Playing PLO at The Lodge in Round Rock Texas and have my biggest winning session in history, you won't want to miss this one! #plo #poker #thelodge #hugewin #gambling #texaspoker #texas #cards
They really can't help themselves. Although a lot of players incorrectly apply hold em strength to their holdings when playing PLO. They go bonkers with top and bottom pair, idiot ends of the straight, etc.
Just found you recently. Love more PLO vloggers. Digging the commentary and sarcasm. The only observation I'd make is move your graphic to the bottom of the screen. Currently it blocks the table and moving it would only block the rail. Love the stream so far man good job.
The game is only easy when you flop the nuts AND they hold. Oftentimes it can be correct to fold a nut straight when there is no way to improve your hand and your opponent(s) can be freerolling you.
4:25 I wonder if betting this turn is better. Don't get me wrong, when you have this hand, a check has a lot going for it. However, this turn could easily scare off your opponent when you bet with other hands. With a single opponent, I think a smallish turn bet(1/3) pot with a large portion of your range might make more sense because people will not be eager to fold when they realize you don't always have a boat when you bet here. If he just calls, you can slow down when have KT and you can consider another bluff on a brick river where you missed your draws.
I could've bet the flop with KT and a variety of straight and flush draw holdings. The problem here is that on the turn my opponent doesn't have a ton left in his stack compared with the size of the pot, and my hand is so strong I want him to catch up (or to think I'm scared on the turn and he can buy the pot on the river with a bet) so I want to give him rope to hang himself. I suppose against stronger opponents taking a line where I'm betting a monster could get called lighter, but generally speaking I don't want to be at tables or in pots with stronger, thinking opponents.
@@PokerJeezus I’m trying to have a session in PLO where i can turn it around like this. I did have a run in vegas last month and i ran 800$ up to $1700 so thats my best PLO run so far
I was wondering if you could give me some strategy on the game I play. It’s a 1/3 game with a max $300 bet. The game plays huge. Regular pots of 2k and occasional 3k. Would you play it on passive preflop? Thanks for your time. I’m glad you’re doing live vlogs
Games can be great or terrible in both areas in my (limited) experience. Only played 3 weeks here in TX so hard to judge compared with close to 3 years in Tampa
I don't know that I could ever have another session run as perfect as this one. Especially when I'm getting freerolled for close to 2K in that spot against the guy who turned the flush draw and could've scooped me.
I don't feel the games have gotten tougher since I started playing three years ago. I will say that in Tampa and here in Austin the games can be hit or miss. Sometimes there's too many grinders, othertimes the games are amazing. I think the thing I struggle with the most is keeping the maniacs from playing BINGO preflop trying to straddle and restraddle where the game plays so big that at most everyone has only 5-10 bb's and thus the variance is through the roof because stacks wind up so shallow
@@SeafightHack12 I HIGHLY recommend Jeff Hwangs Pot Limit Omaha The Big Play to get you a solid foundation in the game. It's like the Harrington on Hold Em for PLO
@@PokerJeezus thanks for the recommendation. Btw where I live in Europe people play PLO way tighter (mostly nits), so I am wondering if the games are beatable with 3% rake uncapped.
