4:04 What would YOU do with J♥J♣ on the flop? Your Stack (CO): 40,549 Their Stack (BTN): 89,540 Pot: 10,430 Board: 8♥ 6♠ 5♣ BB & UTG+1 check, you bet 5,215, BTN raises to 14,830, BB & UTG+1 fold A) Fold B) Call C) Raise to… ?
@gabrieljonsson78212 жыл бұрын
B) Think I'm gonna play bluff catcher and call down all the way. No raise, would only get action from sets and straights.
@mikemeunier62852 жыл бұрын
B call
@hymnofashes2 жыл бұрын
What is villain's range? He elected not to squeeze preflop, so we can discount or eliminate QQ+, although vs a tight UTG raise he may not have a 3-betting range. But we will discount those. For value he can have 97s, 88,66,55, and occasionally some AA. He might raise TT or 99 for protection. For bluffs, he may elect to turn a hand such as 44, 76, or 87 into a bluff, hoping to make us fold a weaker over-pair on the turn. Or he could have complete air such as ace-jack. Since we beat some of the worst hands he could raise for value, and we beat all the bluffs, I think we should continue here unless we have a specific read that this guy isn't going to raise one-pair holdings after the flop. However, I will probably X/F to some big turn bets or bad turns. ...oh, I didn't see the stack size. Never mind, fold.
@MXDRE9072 жыл бұрын
I can't see myself in this spot in the first place. I would have deincentivized a wide button call behind me by 3betting pre flop (to drive out the button and the blinds) to play the hand post flop heads up in position. I'm not interested in playing the hand this passively and encouraging the players to act behind me to enter to pot and play the pot multiway. But... If I did call pre flop, (and know that I am going to bet/fold my overpair to a raise), then I'm not betting my hand. But... If am betting my hand, I'm not betting 1/2 pot. It's either a larger size to better define their hands (making a fold to a raise much clearer), or I'm betting smaller because the burden of defense is spread between multiple players and will elicit the same response as a 1/2 pot bet. This would allow me the option to continue when faced with a raise, from the button or a check raise from anyone else in the hand. *Betting after the pre flop aggressor checks the flop opens you up for attack. Betting 1/2 pot leaves you vulnerable as a field bettor. But... If I did bet (smaller or larger than 1/2 pot, but not this "no man's land" sizing) and get called, I plan to size up on the turn on good cards. As played, having to fold an overpair on a flop texture that is full of draws/pairs + draws was a terrible situation to be putting himself in to begin with.
@TheSodakboy932 жыл бұрын
Fold, not only because I watched the video, but because the BTN's check-raise range here is really polar and no decent player is going to want to bet their best bluffs here into multiple players. So at the bare minimum I'd want a hand that at least can make the nuts, so any continues I have here would have to have a 7 or maybe a 9. The overpairs don't really make great continues here because they can't necessarily improve, and TT-JJ are especially bad because even if the villain has a weird bluff like Qh7h they can still have outs to beat us. I think flatting or 3-betting pre are probably both ok, with early position raisers I'd be way more inclined to call JJ here simply because if we 3-bet here and get 4-bet jammed we probably are getting the right price to call but it's pretty marginal.
@paularized12 жыл бұрын
This is teaching so much more than just how to play jacks. It’s teaching how to analyze any hand. Really happy it reached the 1000 likes so we get parts 2&3! And ima say 8s9s fav hand.
@PokerCoaching2 жыл бұрын
Awesome, I'm glad you enjoyed it! :) AA is my favorite ;)
@chesthoIe2 жыл бұрын
I absolutely LOVE how Alex teaches. He includes the folds that you need to make that the other coaches skip. I can't really put my finger on everything else he does right, but he's got something that no one else does.
@Joel-js2gk2 жыл бұрын
For me the best part of his quizzes is how decisive he always is. He's never really wishy washy, even when he says there's an alternative option, it's like "ya, I guess doing this is OK but really you should do this instead." Always insightful, straight to the point and very clear with the messages he's sending.
