How To READ When Your OPPONENT Is WEAK With Jaman Burton!

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  • čas přidán 31. 01. 2023
  • In this weekly poker hand Jonathan reviews a spot that Jaman ‘The Drawing Dead’ Burton found himself in at the Bellagio poker room in Las Vegas whilst playing a $5/$10/$20 cash game.
    Remember that when you are playing in a game that has a straddle that the stack sizes in big blinds are essentially divided in half. Make sure that you adjust your ranges and poker strategy accordingly!
    When you are looking to isolate preflop with a raise you should look to use a larger size when you are out of position. This will hurt the implied odds of many suited connectors as the stack to pot ratio will decrease which helps give you a small advantage as you are playing out of position.
    Jonathan discusses the questions you should be asking yourself when deciding on the optimal bet size in any given situation at the poker table. An exploitative strategy against recreational poker players is to size up with your value hands as they will tend to continue with the exact same range regardless of bet size (within reason!)
    Jaman Burton faces a raise on the flop after he has isolated preflop with pocket queens. Both Jaman and Jonathan discuss what range of poker hands would potentially be doing this. Jonathan suggests that sets should not be raising as they are unlikely to be outdrawn on this board considering Jaman’s raise preflop which narrows his range to strong overcards and overpairs.
    Jonathan’s read on the turn is that Jaman’s opponent is trying to look as strong as he can by jamming all in very quickly after Jaman decides to check. Most of the time when opponents are doing this Jonathan believes that they are bluffing!
    Jonathan Little analyzes live poker hands from TV poker shows such as Poker After Dark, Hustler Casino Live, The Lodge Poker Club & PokerGO. He also analyzes popular poker vloggers such as Rampage Poker, Brad Owen, Jaman Burton, Ashley Sleeth, Wolfgang Poker and others!
    You will also find many poker hands on this channel that contain some of the biggest names in the poker world such as; Daniel Negreanu, Phil Hellmuth, Phil Ivey, Doug Polk, Garrett Adelstein, Tom ‘Durrrr’ Dwan, Dan ‘Jungleman’ Cates, Fedor Holz & many more!
    #pokerstrategy #jamanburton #cashgame

Komentáře • 70

  • @TheDrawingDeadVlog
    @TheDrawingDeadVlog Před rokem +42

    I love this Jaman guy!

  • @therealexquisiteexistentia4743

    Dudes legit best poker vlogging I’ve found. So much love he puts in his videos

    • @TheDrawingDeadVlog
      @TheDrawingDeadVlog Před rokem +9

      I appreciate that

    • @therealexquisiteexistentia4743
      @therealexquisiteexistentia4743 Před rokem +1

      @@TheDrawingDeadVlog I’m serious man, I watch a lot of poker vloggers and your content is on a whole other level than them. Keep up the great work. Always look forward to your content

  • @jeffcooper4225
    @jeffcooper4225 Před rokem +1

    Thanks. For the insight. I’ll keep that in mind. Great job Johnathon and Jaman

  • @GabrielHarber
    @GabrielHarber Před rokem +4

    Villain had 36.4% equity vs QQ going to the river, and they know that even if Hero calls with an over-pair they’re getting 2-to-1. Add in Villain’s fold equity and they didn’t need to feign strength. They were strong.

  • @ryandaley3351
    @ryandaley3351 Před rokem +1

    I've been watching Jaman vlogs for a few years now. He's solid.

  • @ComeCloserFishy
    @ComeCloserFishy Před rokem

    Great hand, great analysis as always

  • @nicolocasarta6970
    @nicolocasarta6970 Před rokem +2

    Depends on player type I would say the vast majority of the peole I play with just have 2 pair or better in this spot. This super straight forward play allows me to do some hero folds that save me a ton of money.

  • @scottryan2832
    @scottryan2832 Před rokem

    Hey Coach! Thank you for the weekly recap! We have a few nItty straightforward players and some maniacs. So... depends on who it is. Thank you again JL!