How do u look down at hands like this? Do u know how difficult it is to see hands this good as well as having them connect with the board. Haven’t had a session like this in 4 years
It can be hit or miss though. Sometimes the game is full of mis-regs with no action, other times it's overly wild with maniacs just trying to restraddle to 160 preflop who want to play 5-10bb poker just trying to run lucky
So my approach is to rarely raise preflop unless I can get stacks in preflop with a premium OR create such a low SPR that my post-flop decisions are automatic. I approach the game with a pulling, rather than a pushing, mentality. My goal is to invite as many other players into the pot as possible, generally speaking, because: 1. The stronger players and the over-aggro players will have difficulty running bluffs against 5+ opponents, so it handcuffs them 2. It invites the weakest players into the pot. These are the ones who just want to see flops and play hands, and also the ones who'll make an 8-high flush and not be willing to let it go. They'll chase gutshot straights on paired flops, etc. They are your primary source of income, and I want them in the pot when I'm in the pot 3. Some of the maniacs just want to play BINGO preflop, trying to get stacks in with a variety of holdings. The problem is that in the best case scenario, usually you'll be 65% equity against them, but oftentimes it's closer to 55/45. I want to play post-flop poker, not just flip coins for stacks. Post-flop I will get my opponents in spots where I have 70, 80, 90% equity against them, or they're drawing dead. My opponents make bigger mistakes postflop and I look to take advantage of that, rather than give up my equity edge by playing only preflop BINGO where my opponents are making smaller mistakes and my equity is smaller. Some of these maniacs in the game are trying to straddle to 160 or 320 preflop. I don't want to play 5-10bb poker. Don't get me wrong, pushing is certainly a viable strategy as well. The best pro back in Tampa where I used to play would raise with position and try to get pots headsup or three-ways and he is a far better player than I am and makes a lot more money as well. But he also has much deeper pockets than I do, so he can ride those swingy variance trains a lot easier. I've just found my approach to be what works for me
lol, Sammy was a really cool dude and don't forget he laid down middle set in that hand against me. He was in no way a whale in the game, and I coolered the crap out of him in that double board bomb pot to win 3/4ths of it. I just ran super pure. But pretty much anyone who wants to give me $800+ in a session I'm happy to buy them a 30 minute massage lol
@@PokerJeezus fair enough, but whales are usually good dudes and laying down middle set is usually a good idea lol! Bomb pots played well huge +ev spots
@@bmathis26 I'm struggling to keep up with the live schedule and editing the vlogs, let alone coming up with more comedy bits and combing through other vloggers footage to roast them lol. I just joined my areas community center/gym and going to incorporate exercise into my weekly regimen and I still have stuff not unpacked/put together a few weeks after the move lol.
I rarely raise unless I can get stacks in pre or create such a low SPR that my postflop decision is automatic A lot of these guys are trying to play BINGO preflop for stacks. Getting stacks in pre when the equities run closer together allows my opponents to make smaller mistakes I prefer to pull players into the pot as it 1. Makes it hard for maniacs or strong pros to run bluffs going 5+ ways to a flop 2. Makes it more likely the weaker players will see a flop. These are the guys who overvalue top and bottom pair, idiot ends of the straight, 8-high flushes and underfulls (i.e. the people you make money off of)
So my approach is to rarely raise preflop unless I can get stacks in preflop with a premium OR create such a low SPR that my post-flop decisions are automatic. I approach the game with a pulling, rather than a pushing, mentality. My goal is to invite as many other players into the pot as possible, generally speaking, because: 1. The stronger players and the over-aggro players will have difficulty running bluffs against 5+ opponents, so it handcuffs them 2. It invites the weakest players into the pot. These are the ones who just want to see flops and play hands, and also the ones who'll make an 8-high flush and not be willing to let it go. They'll chase gutshot straights on paired flops, etc. They are your primary source of income, and I want them in the pot when I'm in the pot 3. Some of the maniacs just want to play BINGO preflop, trying to get stacks in with a variety of holdings. The problem is that in the best case scenario, usually you'll be 65% equity against them, but oftentimes it's closer to 55/45. I want to play post-flop poker, not just flip coins for stacks. Post-flop I will get my opponents in spots where I have 70, 80, 90% equity against them, or they're drawing dead. My opponents make bigger mistakes postflop and I look to take advantage of that, rather than give up my equity edge by playing only preflop BINGO where my opponents are making smaller mistakes and my equity is smaller. Some of these maniacs in the game are trying to straddle to 160 or 320 preflop. I don't want to play 5-10bb poker. Don't get me wrong, pushing is certainly a viable strategy as well. The best pro back in Tampa where I used to play would raise with position and try to get pots headsup or three-ways and he is a far better player than I am and makes a lot more money as well. But he also has much deeper pockets than I do, so he can ride those swingy variance trains a lot easier. I've just found my approach to be what works for me.
@@isaiahballejo4602 the minimum buyin is $200 and the 1/2/5 will often see straddles to $10 or more There is also sometimes a 2/2 which isn't as crazy, a $5 all double board bomb pot game sometimes, or the Wednesday night PLO "freeroll" tournament which is $30 minimum, up to $245 maximum if you get all the add-ons I'd recommend registering around 9:15pm so you start with 130k in chips for $245 and no more buyins allowed after that
On the river it's somewhat of a cooler because he maintains the nuts on one board and improves to three of a kind with 2nd kicker and just runs into my three of a kind top kicker plus the same nuts on the other board.