@ironmeadz2 жыл бұрын
No wonder this guy is one of the best in the world, he gets dealt pocket jacks (jiggities) literally every hand
@brooknorth52342 жыл бұрын
I think the first hand is wrong. If you assume the button is a good player- the raises he has there are sets (9 combos) and straights (maybe 4 of 97s), and 2 pair 65s(2), that’s 15value bets. His draws are 67s (3), 87s(3) A7s (4), 77 (6), that’s 16. And that’s assuming he’s never bluffing with something like A8/A5 with a back door flush(4 together) or A4 with a back door (3). You’re getting 3:1 on a call. This is a call. Now this depends on the player profile. If you think she’s not raising with these hands, yes, fold! But then what you are doing is exploiting an unbalanced range. Which maybe is his point. Like, the average player in mid/low stakes might not be raising with those hands. But if it’s a good player, this is a call all day. Edit: adding - this is definitely a raise pre as well. Particularly if the button has a tight preflop range.
@PokerCoaching2 жыл бұрын
If you all enjoy this video, make sure to hit LIKE! If it gets above 1000 likes, I'll release parts 2 and 3 of this series from Alex for FREE! :)
@fruitgrapepwnage2 жыл бұрын
you love TJs
@fridrikfalkner47512 жыл бұрын
We got it Jonathan, release the second parts! :)
@DabuDave Жыл бұрын
where's the parts?
@juanpena92622 жыл бұрын
So glad you put this video out man I literally had that AH HAA moment. Felt like this was meant for me to see and i'm so happy I did. The way Alex Explained the reasoning behind it just made so much sense.
@PokerCoaching2 жыл бұрын
Glad I could help!
@nitthegrit75442 жыл бұрын
@1:20:17 Asking "is a 10 ever good here" is sort of a misleading question. An A-10, Q-10, 9-10 can all be playable hands here that would call your 4.9k open. All 10x hands with nutted or semi nutted draws are "good" here for the purposes of realizing equity on future streets.
@bobmcglone66762 жыл бұрын
Alex is the best. He isn’t afraid to go against the grain. He backs up his teaching. Jonathan little- you hit a home run hiring him. And BTW he always follows up with questions/ answers.
@riveradam2 жыл бұрын
1:02:51 Imagine if agentTetris jammed the flop. Does JJ continue there? Losing to any Q, any 4, and random KK AA too? If villain wasn't so worried about pot control or "trapping" opponents, then the JJ doesn't get to see the turn, doesn't get to realize the boat, and the pot goes the opposite direction. What is A4s scared of on a Q44 rainbow board? Literally only losing to exactly QQ or Q4, but beating all other pairs, beating all AQ KQ QT, beating K4s J4s T4s 54s 43s... if everyone folds to a flop jam, then agentTetris wins the pot uncontested. If anyone calls agentTetris, then he has better odds against them. Great video. I love the format with quizzes interspersed. Active learning is the good shit. Thank you Mr. Fitzgerald!
@TheDougWay2 жыл бұрын
Hey, there are a lot of reasons why people don't like to fold. Many of them fallacious though. 1. The opponent may be bluffing. And they could just always bet enough more than me to make me fold every single time, can't have that, I'd lose. 2. People way too often think about only best case and worst case, and ignore the other cases. So like if they still think best case they could still have a straight or flush, they'll see it as still having potential and like to stay in. 3. Some people aren't serious about making money and think it's more important to see what someone to have made that bet with than to conserve their chips. 4. They already bet enough chips that they think they're committed and can't fold the rest of the hand now. 5. Each bet is only a little more chips, so it's like thinking they have good enough odds to stay in for each bet. 6. They think the odds of winning the hand are still greater than the cost of each individual bet. 7. They just don't like folding.
@averynw91802 жыл бұрын
I mainly play HU and 6 handed, but that first example is a play I might make at least half the time with 87, 67, 77 ... take out something like 89 810 suited, or the marginal over-pair such as yours. Would more depend on feel of opponent, but doesn't seem at all clear cut unless he's definitely a solid player.
@BadgerSportsService2 жыл бұрын
Ah Ad. Great video and content. This has to be the best poker youtube channel out there for poker strategy information. I have no idea who even comes close to this channel? If you have ideas please post them.
@PokerCoaching2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate that!