  • @jack42011
    @jack42011 Před rokem

    Similar position last night.. got check raised on the flop by J2 suited that called my button three bet from the big blind. Flopped Top with a flush draw and we were all in... he hit the flush on the river, same player been getting the best of me all week. he usually is my ATM... Every dog has his day...
    tournament hand, started at 44 blinds before my preflop three bet with queens

  • @davidgibbins8812
    @davidgibbins8812 Před rokem

    Both. I play with players who chase flushes and players who chase sets. But mostly raises come from draw chasers and calls from set hitters

  • @vinhphan3151
    @vinhphan3151 Před rokem

    I played in tables where the calling range pre-flop contains suited 4/6. Given the raise on the flop, definitely still call, but proceed with caution. Only players you tag as aggressive would raise with a flush draw.
    Any relatively tight player with an overpair to the board would slow down on the turn because you called the flop raise. He is in position, no need to shove on the turn card. Nice call...if hes has a set or a 5, so be it. More times than not your Qs are good. Well done.

  • @TheSodakboy93
    @TheSodakboy93 Před rokem +1

    Actually in this spot my opponents' ranges in 1-3/2-5 will likely be a lot of marginal one-pair hands trying to "see if they're good", so it's often a lot of 76 or 55 or maybe even a hand like A4cc. plus the occasional overpair like 77 or 88. Most of the time the draws don't raise as they want to call to see if they hit, and the sets often play trappy.
    There is a player type that will absolutely blast sets on this board but those are the really straightforward players whom you can easily fold a hand like this as they will almost never have worse.

  • @originalelijah9541
    @originalelijah9541 Před rokem +1

    I think players I play with would also limp then raise the flop on a board like this with smaller over pairs like 77 or 88 for protection against over cards

  • @danielhenry6777
    @danielhenry6777 Před rokem

    even that i did not see this combo in every situation i have ran of being oop on a 246 twotone board mostly wants to check and when bets around 75% pot

  • @OneOut1
    @OneOut1 Před rokem

    If you truely put the flop raiser on a draw rather than a set the correct play is a reraise all in. Much better than calling and then folding on later streets.

  • @aw7049
    @aw7049 Před rokem

    I think it’s a bet fold on the flop if his range is 64, 65 , 76, 54 , 75 suited, 44, 66 and 22 and he shoves. As played, pot is 240+75+75 , 200 more to call, 4 to 1. Not enough equity vs that range for that price with one card to come. Most part of that range will shove turn as well. Also SPR is 4x on the flop.

  • @TomRauhe
    @TomRauhe Před rokem

    the best hands would want you in the pot and not fold, so a raise is either a flush draw or a medium overpair like 7s to Js that's afraid of overcards AND the flush, not expecting you to have anything made.

  • @stylin40s
    @stylin40s Před rokem

    The games I play, it's heavily weighted towards draws. I've been surprised how often a river blocker sized bet gets folded to, maybe it's just recency bias in the games I've played this last week, but I've been working on sussing out these sized bets, thinking I'm paying it off just to get information and finding that I was just against extra aggressive players who aren't used to someone being sticky. Sometimes on flush flops, or draw heavy boards.

    • @stylin40s
      @stylin40s Před rokem

      I didn't know the guy shoved after you asked us to pause the video and comment. I know that's a strategy that solvers use in tournaments due to ICM considerations, but that wouldn't apply to cash games. Maybe the next solver will be a hybrid of the two and it will be "Bankroll Dependant." People will sit at the table and figure their Risk Premium based upon what percentage of their bankroll is on the table. (This is both satire and quite possible, you can't think about money when playing poker if you want to make good decisions, BUT when you step up to higher buy ins than you're used to, you can't help but play a little tighter and your heart will beat a little more, even making standard bets in good spots)

  • @stijnderksen1837
    @stijnderksen1837 Před rokem +3

    Haven't seen the whole video yet but I feel like the raise on the flop indicates more towards strength. I feel like a draw would probably float a lot of times and maybe bluff on later streets when you missed the draw. Raising targets exactly the type of hands like QQ, but also AK and AQ with at least one spade I think

    • @stijnderksen1837
      @stijnderksen1837 Před rokem

      On the turn, I think they jam for value. If they were waiting for a straight with A5 or something they got there but as I said, I think most of the time they'll have a set here and they don't want to let it run out

    • @stijnderksen1837
      @stijnderksen1837 Před rokem +1

      I was wrong :(

    • @stijnderksen1837
      @stijnderksen1837 Před rokem

      Tbf I got the strength part on the flop right. Top pair with flushdraw is easily a flop of dreams for that hand.

