3 PREFLOP EXPLOITS To Help You CRUSH Poker

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  • čas přidán 5. 04. 2022
  • Preflop is the most important part of poker.
    Take my 5 day PREFLOP CHALLENGE and take your poker game to the NEXT LEVEL: pokercoaching.com/preflopchal...
    You must learn the correct preflop strategy or the rest of your poker game will fall apart!
    Whether you are a recreational or professional poker player the same rules apply, preflop poker is something that you need to master. Studying GTO strategies is a great starting point, but if you want to make the most money in your games, you must learn to exploit your opponents at the poker table.
    Watching this webinar will teach you preflop fundamentals, common poker leaks to look for at the tables & exploits that you can use right away in your games to make more money!
    When you are playing against weak poker players it is vitally important to focus on playing as many pots in position against them often using preflop 3-bets to isolate them heads up. You should adapt between linear & polarized 3-betting strategies depending on your opponent's tendencies.
    One big leak that I see players make is that they tend to lose all of their money when playing against nits! Tight poker players will mostly always show up with the nuts when all of the money gets into the middle so remember that you don't always need to stack off in cooler situations - especially preflop!
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Komentáře • 62

  • @gazorpazorp9798
    @gazorpazorp9798 Před 2 lety +30

    You Explained combos so well this time that my wife, who was was listening along, said “I finally get it”. LoL good job Jonathan

  • @maciejtrabski209
    @maciejtrabski209 Před 2 lety +12

    I am usually watching your videos on my lunch break and they make me want to just go play immediately instead of finishing work, as I feel pure gold of the new knowledge. Thank you for helping so many of us improve!

    • @PokerCoaching
      @PokerCoaching  Před 2 lety +3

      So happy to hear that. Good luck in your games!

  • @1adamantium1
    @1adamantium1 Před 2 lety +9

    Really liked this episode. I train MMA and I like to parallel "fight aggression" with your (lose and splashy technique). Some people in porker(or fighters) use aggression wildly, in an amateur battle they can often win, do to lack of opponents experience/knowledge . But against a pro, this is fatal, what you want is well timed/strategized aggression. In a fight against an Aggro monster simple footwork will make them look silly, within a minute, they're so exhausted from muscle punching they can barely breath...perfect time to activate your aggression! Poker is similar...strategically weaving through junk hands and hitting the top range against a bluff aggro monster is sublime, but also, a well timed 45s preflop bluff can turn into an AA killer.

  • @rofltrance
    @rofltrance Před 2 lety +2

    Awesome learning content, Jonathan! Greatly helped my game and my love life.

  • @deviongants3724
    @deviongants3724 Před 2 lety

    Great video thx for all the help keep up the great work and thumbs up

  • @kibspoker
    @kibspoker Před rokem +1

    Thank you for sharing this. Helps a ton. Tnx so much 🤟

  • @GetMeThere1
    @GetMeThere1 Před 2 lety +1

    Good one. Thanks!

  • @royp.165
    @royp.165 Před 2 lety

    great video. This helps me a lot!

  • @nitrojunkie2675
    @nitrojunkie2675 Před 8 měsíci

    Ur awesome Johnathan, I love ur energy. Ty

  • @Bubi17
    @Bubi17 Před 2 lety +1

    great content thx

  • @aaronmaddox640
    @aaronmaddox640 Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you for the great content!

  • @michelepuluti4323
    @michelepuluti4323 Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks Jon! Great coaching advice’

  • @jurijkornilin1843
    @jurijkornilin1843 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Call with JJ on that board is biggest mistake ever.. turn card club - action stops, now he actually can fold AA-QQ on all in

  • @CRAIG5835
    @CRAIG5835 Před 2 lety +2

    First time i have seen James for a while, he was about to start school, thats going back a few haircuts now, quite timely as I had asked after him the other day during a Live I caught, it was 2 am NZ time so I dont catch Lives as much as i would find optimal. Thanks for all the pro bono content you do for the people Jon.