@nintendolover822 жыл бұрын
Disagree with “checking jacks caps your range” if you play your checking range differently. For example I’d probably slow play top set esp with a spade. I tend to bet larger on these types or flops with a more polar range so I’d play jacks as a bluff catcher and/or value bet if the turn checks again
@mick727xd2 жыл бұрын
It depends on the board. Just because you have the best hand currently, doesn't mean that your range isn't "capped". If its a board that you'd bet with Aces or Kings etc or maybe a draw that could complete, you lose those hands from your range. Therefore on the river, the opponent might be able to make a better decision due to ruling certain hands out depending on the runout.
@mjriemen2 жыл бұрын
I pretty much agree. If you have any sort of balanced checking range at all… you shouldn’t be completely “capped”, you can still have at least a handfull of value hands. Sets of Kings and Tens, AK of Spades, maybe AK off with the Ace of Spades, or AA with the Ace of Spades… Thats the whole reason to be balanced. So when we check Jacks on a King high board, our opponents can’t just automatically put you on QQ or JJ and always be right.
@harbingerofepiphany31552 жыл бұрын
Whats the idea of cold calling with the 4th best hand from the CO" Wouldn't it be substantially better to utilize our position & aggression more frequently and isolate then not? Feels like we are laying a red carpet for the Button and Blinds to either tag along with their widowmakers or perhaps a Squeeze! PRECARIOUS BALANCE I SUPPOSE!
@Ojja782 жыл бұрын
Answer to first question: I think I would just call and then check/call or check/raise on the turn expecting to trap. Button could have a few hands that crush us (bigger pocket pair, sets, 97s), but statistically he's going to be betting here with top pair/mid pair or smaller pocket pairs (7's, 9's and 10's), draws (87s, 76s, ...), or even with 2 overcards (AKs, AQs, KQs, ...) etc. I think we're good here much more often than not. I would NOT reraise because we don't want to force weaker holdings to fold and stronger holdings will just call or shove on us, which we don't love because we are losing to sets, 97s (unlikely but they have been called loose, so not beyond the realm of possibility) and larger pocket pairs.
@sylthaya75712 жыл бұрын
favorite hand? suited 10-2, any suite doesnt matter just aslong as theyre both suited
@JLIV461 Жыл бұрын
"Taking your time and giving an explanation so it sticks with us". Awesome. I teach hitting, and that's my philosophy as well.
@BrianThorstad2 жыл бұрын
Great session here, and Jonathan, you love AA w/o caring about the suits.
@62watsondavis2 жыл бұрын
THANKS so much for showing best way to deal wih the pocket jacks!!
@LetterRip12 жыл бұрын
Is the preflop flat in the cutoff during first hand to induce a squeeze jam by the short stack in the BB? Also a slight error - we aren't check-raised, the player who raises us is the button, not the small blind. A raise in position with 2 players to act and the players to act and the continuation bettor all have stacks that are jam sized, is still strong so I tend to agree it is a fold.
@kep00642 жыл бұрын
The hand where BB 3! 5.35x with QQ. Do you read anything into that bet size? I feel like it's most often a strong linear range that jacks are at best flipping against.
@ronkoehler22632 жыл бұрын
Your favorite is Jack Ten of clubs. Your videos are very well done and helpful
@josephweekes16602 жыл бұрын
On Q44J2 why not overbet? You maybe lose some value against a 4 if you think it's gonna jam a lot over a smaller bet, but it puts a Q in max pain
@trentwalker90942 жыл бұрын
I wished the PC version had subtitles too, great stuff here I love getting JJ 😁
@PokerCoaching2 жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it :)
@christ94672 жыл бұрын
Just started one of Alex’s books! Love his perspective and play.
@jasonbatteiger24212 жыл бұрын
he's got 2 books, both came out fairly close in time.
@dominikdangendorf42592 жыл бұрын
Big chout out to Alex. I saw the picture is Name and though my kay... But i really like your humor Alex and omg i miss this simple but pure gold content and how you transvers it in a really simple and logical way. I not heard one time GTO (damm you did it on 1:22:50 xd). Some sounds so simple and we agree yes makes sense easy game but next hour one the table we check back JJ on K Flop. Beste Grüße und Danke ;)
@DavidRSamuel123452 жыл бұрын
7:45 Call. Possibilities of overpairs, sets. But check-raising presents strength. Solid player. Gotta just call and take a more conservative line given the stats presented.