Not sure why you choose to limp AJT9ds, you've under inflated the pot with a premium, and then you aren't able to get the max post flop due to the pot being so small
The exact same thing happens the next hand, (trying to) limp KKJTss, and then you flop gin and there's no money in the pot, winning the minimum off (supposed) mid set. It's very hard to extract value post flop taking a passive preflop line without turning your cards extremely face up
So my approach is to rarely raise preflop unless I can get stacks in preflop with a premium OR create such a low SPR that my post-flop decisions are automatic. I approach the game with a pulling, rather than a pushing, mentality. My goal is to invite as many other players into the pot as possible, generally speaking, because: 1. The stronger players and the over-aggro players will have difficulty running bluffs against 5+ opponents, so it handcuffs them 2. It invites the weakest players into the pot. These are the ones who just want to see flops and play hands, and also the ones who'll make an 8-high flush and not be willing to let it go. They'll chase gutshot straights on paired flops, etc. They are your primary source of income, and I want them in the pot when I'm in the pot 3. Some of the maniacs just want to play BINGO preflop, trying to get stacks in with a variety of holdings. The problem is that in the best case scenario, usually you'll be 65% equity against them, but oftentimes it's closer to 55/45. I want to play post-flop poker, not just flip coins for stacks. Post-flop I will get my opponents in spots where I have 70, 80, 90% equity against them, or they're drawing dead. My opponents make bigger mistakes postflop and I look to take advantage of that, rather than give up my equity edge by playing only preflop BINGO where my opponents are making smaller mistakes and my equity is smaller. Some of these maniacs in the game are trying to straddle to 160 or 320 preflop. I don't want to play 5-10bb poker. Don't get me wrong, pushing is certainly a viable strategy as well. The best pro back in Tampa where I used to play would raise with position and try to get pots headsup or three-ways and he is a far better player than I am and makes a lot more money as well. But he also has much deeper pockets than I do, so he can ride those swingy variance trains a lot easier. I've just found my approach to be what works for me.
@@PokerJeezus appreciate the response, I come from an online background, so I think I am a bit anti-limping without fully understand live cash dynamics. But can definitely understand the reasons and should include some in my game
@@wynz7810 Yeah, live players generally are going to be far more passive and overall more like calling stations than online play. Plus a lot of online play is 6-max as opposed to full-ring like I've got live. But we do have our share of maniacs who are straddling OOP and then juicing pots and people are seeing flops 4-5 ways when the pot is already $500-$1,000 and stack sizes just aren't deep enough to make that very skillful if I contribute to it every hand. The guys with super deep pockets or who are just straight degenerates are trying to make the game play way bigger than the advertised stakes, and I'm trying to keep the pots manageable so I can see flops and still have room to navigate, rather than being pot-committed constantly.
@@wynz7810 Seems like every live player is doing the limp/pot control pre. I play an aggressive style and have an online 6 max background as well. His approach is way less variance. Its all based off table dynamic live imo. I just love bloating the pot because the fish are way more likely to go with lesser holdings when they have higher percentages of their stacks in pre flop. Lol nothing better than the bad regs online though that only 3/4b AAxx lmao.
I played 1-2 PLO live first time this weekend. Crazy how degens couldn’t fold 2 pair. Thanks for showing me the way brother.
They really can't help themselves. Although a lot of players incorrectly apply hold em strength to their holdings when playing PLO. They go bonkers with top and bottom pair, idiot ends of the straight, etc.
Beautiful session, I think it's fair to say that the king(s) of the Lodge has arrived
They have some absolute superstars and high rollers on their streams, I have a ways to go
Much excite for this episode!!!
I am 3rd best PLO Vlogger in all Khazakstan!
Congrats! Glad to see you have some run good!
Thanks Patrick, I was on cloud 9 for awhile after this win!
Double Fisting!!! Ding Ding we have a winner!
Oh no lol
sick sesh...run good is indeed pure when u fade the freeroll for sure. and tyty 4 the shoutout!!!! i did all 3 as vanessa commanded
I finally met "Vanessa" at the Lodge last week, not sure "she" pays attention to my vlog though
I can actually say I been watching since Day 1! 😀😀 awesome job buddy
Tyty Rashaud, appreciate the support!
Congrats!!
Ty for watching and taking the time to comment!
Nice one mate!
Ty Hitch, appreciate the support!
Sweet intro music and camera work
Thanks for watching and sharing kind words, greatly appreciated!
