost whatever airball had on the hand.