@DavidRSamuel123452 жыл бұрын
Didn't look at stack sizes. The 10K raise is likely pot committing you. Don't know if I would call based on looking at stack sizes....
@allboxing9851 Жыл бұрын
Do you ever need to Fold KK in tournament or go Al in every time ?
@toddpifer2 жыл бұрын
for some reason you flashed the 7 of clubs and the 2 of spades. Is that your favorite hand??
@knapper9792 жыл бұрын
Your favorite hand to play is deff either suited AK or suited 89
@daikusan552 жыл бұрын
Favorite starting hand guess is AsAh. Thanks for the video.
@abelgergely2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic video, bit i disagree with the way you played the hand where you called the jacks against utg+1 3bet (from 32:00). I think villains range is incredibly capped. Unless he is a total maniac, he wouldn’t 3bet 77 to 1010. JJ maybe but there is only 1 combination left of it. Utg+1 3bet range against utg bigstack open is basically AKo, AQs+, KK, AA. On the flop when he checks we can guess that most of the time AA and KK and AQ is out of the question. Sometimes he might slowplay AA and KK, but not too often. So the only hands left are all the AK-s. I think he would call a small bet on the flop with that, and also you dont want him to get a free card with 2 overs and all kinds of backdoor draws. On the turn if the A or K comes, you can easily check-fold. On all the other turn cards you can continue betting with a variety of different sizings. With this line you can have at least 1 street of value, but on some turns even 2 streets.
@stevezagieboylo9172 Жыл бұрын
The hand at 30:00: Preflop UTG+1 raised, UTG+2 reraised, we called, UTG+1 folded. Flop of Qd 3h 2d and preflop reraiser checks to us. You ask what do we think he has, and then you listed a bunch of hands but didn't mention AK nor QQ slowplaying. Those are the primary hands I put him on, with also possibility of the other two jacks, plus maybe TT or 99. If he were the table leader I might add in some weaker aces and 88-77, but generally no. The question you didn't ask is what are we behind on the flop? AA, KK, AQ are all going to c-bet this flop. If he got here with KQs, then he is seriously aggressive so he probably c-bets that, too. The only hand we're behind is QQ trapping, and there are only 3 combinations, compared to 16 combinations of AK. I am always going to bet my jacks here, but I do agree that the sizing is pretty small. I'm also going to bet AQ plus all of my flush draws (which are not that many after I cold-called a 3-bet preflop AdJd, AdTd, JdTd).
@Getsitdone2 жыл бұрын
Great content as always! Favorite starting hand.... 78s!
@State-uw8pu2 жыл бұрын
I like your tone Alex sometimes I feel like Johnny is yelling at me lol
@rezamoosavi13612 жыл бұрын
9T suited is your favorite hand?
@astonlane32292 жыл бұрын
Love Alex’s content. However really don’t understand the sizing on the 3 bet for the second hand. villain never folds there therefore impossible to balance bluffs ?
@pallytime21562 жыл бұрын
Guessing your favorite Hand is A3s Fun fact. In one of your videos you said it a couple years ago. Can't remember it. Wondering if its changed.
@matthewwagner40422 жыл бұрын
I think your favorite starting hand is As As... you just didn't know until I just told you... because you've never had it... and you never know your favorite until you do, but if you were dealt that things just got real interesting and you have a hell of a story to tell.
@carrotstick22932 жыл бұрын
#1 The preflop decision at 53:15 is against UTG+1 open with, LJ, HJ Call from the SB --> We flat call 4 handed out of position? #2 The decision at 1:16:40 Is against UTG with us being in UTG + 1 --> We 3 Bet In the quiz I thought #1 Is a clear 3 bet and #2 close between 3 bet and call Both hands we didn't really seem to have a read just an average player I'm just a silly rec But comparing the spots surely #1 should be a better spot to 3bet --> #1 is vs open from later position, #1 has callers in between so squeeze acquires more chips and in #1 calling and playing out of position seems bad
@leonproud4002 жыл бұрын
If you’d have re-raised pre, and the player is reasonable, I would think that a call on the flop would have been good (basically behind 88 and 66), the action as it is isn’t fun for you, could be a fold.