Great score
Ty, I just need to beat it now!
I'm really digging the vlog.
Ty, I love your screename lol
$2 tip on the double board bomb pot scoop…. Nice
I guess you missed some of my larger tips during the video and only focused on that one
I've been playing 2/2 PLO a lot lately in Dallas at Texas Card House. Still on the learning curve, but having a lot of fun.
Awesome, I haven't played in Dallas yet, how are the games?
@@PokerJeezus Crazy and tons of fun! Come on up! TCH Social in Las Colinas. I also play 1/2, and 2/5 NLH.
Right on. Another PCF member! Had to subscribe now.
Hey man, I just need a playable set of Empress Stars and nobody needs to get hurt!
Just found you recently. Love more PLO vloggers. Digging the commentary and sarcasm. The only observation I'd make is move your graphic to the bottom of the screen. Currently it blocks the table and moving it would only block the rail.
Love the stream so far man good job.
Thanks so much for watching and providing feedback!
Nice win!
Thanks Mike, it's always fun bringing racks and racks of chips to cashout, I should do it more often!
Oh ya oh ya… so sexy! Run good is a must in plo… I approve this message👍🏼🤣
It's very hard to run this good in a session
Sun running
Always nice to run pure
what a GREAT game!!!
I REALLY wish they could all be like this session
For a Holdem player this 4card game seems fun and easy when you flop the nuts every other hand 😂
The game is only easy when you flop the nuts AND they hold. Oftentimes it can be correct to fold a nut straight when there is no way to improve your hand and your opponent(s) can be freerolling you.
I’m playin plo tmmrw. Hope I run like this
Gl man, let us know how it goes!
4:25
I wonder if betting this turn is better. Don't get me wrong, when you have this hand, a check has a lot going for it. However, this turn could easily scare off your opponent when you bet with other hands. With a single opponent, I think a smallish turn bet(1/3) pot with a large portion of your range might make more sense because people will not be eager to fold when they realize you don't always have a boat when you bet here. If he just calls, you can slow down when have KT and you can consider another bluff on a brick river where you missed your draws.
I could've bet the flop with KT and a variety of straight and flush draw holdings. The problem here is that on the turn my opponent doesn't have a ton left in his stack compared with the size of the pot, and my hand is so strong I want him to catch up (or to think I'm scared on the turn and he can buy the pot on the river with a bet) so I want to give him rope to hang himself.
I suppose against stronger opponents taking a line where I'm betting a monster could get called lighter, but generally speaking I don't want to be at tables or in pots with stronger, thinking opponents.
What a run! Big congrats 😁😁😁
Tyty, I miss it already lol
@@PokerJeezus you said best run in your entire career? That must mean those kinds of sessions are very few and far between!
@@pokerstar2926 if every hand ended on the turn I'd be retired by now, it's very hard to fade so many rivers
@@PokerJeezus i guess that's how the math shakes out? How much do you study the numbers, like equity % etc?
@@pokerstar2926 i use the cardplayer websites odds calculator a ton to look at equities of spots
SHEESHHHHHHHHH
I'm still trying to have another session like this lol
@@PokerJeezus I’m trying to have a session in PLO where i can turn it around like this. I did have a run in vegas last month and i ran 800$ up to $1700 so thats my best PLO run so far
@@isaiahballejo4602 nice! Just focus on making good decisions, you can't force a big win
I was wondering if you could give me some strategy on the game I play. It’s a 1/3 game with a max $300 bet. The game plays huge. Regular pots of 2k and occasional 3k. Would you play it on passive preflop? Thanks for your time. I’m glad you’re doing live vlogs
I assume you're playing PLO and is the max $300 per betting round (i.e. max $300 pre, max $300 flop, $300 turn and $300 river?)
You left Tampa to go Texas. Curious to hear your thoughts on that now? I’m in Tampa and these PLO games are amazing
Games can be great or terrible in both areas in my (limited) experience.
Only played 3 weeks here in TX so hard to judge compared with close to 3 years in Tampa
What a dream session. Flopping huge and fading bad run outs. What we all hope when we flop the nuts with no possible further equity.
I don't know that I could ever have another session run as perfect as this one. Especially when I'm getting freerolled for close to 2K in that spot against the guy who turned the flush draw and could've scooped me.