  • @gersainlopez9297
    @gersainlopez9297 Před 2 lety +1

    You a real one for this. Thanks for all the poker knowledge!

  • @danienortman9541
    @danienortman9541 Před 2 měsíci

    Thank 4 your teaching, it’s great! Danie from South Africa

  • @micarobles3248
    @micarobles3248 Před rokem

    I love this game,and you are going to turn me into a 🦈, Tks coach.

  • @evilpandakillabzonattkoccu4879

    I love this video in particular! I have a hard time in these situations at times....then, at other times, I am every difficult player. I will play tight and not bluff, lose a hand or two....then I will start to bluff. I like to tell people that they made hero folds (doesn't matter if they did or didnt) and see the reaction. I want to see if they struggle with folding mediocre hands or if they are a skilled player who knew my hand and saved money by folding....
    .....I'm never sure why I post my playing style, since I'm not a pro and I play money free games simply because I can't afford to actually play....so, it's like me giving advice on how to race Formula 1..... I don't have access to most Formula 1 races, just clips on CZcams, yet I still feel the need to explain my personal opinion on the subject. 🤦‍♂️

  • @SENSUI347
    @SENSUI347 Před rokem

    GREAT VIDS THANKS

  • @yageroi
    @yageroi Před rokem

    Thanks!

  • @acescracked4395
    @acescracked4395 Před 2 lety +1

    Very nice video!
    I like the GTO stuff, and I like the idea of adjusting away from it to exploit , like whatever you can exploit.
    Regarding the Find a game you can beat , Play it a lot, Keep a proper bankroll-
    I got 1 and 3 , but play a lot is problematic.
    The reason is I grow my stack sometimes too quick, and then afraid to play deep stacked.
    So I end up cashing out at the expense of playing more. Dont know if I am leaving a lot of EV by not playing longer

    • @PokerCoaching
      @PokerCoaching  Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah, I would spend time learning to play deep-stacked! The deeper the stack, the bigger the edges!

  • @martinsmith2938
    @martinsmith2938 Před 2 lety +1

    JJ on J65cc... shouldn't we raise because a club on the turn might prevent opponent from gong broke with AA/KK/QQ?

  • @delvega1975
    @delvega1975 Před 2 lety

    1:44 you the man !

  • @SoFasT99
    @SoFasT99 Před 2 lety +2

    Just binked a 1700 runner mtt. Thank you JL for all the content. ❤❤❤ im a much better player thanks to you 😁😁👍

  • @HighTide_808
    @HighTide_808 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks coach

  • @RKWARLORD
    @RKWARLORD Před 2 lety +4

    That guy in the chat at 5:50 LMAO
    "We should fold and inform him that hes a weak player and that we are doing him a favor"

  • @maxwelllittle5291
    @maxwelllittle5291 Před 2 lety +1

    On GG 2nl I run into a few of players with a pretty high 3 bet percentage (think 20%+) while most players are down in the 2-5% range. Would it be viable to 4-bet bluff hands like suited Aces or Broadways like KQ and KJ mainly (which block their value range) more often? I usually don't run many 4 bet preflop bluffs since most players 3 bet a tight range which is not all that much wider than a 5 bet shove range (QQ+, AK seems to be about average for 5 bet shove, where 3 bet adds in AQ, AJ and JJ with some TT).
    Also, what would a good 3 bet-percentage be overall? I seem to be around 7% but I feel like I might be under-bluffing slightly especially in Btn/CO and BB/SB vs Btn situations.

    • @PokerCoaching
      @PokerCoaching  Před 2 lety

      It depends on the exact structure, but I think going from 7% to 10% is likely great.

  • @mengsou
    @mengsou Před 2 lety +1

    Legend.

    • @mengsou
      @mengsou Před 2 lety

      Thank you for day one! It’s widened my knowledge! Also, the app is an absolute gem.