@WhilMac2 жыл бұрын
This guy sounds like Doug Polk went through puberty.
@floriduhhh39892 жыл бұрын
In the first hand why do we just flat? Is 3-betting and probably folding out BU and getting it heads up in position better than the spot you get into in the video? Having to play OOP with Jack's seems to be exactly the reason people say they don't like playing it in the first place. If your hand is good enough to lead on the flop for half pot with one person behind you why not 3! pre and get it heads up and just fold to 4!
@malcolmwasher2308Ай бұрын
Lost on jj twice today its a danger hand
@positiveenergy24242 жыл бұрын
hello, why not raise the jacks in the first hand pre-flop?
@kevinwright68632 жыл бұрын
studying the preflop, stack to pot ratio and portion of re raise, I don't think a straight would bey like this being a rainbow flop. looking at flopzilla pro, I put the re raise range on set or two pair, pocket 99,10;s as no 3bet preflop, combinations then are 12 over pairs 99 or 1010, 9 combo's of top pair(98,78,A8 suited), 9 combos of sets(88,66,55), 6 combos of 77. this still gives 55% equity, so the bet is 15k pot + 15K RR = 30k pot we need to call 10K, so easy call with our equity , thinking what to do at the turn or river is my next question already. for now call
@Jealod24 Жыл бұрын
The first hand- reraising with a7s wouldn’t be a bad play at all and is a great bluff since you block any other Ax which might call, you’ve got back doors with a straight and flush, you’re squeezing the preflop aggressor, and since there weren’t any 3 bets preflop it’s less likely you’ll run into aces, kings or queens… so you’re going to put a ton of pressure on all the other hand combos… you’re fold equity is high and you’re building the pot should you win the hand.
@David-ej9hn2 жыл бұрын
Can we get strategy on playing this vs NOT solid and NOT tight and NOT very good players (do not consider who's behind to act... stack sizes... do not care about opponent's ranges, etc)? Because in that first hand on 658 flop, multiple guys from my regular game with my buddies would do that with a 7.... plays open ended like it's the stone cold nuts...
@ShaneMclane-PrivateEye Жыл бұрын
Been playing for awhile and I dont think I would be confident with any decision especially if I had not been playing with those people long enough to gauge their style of play. If a solid player raised with that flop itd be somewhat tricky because I can see him flopping a straight, two pair, trips. Although being a solid player would put you on a pocket pair (if I raised preflop) and would know that in order to win would have to bet like he had the hands mentioned above. Scenerios like this, and the ways on how to navigate through them to maximize profit potential are a big reason why I watch these videos. Just quality stuff. What I would do though is have a friend call in a bomb threat or start a small fire and get the hell out of there.
@gymlin1232 жыл бұрын
this guys analogies make me cracking:D
@FefeLeVrai2 жыл бұрын
So a 'solid player' is someone who plays 13% VPIP, loves to pot control top pair, and always has a set when he raises on 865r? I just call that a nit :)
@bajjwalbhattarai34352 жыл бұрын
My favorite poker coach
@MidKnight_Sicario1872 жыл бұрын
Fold bc they should have a range with a set in that first situation I think
@imthemoeron Жыл бұрын
If you go all in preflop with pocket Jack's and lose (especiallyheads up,) you have bad luck. But remember to play the person at least as much as you play the hand
@phillipholmes52062 жыл бұрын
I think it's a mistake to bet after the flop, because you basically announced you had a big pair by reraising preflop. I think it's better to just check first to see what sort of raise anybody else decides to make. Then just check call small raises to try and get to showdiwn. Then just fold to any raise that you don't have good odds to call. By betting after the flop you arewide open to a bluff re-raise and have no way of knowing if it iswirth trying to continue. Having made the bet you have to fold the re-raise.