Sick vlogs! Have the games gotten tougher since you started playing PLO 3 years ago? Is your hourly win rate still the same? Thanks
I don't feel the games have gotten tougher since I started playing three years ago. I will say that in Tampa and here in Austin the games can be hit or miss.
Sometimes there's too many grinders, othertimes the games are amazing. I think the thing I struggle with the most is keeping the maniacs from playing BINGO preflop trying to straddle and restraddle where the game plays so big that at most everyone has only 5-10 bb's and thus the variance is through the roof because stacks wind up so shallow
@@PokerJeezus Yeah, makes sense. Can you recommend any resources for learning plo as a beginner? I am looking to transition from nlh :)
@@SeafightHack12 I HIGHLY recommend Jeff Hwangs Pot Limit Omaha The Big Play to get you a solid foundation in the game. It's like the Harrington on Hold Em for PLO
@@PokerJeezus thanks for the recommendation. Btw where I live in Europe people play PLO way tighter (mostly nits), so I am wondering if the games are beatable with 3% rake uncapped.
@@SeafightHack12 I couldn't make a living if the games were too tight. Right now I pay a $10 per hour time charge.
Uncapped rake sounds awful :(
How do u look down at hands like this? Do u know how difficult it is to see hands this good as well as having them connect with the board. Haven’t had a session like this in 4 years
I'm still chasing this high too, ceck my video with straddles to $320 where I get WRECKED
Love the Vlog, less hairy arms would be nice though😂
I was bitten by a werewolf, how dare you shame me!
You got a mention in the outro of my most recent vlog! czcams.com/video/C5P0E4lMRCc/video.html
Told u Texas poker was the nuts 😊
It can be hit or miss though. Sometimes the game is full of mis-regs with no action, other times it's overly wild with maniacs just trying to restraddle to 160 preflop who want to play 5-10bb poker just trying to run lucky
@@PokerJeezus Houston action is much more consistent as far as plo is concerned lodge def hit and miss
@@havenrab only thing is I'm allergic to being shot lol
Let me give you my first impression 24 seconds in. Wow! They grow them waitresses big in Texas! She is a Heifer.
you just gotta like em thick!
@@PokerJeezus The correct spelling is "thicc".😄
@@feistyalchemist3980 I stand corrected!
More PLO vlog. Good thing
More arm hair than necessary. Bad thing.
Lol, kinda new to live vlogging so still figuring out the camera angles
You got a mention in the outro of my most recent vlog! czcams.com/video/C5P0E4lMRCc/video.html
Did you win or chop the first pot??
Edit: also on second pot and qqjj hand there's really a lotta value lost by overbetting.🍻
I scooped the first pot, my opponent didn't show his hand
Just saw your edit about the overbet. There's $2,800 in the pot before I bet and my opponent only has $500 left, what would you bet?
I thought donkfish was passive preflop, you put him to shame.
So my approach is to rarely raise preflop unless I can get stacks in preflop with a premium OR create such a low SPR that my post-flop decisions are automatic. I approach the game with a pulling, rather than a pushing, mentality. My goal is to invite as many other players into the pot as possible, generally speaking, because:
1. The stronger players and the over-aggro players will have difficulty running bluffs against 5+ opponents, so it handcuffs them
2. It invites the weakest players into the pot. These are the ones who just want to see flops and play hands, and also the ones who'll make an 8-high flush and not be willing to let it go. They'll chase gutshot straights on paired flops, etc. They are your primary source of income, and I want them in the pot when I'm in the pot
3. Some of the maniacs just want to play BINGO preflop, trying to get stacks in with a variety of holdings. The problem is that in the best case scenario, usually you'll be 65% equity against them, but oftentimes it's closer to 55/45. I want to play post-flop poker, not just flip coins for stacks. Post-flop I will get my opponents in spots where I have 70, 80, 90% equity against them, or they're drawing dead. My opponents make bigger mistakes postflop and I look to take advantage of that, rather than give up my equity edge by playing only preflop BINGO where my opponents are making smaller mistakes and my equity is smaller. Some of these maniacs in the game are trying to straddle to 160 or 320 preflop. I don't want to play 5-10bb poker.
Don't get me wrong, pushing is certainly a viable strategy as well. The best pro back in Tampa where I used to play would raise with position and try to get pots headsup or three-ways and he is a far better player than I am and makes a lot more money as well. But he also has much deeper pockets than I do, so he can ride those swingy variance trains a lot easier.