  • @KenHollowayshow
    @KenHollowayshow Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the video. I'm new to GTO studies. If I understand game strategy correctly, a tight aggressive player earns the respect of the opponents and that allows him or her to win more pots and pull off more bluffs. That's great. But when does a player like that cross the line into becoming a nit (someone who no one will bet into because the nit only bets when he or she has the nuts)? If you wait for the good cards, you want them to pay off. I know your other videos say don't feed the nit. Is the TAG supposed to turn his cards up once in awhile to show the other players he was bluffing or semi-bluffing? In other words, not afraid to give action to get action? Sorry if that's too many questions. I'm still learning.

    • @PokerCoaching
      @PokerCoaching  Před 2 lety +1

      No problem. If you use a tight, aggressive strategy, still finding SOME bluffs, it's very likely that your image will still be good enough to get you paid off when you have big hands!

  • @jh0720
    @jh0720 Před 2 lety +2

    Jonathan gang

  • @valentinbonchev7485
    @valentinbonchev7485 Před 10 měsíci

    i watch your videos carefully and i have a feeling of understand what you say. However i forgot everything when i sit to play :(

  • @pratikbangal
    @pratikbangal Před 2 lety

    Hi Jonathan. Sometimes in NLH live cash games, when we have a good hand and we 3-bet pre flop, most of the other players also call our bet instead of folding. In such case, instead of 3-betting, should we 6-bet to make most of them fold their hands and then have heads up with only 1 player for post flop action?

    • @hiphopconnoisseur8314
      @hiphopconnoisseur8314 Před 2 lety

      😂

    • @PokerCoaching
      @PokerCoaching  Před 2 lety +1

      I think you mean 3-bet to a larger size. Using large 3-bet sizes can work quite well too against people who have no intention of folding to your 3-bet.

  • @brazianreviews2232
    @brazianreviews2232 Před 2 lety

    His kid folded the pre flop kiss at the beginning of the video 😂

  • @brandontagarook2818
    @brandontagarook2818 Před 2 lety

    So, final table with 8 players left. I'm utg+1 against BB, I raise 3 bigs pre flop, folds to the BB and they call. Flop is 10 10 3, 2 spades. I have K10o and BB bets 1 big. I shove all in with 20 bigs. BB calls. Turns over jack8 spades. Turn is a 7. River is a 9.

  • @damedley75
    @damedley75 Před 2 lety +1

    12:00 What is villain's best line?

    • @damedley75
      @damedley75 Před 2 lety

      He really can't get away with less than one bet per street, can he?

    • @damedley75
      @damedley75 Před 2 lety

      One bet or call per street that is

  • @vai592
    @vai592 Před 2 lety +1

    19:17 I'm not sure if I understand, why would you call a KQs but 3-Bet a QJo?

    • @PokerCoaching
      @PokerCoaching  Před 2 lety +1

      K-Qs is good enough to see a flop. Q-Jo is not.

    • @vai592
      @vai592 Před 2 lety

      @@PokerCoaching ah, makes it clear haha, thanks

  • @zacharywrightsman
    @zacharywrightsman Před 2 lety +1

    Hey johnathan, so I sat at my first time since studying your methods and I felt I did alright. However, I know I’m some of your videos you say were in it for the long game. The longer you play the more you’ll make. Well I had an older gentleman sitting next to me tell me the opposite and kinda made me nervous. He knew I was new to the game. I mean no one like losing but do you have a video about poke mind set or any advice that you could give to new poker players when they here something like this?

    • @PokerCoaching
      @PokerCoaching  Před 2 lety

      Search my channel for mindset/tilt/etc and you will find something.

  • @nitrojunkie2675
    @nitrojunkie2675 Před 8 měsíci

    👍👍

  • @johnthepalm
    @johnthepalm Před 2 lety

    That kid is almost bigger than Jonathan

  • @baydrixnewzealandwarrobotf2681

    Lol Dad!

  • @roguemerlin1969
    @roguemerlin1969 Před 2 lety +2

    \o/

  • @janvdplaat3067
    @janvdplaat3067 Před 2 lety

    .
    . 20:21 When you play against a fool - who thinks he is reasonable, there is only 1 rule: sit left of him, and you win a lot.
    .
    .