@Jealod24 Жыл бұрын
If you’re only 3betting with big pairs, especially from the button, you really need to brush up on your ranges… you have position, the blinds have yet to act, the initial raiser is in the cutoff… I mean… there are so many great 3 betting hands… all the ace4-7s, a5os, suited connectors like 67, 78, 89, aa, kk, qq, jj, 10’s, 9’s, aks/os, aqs/os… you want to avoid 3 betting hands like k10s because those are cards you want your opponents to have but you really need to widen your 3 betting range. I didn’t read past the first sentence because it’s depressing but from what I’ve seen you are losing a lot of ev. Always remember we raise for two reasons… to deny equity and build the pot in case we win. That’s doesn’t mean go insane with the bets… the more money goes in the more polarized the ranges… so …
@Jealod24 Жыл бұрын
You say you’re bet on the flop leaves you open to a bluff reraise… what hands reraise on that flop? Let’s say you’re in the cutoff, you don’t have trip kings because that 4 bets… you’d likely fold tens preflop lol, so what do you have. Maybe kts but does two pair or three 5’s reraise on the flop? Aqs might reraise, ajs… the point is it seems like you’re playing scared… as though you’re looking for a reason to fold. You literally wrote that you want to check down a pair of jacks with one over, when you’re blocking kj, and fold to big raises. You have position, you have the range advantage, and you have initiative. If you raise your jacks what hands reraise… because three of a kind and two pair would likely call to keep the button betting. And maybe you do fold to a reraise sometimes… but being afraid of a reraise isn’t a reason not to raise. Especially if you have the discipline to fold when you should. All I’m saying is this… there are way way way more combos of hands that don’t have you beat, compared to the ones that do… and whenever that’s the case, you have position, the range advantage, and the initiative, you should bet to deny equity from pairs of tens, 5’s, and draws, and build the pot in case you win. Maybe he has a king, or better, but what reraise for value on the flop vs what reraises as a bluff, and you can’t be scared. I promise you’re leaving value out there and will be exploited by good players paying attention. And you’re a thinking player so you can definitely crush it… good luck brother.
@mikehickmanvloggamessingin3604 Жыл бұрын
1. You need to handrange read and read handranges more accurately. And you need to balance your range out, and not be such a tight nit, if they are putting you on a high pair. That does not mean that you can't play semi tight, to semi moderate, and have to be Loose to LAG. 2. You should bet, Cbet there because 1. Your likely ahead, and they likely missed. 2. They will likely CALL with less then what you have, and call with bottom pair, middle pair, top pair crap kicker, chase draws, etc, that can either fold out later top pair crap kicker that beats you, if your nit tight, or cause them to call with less if your ranges are semi balanced, semi moderate, etc. 3. If you don't usually cbet there, with what you have and only Cbet if have better then your narrowing, semi limiting, semi capping your range, and semi playing your with your range revealed. 4. Like the others have said, you can't be scared money. Sure they can check raise you. But that doesn't mean they will. All you can do is evaluate the likelyhood range of whether they will check raise. If it's about 50%+ that they check raise, then check. If it's about 17% to 27% to 37% that they check raise, then go ahead and Cbet If you cbet and if they check raise, and if they are not likely bluffing, either call and revaluate, be careful, etc, on future streets, if the check raise is small, or fold. If they loosely check raise a lot, consider flat calling, an or extremely rarely reraising them. But just because they might theoretically, possibly check raise you about 13% of time or an unknown amount of time, does not mean you should never ever Cbet in that spot. If you think you should never ever Cbet in that spot, your scared money, and you open yourself up to, an can possibly, semi probably be outplayed lose, and have that happen often enough, to be more then the amount you lose in the long term by cbetting on that board, and then occasionally getting check raised. So you cbet better hands there, nut hands there, your JJ type hands there, and semi bluff Cbet your draws there, and occasionally Cbet air, etc there, to semi balance out your range. You should be cbetting there at least about 59% of the time at minimum. Also that's why it's important to have good bankroll management, and good table, player, handranges reading etc, to help you cbet more, in those situations.
@robertwolff32212 жыл бұрын
The Dunning-Kruger has made me lots of money in poker.
