What strategies do you employ to make sure you're in the right headspace before playing poker?
@Mr_Miggz3 күн бұрын
Love your videos man.
@CarloRossiTheGreat3 күн бұрын
A mantra that I can only control the decisions I make
@jarirepo11723 күн бұрын
I try to remember what all results are possible before making a decision. It's much more easy to accept whatever happens when you go through it in your mind, sometimes opponent has top of his range, sometimes he will hit runner-runner to beat you, etc. Then whatever happens, it's easier to accept than to be surprised at the end - even if you win it's better to be prepared for it and not elated by it. EDIT: Oh, this was rather during I play than when I prepare to play. Well, when I prepare I try to remember that most of the tournaments will go badly and most of the time I will lose.
@chefmikeankh64343 күн бұрын
Johnathon .. what’s the goal? Meaning if it’s a long term goal, then should it be calculated monthly , quarterly or annually. How do you measure poker success?
@pauld97303 күн бұрын
Every time I feel myself tilting and start to make bad moves, I imagine Jonathan shaking his head in disgust at me. Works every time.
@danielgarland9838Күн бұрын
Thanks Johnathan! Happy Holidays!!
@stylin40s3 күн бұрын
Thankfully my blow up was at 16 years old. Where I worked we played on breaks and sometimes break was all day. One day I had a string of bad beats and went on tilt and lost all the money in front of me. I then went back to work and spent the rest of the day thinking about how terrible that decision was and how I shouldn't let it happen again. That was 29 years ago, I have lost my cool a few times since then but I haven't punted off my stack in anger. It was a great lesson for young person to learn.
@yaronpini63372 күн бұрын
Great video! can you make video about how to reduce variance on MTT? like use more FE, try to play more postflop because the pool are like to call shove with any two and bink, etc
@devonperry922613 сағат бұрын
This really the best video. Poker discipline is number 1
@wristwatch-trader72372 күн бұрын
Such good advice. I've had plenty of 10 hour cash sessions where I was just completely dead, zero chance to do anything. If that happens in a tournament, you're just gone. And you have to be ready to accept that if that's how it goes down.
@johnbell69562 күн бұрын
Your lessons are enjoyable. I am mostly a tag or lag depending on the table makeup. Once my money is converted to chips it ceases to be money for me. Chips are just to keep count of my relative position among the other players. Up or down when a hand is over I forget it and play my game. Cheers
@davidmoir22692 күн бұрын
My bad beats can be avoided or averted when it is an all in situation as stars allow you to cash out during the hand according to ur equity so if u have 87.54% equity subject to a 1% pot fee u will be paid your % of the pot if u cash out, doing this affects ur postflop strategy to a degree
@Benjithebopper3 күн бұрын
Going through my worst ever downswing. Thanks for this video 🙏🏻
@petes19692 күн бұрын
The paradox is that to be truly successful you have to play with no expectation. This is challenging for most because of the money factor.
@iamamish3 күн бұрын
Getting a bad beat is usually a good thing! Your opponent is likely to learn the wrong lesson, and you made the correct play, yet still lost. This bodes well for future hands. The variance is why bad players keep coming back to give you their money - if the bad players lost every time (like chess), they'd learn they're bad and stop giving you their money.
@enriquestewart57623 күн бұрын
I needed this video. Going through a downswing.
@gesus.christ993 күн бұрын
How many hands? 2500?😂
@ViciousBloodrush3 күн бұрын
me too bro. it's crazy how bad i feel after losing... it really affects my well-being
@TwistedMetal323 күн бұрын
A few times a year, poker tournament winner highlights are “Joe Schmoe has won his first live tournament ever!” Whether it’s a bracelet, a daily tourney, anything in between. I think those people struggle the most with these mindset leaks. In the moment, to win your first ever tourney in a sizable field, the amount of luck, good fortune, poker “bounces” that go that players way needed to win. create a sense of entitlement for said player. They think they’re going to win 4/5 flips, hold more often than the math states, and bad beat others at a high clip like they did in a winning run. Losing in poker teaches you a lot about a man. Including yourself.
@harryjoyce67623 күн бұрын
I found a good strategy to help with bad beats is to be happy you got the money in and to be even more happy when your opponents are happy to put the money in whilst behind
@marcoschmidt98333 күн бұрын
Hello, thanks for your great advice. What do you think Is the best thing to do? If I have a day with all the bad beats and feeling card dead, as you said I'm not a robot, do you think it's better to stop that day, because feeling bad causes mistakes?
