If you concerned about losing value bet the turn more when you are ahead. People call more with weak hand strength when they still have a draw available. On the river they only call based on their hand strength.
@@vinhduong3148 thanks for the fun session the other night, appreciate you my friend. After you left I got dealt some nasty coolers… See you around soon 😎
In the K 10 hand you said he should have raised your $35, but it seems like that is what you would have wanted him to do. From his perspective, if he raised to $100 which would be about a pot-sized bet, what worse hand from his perspective is calling that? Would you have called with your K 10? I don’t think so. So from his perspective I think he made the right move in calling because raising would only fold out worse (like what you had) and gotten called by better (like a rivered straight). The way the hand was played is totally consistent with you having KQ from the other player’s persepctive. It’s in your range when you raise preflop. You check back the flop when all cards are under a 10, suggesting you whiffed the flop. You simply call the BB’s bet on the turn as though you’re drawing rather than raising to rep that you turned top pair good kicker. On the river, he checks to you and you finally show some aggression by betting half pot, which seems like a value bet. Why would he raise you here? EDIT: The way you played is also consistent with a lower straight you river with any 8X holding, especially something like 98 or A8, both of which are in your raising range on the button.
Thanks for that insight. I misspoke on the "raise" there. What I was meaning to say is I am surprised he did not initially bet on the river for value, since hands like KJ and AJ are definitely in my range and I would call with those hands for the right price. He played it well for checking over to me because I felt over confident and bet a larger amount than I would of probably called, him making the call there makes sense since worse hands would fold to the reraise and better hands would call, so I agree with you. Raising on my part was a misplay anyway, since I had decent showdown value, so overall not happy with how I played the hand and verbalized it. Thanks for the input.
Thanks for the input. I’ve been trying to be more aggressive in my game, since my best and most profitable sessions are when I am more aggressive. I’ll keep that in mind for the future to not min-bet as often.
Raising K10 min raise is bad. It invites too wide a calling range and then makes that hand really tough to navigate post flop. When you bet the river on a 4 to the straight board with 2nd pair you basically turned your hand into a bluff. People aren’t calling with 3rd or 4th pair there are they? When you bet $60 into $90 top 2 w KQ to protect from flush draw you may have signaled your hand is strong end of range by betting more, since you usually bet less, but if someone had a flush draw there in position they would probably call and you don’t want to price in flush draws. 1/2 pot does that, 2/3 pot doesn’t, so it’s not a bad bet. At this level the players seem to be calling as a mistake so larger bet sizes will balance out equity over time.
To some extent, yes. Especially if the players tend to call too much. Your polarized range of weak hands should be flush draws, j10s, 2 clubs w a gutter or a a pair. This builds a pot for when you hit and allows you to get people to fold out when they are holding better say a 98s where you have a gutter and flush draw and someone has a pair of queens…. You gain a lot of equity when you get people to fold when you are behind. You also gain equity when they decide to look you up and you have a hand. You can then decide to profitable bomb the river when it suits you and the pot is built to allow massive bets for when you are strong and they have a hand they won’t fold. And the bigger bet sizes scare off some players who stop wanting to play as many hands with you. But some of this depends on the table play style. Aggressive players who play back at you for example make these bets a lot harder to make profitably, you don’t want to bet a flush draw and have someone w a pair shove on you in the turn, puts you in a blender.
@@darklurker33 yeah makes sense, I think it’s wise for me to gauge the table and play tight for a bit, and when the table sticks around and I pick up on how they play I can polarize my range and be a bit aggressive.
Or play a little loose then tighten up…..depends on if the table is too tight or too loose. If they are too tight I’ll get aggressive, too loose and I’ll tighten up. There is no optimal style of play for poker in general but there is an optimal style of play for a particular poker table.
So glad you're posting again man, it's really nice to watch a high intermediate/pro poker player and learn new phrases as an aspiring novice like myself. Never knew the phrase Bigger Nalls was just another way to say you got a bad hand but I'll be sure to remember from now on. Nice video!
The term drawing dead means you don’t have any outs while you’re in a hand, I think the term you were looking for is “card dead” which means you aren’t getting any good whole cards! Love the vlogs!
I am, I only played with my family here and there growing up, and I’ve only been playing live poker since April of this year. It’s fun and beneficial to get feedback and advice from people that tune in.
@@pokersam yeah no offense but you are weirdly scared of monsters under the bed but at the same time always trying to get more value with smaller bets and I'm just like bro you are never gonna stack someone that way and I feel like you understand the word range and use it a lot but maybe don't have the context of equity distribution to go along with it sorry if I'm being a dick but also I play for the money don't get me wrong I just enjoy playing but some people don't want to study and improve and that is perfectly fine
@@peterveckmen9314 no offense taken brother. I know I’m not good, but I’m always trying to learn and get better. I only started studying and putting the work in last month, feel like I’ve learned a decent amount since then. I appreciate your feedback though.
@@pokersam yeah I'd say learn how to construct a polarized range it's the biggest thing people get wrong like one of the hands with the 10 that you bet on the four straight too thin either bet it big as a bluff or check down and be content with the pot
@@peterveckmen9314 do you recommend any books or software? I read through essential poker math and use gto wizard to study some charts and specific spots. Not sure what to study sometimes and feel lost when that happens.
Cool vlog. I like the chill vibe of the channel. The shots in the parking lot brought back some memories of when I played at Commerce back in the day. What’s up with those screens in front of players on the table though? Looks like they’d get in the way.
Glad you enjoyed it. I was actually talking to an older gentleman today about the screens. He told me they installed them 1-2 yrs ago…. Awful mistake, cards get stuck all the time. I believe they are for jackpot bets.
@@KenDavis-uo8kq I went there about a week ago, but the tables were super crammed and I didn’t feel comfortable getting good footage. Also I think they are a lot strict with recording so I didn’t want to risk it. It sucks because the screens are really frustrating…