@chezchezchezchez2 жыл бұрын
Very good discussion on JJ 👀
@kemperhp47322 жыл бұрын
For the scenario at 56:09, if the Q was a K does that change anything?
@PokerCoaching2 жыл бұрын
Not too much.
@jackmiller9926 Жыл бұрын
The first example 5:44 this happened to me all the cards were lower than jacks so we both bet heavy then he ended up having QQ overpair. How can you spot when someone has overpair or two pair or even trips? i sometimes lose my stack getting dragged all in by villain as most people on 1c 2c bet a low pair to the river and finish. I have a good system but then these situations are wiping my profits built up over the past 2 hours of playing. Thank You. Maybe control pot size even when I think I have the nuts?
@Pelbee542 жыл бұрын
If Jacks were called ‘11’ and didn’t have a picture on they’d get played less :D It’s the picture card rush I tell ya! :D
@TheMarceloSilva2 жыл бұрын
where is the part 2 and part 3???
@WeissAdvice2 жыл бұрын
Why is this dude so mad at us?
@WeissAdvice2 жыл бұрын
Paused at 12:47 > can we really assume that this person is raising a small amount because they're strong? I get the logic, but how do we know this person isn't raising small so that they're not doing something else, like giving themselves enough stack left if they want to fold to a raise, or taking control of the pot so they're more likely to get checks and they can check to the river. And if we're supposing that this player is playing 15% of hands - doesn't that exclude almost all of the value hands except 88, 66, 55, and 65s? Whereas they could have a bunch of value + redraw like T9s, 87s, 76s, 54s, or even be value betting light with 99 or TT? I'm assuming I'm wrong and maybe the video is about to tell me why we don't call when we're getting 3:1 on our money here.
@WeissAdvice2 жыл бұрын
"This person was a solid player..... I found out an hour later differently." right. exactly.
@joshsheppard212 жыл бұрын
I played the second had pretty much exactly the same as Alex so I’m good with that my thought process was very similar too The first had I played completely wrong and in the back of my mind I said why would he bet so big into 4 people with a bluff and still called def learned from that mistake tho great video
@johnniki85212 жыл бұрын
My guess is 7s8s. My favourite are the two cards that lets me win the hand
@lisas60562 жыл бұрын
So this is just for tournament play?
@PokerCoaching2 жыл бұрын
No.
@daithi19662 жыл бұрын
That was an exceptional training video. Thanks! ...and I'm going to say TJs and the suit doesn't matter (okay, that's mine, and I have no idea what yours is).
@loganyu71172 жыл бұрын
AA of any suit is your favorite hand
@songjunejohnlee21132 жыл бұрын
Can you please rethink graphics and/or consistently narrate the important numbers as the action unfolds? When coaching questions are being asked, the stack and bet sizes are illegible on a 10” tablet, while the nearly content free PowerPoint template takes up 75% of the available resolution. Would be great to be able consume this on a phone.
@vamoneygroup2 жыл бұрын
7:45 If tight, fold. If loose, call.
@PlzDontDiscuss2 жыл бұрын
See this guy at 14:00 sounds reasonable but then again if your ratztovvv with 10/10 in that situation what do you do? Call? vs a 35k stack with 10/10? or 9/9? Fold? Its the same play.
@pjreo2 жыл бұрын
Favorite hand is Q9 of hearts . For some strange reason this is my favorite hand I call it the birds. Is there any logic to that or am I just superstitious...?
@garysostrin38092 жыл бұрын
Excellent video for me. Johnathons favorite hand maybe red 10s
@remodelingtulsa2 жыл бұрын
Glad it helps
@ancientnpc2 жыл бұрын
In France they are called Jacques or Jacquities.
@matthewriebel57922 жыл бұрын
I would have raised the turn with A4s.
@Jealod24 Жыл бұрын
For those who don’t know… they don’t really care what you write in the comment section, just that you write something. The more comments a video gets the more the algorithm will prioritize said video and subsequent content from the channel. So everyone should write a comment about anything
@colinmurphy34782 жыл бұрын
23:00 - Why 3bet to 762 as opposed to a standard 3x, meaning 900?
@PokerCoaching2 жыл бұрын
"Standard" is often incorrect.