@ed53083 күн бұрын
I keep records for the year. At the end of year I see where I have ended up. Some years I have made 2K. Some years I have lost 3K. I am not a winning player for the last 10 years. It does not bother me at all. I never risk food, gas, mortgage money. Its just one long card game to me. Does it get frustrating to get sucked out with AA? Sure but I remember a tournament where I won and beat AA and KK with pocket 33"s. It just part of the game.
@ph34poker3 күн бұрын
Yessir Johnathan!! Best free content around 😎
@chasebethersonton51692 күн бұрын
Facing river bet - "I don't know what he could have, so I fold." I hear that a lot on advice channels.
@jackksc2073 күн бұрын
Well, one day I got knocked out four times in a row by all in AA preflop. Guess I need to get used to it
@McRuffin3 күн бұрын
Me personally, never created a scene playing live. Although in the past, i had my fair share of blowups playing online in the comfort of my home lol
@midnightmadness_3 күн бұрын
Thanks for this
@fialee83 күн бұрын
These three mindsets can also apply to life in general.
@untouchable360x3 күн бұрын
4. Scarcity mindset
@carlr24383 күн бұрын
Hey Jonathan have you ever played with Mike Matasow
@PaulRoos-p3o3 күн бұрын
I tilt in the opposite direction when i fold 9-4o and a full house flops, ok it happens, but then it happens again , and again so now i'm afraid to fold , but i do , i fold J3 off and what do you think happens !? flopping the nuts is the best feeling for me , 2nd best feeling is a clean fold TRUTH !!!
@LowTide9413 күн бұрын
Did you just learn how to play poker? That’s kind of a beginner thing
@PaulRoos-p3o3 күн бұрын
@@LowTide941 yeah i'm pretty new to poler, yesterday i folded 3 crap hands in a row and 1 was a full house and the very next 1 was a straight , it seems like every 3rd or 4th hand i fold woulda won, but thanks i was starting to think it was only me .
@francescoiadicicco12663 күн бұрын
"If you get in with AA vs J4o" made me giggle 😆
@yixiaoshen49203 күн бұрын
J4o🤣
@timhefner40563 күн бұрын
Does anyone play poker anymore for fun? It's not even fun anymore when 7+ players at the table are only there to in a little money. Even more so at 1/2 games.
@PaulRoos-p3o3 күн бұрын
WHENEVER I START TO LOSE IT I CHANNEL CHIP REESE .
@marksimpson23213 күн бұрын
How many weak players always forget the times they suck out on someone else? 😅 I had Ac9d v KdKh allinmid stage of a small buyin tournament yesterday and the run out was 5 spades 😅. Someone lost most of their stack with JJ v JJ 😅. These things happen. Just enjoy being on the good side when it happens!
@davidaronson94753 күн бұрын
Who could have guessed?
@dinodoljanin27132 күн бұрын
1:26 what is that ??? Ur makeing coke line with your fingers..... SHOOOCKING ALLEGATIONS !!!
@quidz773 күн бұрын
There is someone who likes J4o 😉
@miked43093 күн бұрын
its the flat tire.
@OneOut13 күн бұрын
I started playing 5/5 pot limit holdem in the late 70's. I disagree with the idea that seems popular today that short term results don't matter. YES THEY DO. If you take care of short term results the long term results take care of themselves. Avoiding large losses is key to overall profits. One of the influences to my understanding of this came from observing a hugely successful cash game player from the old underground games in Texas.
@johannessmithenstein3 күн бұрын
I don't mind variance at all, in fact if it was real for me I would embrace it. Problem is I don't have positive variance and haven't for two years. And it's not just getting outdrawn, it's massive absurd coolers, myself never hitting a draw, etc. For example just this month I've had FIVE instances of having the king high flush losing to the ace high flush. I've never had it the other way around. I also never hit a draw. So when five people in one night hit a gutshot on me, I wouldn't mind if I could just hit my share of gutshots or even good 33% equity draws but my equity is nowhere near 30% it's like 5% at best. I used to wonder about the existential implications of all this but now I've come to peace with it and I just play for fun. I'm good enough now to break even despite running this way. I win all my hands by bluffing and then I make crazy folds that no one else would make. But I know I can never be a pro with that kind of variance (and neither could anyone else) so I'm cool with that.
@rickybelcher14413 күн бұрын
You should get Jonathan Littles master class!! Sounds like more than just crappy luck
@pokerqAK473 күн бұрын
2 years don’t mean anything. You could have played 20 hours in 2 years. So it’s a matter of how many hours you played. I’ve had break even stretches for 400 hours. Meaning that I’d lose, win, lose, win, eventually win anyway. But while I was losing I’d study every single day. Do you?