I've just found my approach to be what works for me
You got a mention in the outro of my most recent vlog! czcams.com/video/C5P0E4lMRCc/video.html
Genius!!! Getting the giga whale a massage so he does not leave
lol, Sammy was a really cool dude and don't forget he laid down middle set in that hand against me.
He was in no way a whale in the game, and I coolered the crap out of him in that double board bomb pot to win 3/4ths of it. I just ran super pure.
But pretty much anyone who wants to give me $800+ in a session I'm happy to buy them a 30 minute massage lol
@@PokerJeezus fair enough, but whales are usually good dudes and laying down middle set is usually a good idea lol! Bomb pots played well huge +ev spots
@@PokerJeezus also we need another coffee corner man!
@@bmathis26 I'm struggling to keep up with the live schedule and editing the vlogs, let alone coming up with more comedy bits and combing through other vloggers footage to roast them lol.
I just joined my areas community center/gym and going to incorporate exercise into my weekly regimen and I still have stuff not unpacked/put together a few weeks after the move lol.
@@PokerJeezus keep moving forward! You've got the momentum going!
AJ109 DS no raise ?
I rarely raise unless I can get stacks in pre or create such a low SPR that my postflop decision is automatic
A lot of these guys are trying to play BINGO preflop for stacks. Getting stacks in pre when the equities run closer together allows my opponents to make smaller mistakes
I prefer to pull players into the pot as it
1. Makes it hard for maniacs or strong pros to run bluffs going 5+ ways to a flop
2. Makes it more likely the weaker players will see a flop. These are the guys who overvalue top and bottom pair, idiot ends of the straight, 8-high flushes and underfulls (i.e. the people you make money off of)
You limp with aj109ds and qqjj? Way too passive
So my approach is to rarely raise preflop unless I can get stacks in preflop with a premium OR create such a low SPR that my post-flop decisions are automatic. I approach the game with a pulling, rather than a pushing, mentality. My goal is to invite as many other players into the pot as possible, generally speaking, because:
1. The stronger players and the over-aggro players will have difficulty running bluffs against 5+ opponents, so it handcuffs them
2. It invites the weakest players into the pot. These are the ones who just want to see flops and play hands, and also the ones who'll make an 8-high flush and not be willing to let it go. They'll chase gutshot straights on paired flops, etc. They are your primary source of income, and I want them in the pot when I'm in the pot
3. Some of the maniacs just want to play BINGO preflop, trying to get stacks in with a variety of holdings. The problem is that in the best case scenario, usually you'll be 65% equity against them, but oftentimes it's closer to 55/45. I want to play post-flop poker, not just flip coins for stacks. Post-flop I will get my opponents in spots where I have 70, 80, 90% equity against them, or they're drawing dead. My opponents make bigger mistakes postflop and I look to take advantage of that, rather than give up my equity edge by playing only preflop BINGO where my opponents are making smaller mistakes and my equity is smaller. Some of these maniacs in the game are trying to straddle to 160 or 320 preflop. I don't want to play 5-10bb poker.
Don't get me wrong, pushing is certainly a viable strategy as well. The best pro back in Tampa where I used to play would raise with position and try to get pots headsup or three-ways and he is a far better player than I am and makes a lot more money as well. But he also has much deeper pockets than I do, so he can ride those swingy variance trains a lot easier.
I've just found my approach to be what works for me.
You got a mention in the outro of my most recent vlog! czcams.com/video/C5P0E4lMRCc/video.html
Whats the min you recommend to take in
It depends on the stakes, the lineup, etc. I like to have at least 3 buyins
@@PokerJeezus i plan on taking only $200+
@@isaiahballejo4602 the minimum buyin is $200 and the 1/2/5 will often see straddles to $10 or more
There is also sometimes a 2/2 which isn't as crazy, a $5 all double board bomb pot game sometimes, or the Wednesday night PLO "freeroll" tournament which is $30 minimum, up to $245 maximum if you get all the add-ons
I'd recommend registering around 9:15pm so you start with 130k in chips for $245 and no more buyins allowed after that
Might want to adjust your camera angle or move your arm out of the way after checking your cards. This is basically a 20 min shot of your pale arm.