@ricky53692 жыл бұрын
I would probably call. I think the right answer is probably going to be to raise, but I would definitely call. I don't like how this pot is multiway and a caller on the button will have a lot of the nuts in their range. But this is one of those times where I feel like my analysis is shit and the answer will be completely different. I could see them raising with a straight draw which makes sense to price them out I guess but I would never do it. before I see it, I also think they would call all those pocket pairs preflop as well 55, 66, and 88 I can see why we should fold, I didn't guess because like you said the raise didn't seem big. I didn't notice it was half our stack and that makes a lot of sense now
@pallytime21562 жыл бұрын
Sigh, I would call. Dudes polarized to be sure. Possibly on and draw or has a straight already made. Point is with the polarization if he's bluffing we good to go to showdown and if he has it no point bloating this pot he not going anywhere. Call and re-evaluate later. Curious to see how I am wrong as usual :P
@Fake_Jesus Жыл бұрын
Perhaps the most useful instruction for how my mind works.
@grahamplayscards2 жыл бұрын
Jonathan, you and Alex are much MUCH better players than me, so this may be a very low level objection to the first hand - it looked like this hand started with Alex at 40BB. I would’ve opted to raise to 5500-6000 preflop, even against a tight UTG+1 range - it seems like the call pre put us in a bad spot 4 ways on the flop on a very connected board with really no good turn cards for us. Why flat pre and let button/BB in behind who will hit this board hard?
@PokerCoaching2 жыл бұрын
Because their range is in terrible shape and if you 3-bet and get all-in, it is not great.
@kenh31492 жыл бұрын
JL fav had would be Red Aces.
@raywhee752 жыл бұрын
Great video Alex
@matthewriebel57922 жыл бұрын
Check on KT5 two-toned.
@jamilafay2 жыл бұрын
Alex I LOVE your style!
@RamitMalhotra2 жыл бұрын
From Seattle, and I just want to say: I get it Alex. I’m sorry Seattle’s weather has rained on quite a few parades for you.
@yalee79962 жыл бұрын
Awesome vid, going for part 2 now. And ofcourse favorite starting hand is Aces. Anyone saying something else has a screw loose lol
@UnderEstimated0Poker Жыл бұрын
Nice vids and stream! I'm just starting my Bankroll Challenge on KZbin
@Noondroid2 жыл бұрын
QdJd is your favorite hand
@kimberlyadams50392 жыл бұрын
Agree never understood players when it came to jjs
@Joel-js2gk2 жыл бұрын
@40:05 if you don't think he's 3betting 88 99 TT pre then why can't we just fold before the flop? We're just calling, praying he has AK or AQ and misses?
@michaellocker29952 жыл бұрын
I could be wrong but even if we think he has AA-QQ, AK,AQ and that's it, he still has AK or AQ almost 70% of the time and those WILL miss the flop almost 70% of the time. So yeah basically that is the play because its mathematically sound?
@davelalor6792 жыл бұрын
I'd say ace of diamonds and ace of hearts. dunno why, perhaps the colour coordinated aces
@ChiefKomanekin837 ай бұрын
In the video at 50:00, what's wrong with betting like 2bb in attempt to induce a check raise
@Lyqu1d2 жыл бұрын
This is why semi-bluffing draws multi-way can be so powerful in live games. People are going to overfold.
@marksimpson23212 жыл бұрын
I think I fold. We are crushed to slow played AA - QQ and straights , two pairs and sets . We crush 99 -TT but in the microstakes games I play JJ isn't good enough.
@badhabitpoker46922 жыл бұрын
There is just something about Alexes coaching, He turns mountains back into mole hills.
@koji.7172 жыл бұрын
super helpful thank you
@GPMD142 жыл бұрын
Fav starting hand has to be AA b/c duh.... and lets go with RED ONES.
@Getsitdone2 жыл бұрын
Wanted to identify that player this week but I can't find the post?
@PokerCoaching2 жыл бұрын
What do you mean?
@Getsitdone2 жыл бұрын
@@PokerCoaching you guys have posted a silhouette of a poker player from New York and we were going to identify this person. I cannot find the post so I cannot identify the person. Thanks