Yeah, this is from my first week of live vlogging so gonna be some arm shots lol
You got a mention in the outro of my most recent vlog! czcams.com/video/C5P0E4lMRCc/video.html
Hes getting basically freeroll Ed on bomb pot with your spades so not a cooler just unfortunate spot
On the river it's somewhat of a cooler because he maintains the nuts on one board and improves to three of a kind with 2nd kicker and just runs into my three of a kind top kicker plus the same nuts on the other board.
What software do you use for editing
I'm using VideoPad Editor
@@PokerJeezus You do your editing all on a Ipad then?
@@JCH-hn7gr nope, I use it on the PC I built, I don't use any Apple products
@@PokerJeezus Could you send me link of poker graphics you use or if need email can provide it
@@JCH-hn7gr this was the vlogger I received the card graphics from www.youtube.com/@dougmccuskerpoker
Not sure why you choose to limp AJT9ds, you've under inflated the pot with a premium, and then you aren't able to get the max post flop due to the pot being so small
The exact same thing happens the next hand, (trying to) limp KKJTss, and then you flop gin and there's no money in the pot, winning the minimum off (supposed) mid set. It's very hard to extract value post flop taking a passive preflop line without turning your cards extremely face up
So my approach is to rarely raise preflop unless I can get stacks in preflop with a premium OR create such a low SPR that my post-flop decisions are automatic. I approach the game with a pulling, rather than a pushing, mentality. My goal is to invite as many other players into the pot as possible, generally speaking, because:
1. The stronger players and the over-aggro players will have difficulty running bluffs against 5+ opponents, so it handcuffs them
2. It invites the weakest players into the pot. These are the ones who just want to see flops and play hands, and also the ones who'll make an 8-high flush and not be willing to let it go. They'll chase gutshot straights on paired flops, etc. They are your primary source of income, and I want them in the pot when I'm in the pot
3. Some of the maniacs just want to play BINGO preflop, trying to get stacks in with a variety of holdings. The problem is that in the best case scenario, usually you'll be 65% equity against them, but oftentimes it's closer to 55/45. I want to play post-flop poker, not just flip coins for stacks. Post-flop I will get my opponents in spots where I have 70, 80, 90% equity against them, or they're drawing dead. My opponents make bigger mistakes postflop and I look to take advantage of that, rather than give up my equity edge by playing only preflop BINGO where my opponents are making smaller mistakes and my equity is smaller. Some of these maniacs in the game are trying to straddle to 160 or 320 preflop. I don't want to play 5-10bb poker.
Don't get me wrong, pushing is certainly a viable strategy as well. The best pro back in Tampa where I used to play would raise with position and try to get pots headsup or three-ways and he is a far better player than I am and makes a lot more money as well. But he also has much deeper pockets than I do, so he can ride those swingy variance trains a lot easier.
I've just found my approach to be what works for me.
@@PokerJeezus appreciate the response, I come from an online background, so I think I am a bit anti-limping without fully understand live cash dynamics. But can definitely understand the reasons and should include some in my game
@@wynz7810 Yeah, live players generally are going to be far more passive and overall more like calling stations than online play. Plus a lot of online play is 6-max as opposed to full-ring like I've got live.
But we do have our share of maniacs who are straddling OOP and then juicing pots and people are seeing flops 4-5 ways when the pot is already $500-$1,000 and stack sizes just aren't deep enough to make that very skillful if I contribute to it every hand.
The guys with super deep pockets or who are just straight degenerates are trying to make the game play way bigger than the advertised stakes, and I'm trying to keep the pots manageable so I can see flops and still have room to navigate, rather than being pot-committed constantly.
@@wynz7810 Seems like every live player is doing the limp/pot control pre. I play an aggressive style and have an online 6 max background as well. His approach is way less variance. Its all based off table dynamic live imo. I just love bloating the pot because the fish are way more likely to go with lesser holdings when they have higher percentages of their stacks in pre flop. Lol nothing better than the bad regs online though that only 3/4b AAxx lmao.
Legenda português please?
eu não sei como fazer isso. Desculpe (usando o Google Tradutor para responder
Second impression. Invest in some Nair, those hairy arms are off putting.
unga-bunga!
You know your channel is going places when you start getting haters buzzing about 😁
@@pokerstar2926 lol, Mike is actually a good friend I've known for decades, he just likes to bust my balls
You got a mention in the outro of my most recent vlog! czcams.com/video/C5P0E4lMRCc/video.html
@@PokerJeezus aw shit! I'm giddy! Time to watch!