    • @Gingnose
      @Gingnose Před rokem

      @@stijnderksen1837 draw tho

    • @TheTree1
      @TheTree1 Před rokem

      @@Gingnose a draw that’s a favorite or a set is most of the villains range on this flop. Also QQ isn’t the top of his range it’s more like the middle. This turn is an insta fold you’re either almost dead or trying to dodge 15+ outs.

  • @tphuynh85
    @tphuynh85 Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you

  • @tripsix2186
    @tripsix2186 Před rokem

    When an opponent bets that big they are usually on a draw or are feeling weak with some showdown value. They're just trying to end the hand unless there has been some history between the players.

  • @bbbulldog61
    @bbbulldog61 Před 10 měsíci

    I've been out of action for a long time because I was broke. But with the small 🦐 sample size I've played over my last 3 sessions in the 5-5 game with a $300 minimum at H.G. in L.A. if the players are regulars and not 🚫 getting out of line to often they have 2 pair and up 60 percent of the time when they make that raise. I don't mind the way 6S-7S played his hand after the flop. QQ had the perfect reed. But 6S-7S is applying ultimate pressure getting rid of over cards charging bigger flush draws and sometimes maybe getting over pairs to fold. Even though 6S-7S didn't flop a set he hit 🎯 the flop really hard. Had decent equity. So he kinda did have it even though he wasn't a head 🗣️. I'm not 🚫 in love with my QQ but I probably make a crying 😭 call if I'm 60 to 75 blinds deep.

  • @kineahora8736
    @kineahora8736 Před rokem

    @Jonathan, I don’t understand your advice to small-frequent bet the flop. This is a straddle single-raised spot (not a 3-bet pot) with hero OOP and a connected small card board 6 high. Aren’t those just a range check OOP, and QQ is probably a checkraise? I guess, wait a minute-I guess this is against a limper… and there are no GTO solutions for limpers! Uggh🤣

  • @qazzaqstan
    @qazzaqstan Před rokem

    With an SPR that low I'm not sure they have all the sets and I think a lot of their draws are going to try to attack my good A high hands that don't connect with this board also they might havre some number of small overpass betting for protection. They will have some amount of 2-pair+ here but I don't think it is the majority of their range let alone a big enough majority that I'm considering folding here.

  • @brandonloehle4304
    @brandonloehle4304 Před rokem

    I play 1/2, and at those stakes this is almost certainly 2 pair+. Still a call on flop, but definitely fold on the turn to most player types (except maybe young aggro player archetypes)

  • @YTSparty
    @YTSparty Před rokem

    I have a question. Some tables both players put their cards up after an all-in, other tables the players keep their cards hidden and even muck after the run out. I know the rule about the person who calls gets to muck, just wondering why some tables seem to force players to put up their cards as the dealer runs out the board.

    • @jonathanhenderson9422
      @jonathanhenderson9422 Před rokem +1

      Generally the forced show is for tournaments and especially for TV tables. Every cash game I've ever played or seen has the rule about who has to show depending on the action.

  • @StreetSoulLover
    @StreetSoulLover Před rokem

    If villain moves in, in less than 5-10 seconds of hero checking, this is absolutely a bluff and I would call here a lot. With a 5, wouldn't you take some time to think about it? Wouldnt you perhaps think about how you might get value from your wheel?
    Ripping it in seems odd, Bare in mind we can have A5s here too so ripping for pot seems a bit crazy with a set. This feels a lot like spades (without seeing the end)

  • @cjcreate2872
    @cjcreate2872 Před rokem

    over pair or straight/flush draws

  • @matthewkagan1346
    @matthewkagan1346 Před rokem

    I'd say they are weighted toward "premium" hands in my game, but I put that in "quotes" because, in this context, that includes 77-99, which we beat.

  • @charliew7516
    @charliew7516 Před rokem

    call, bet, bet, line would get more credits for 76ss holding, assuming Jaman would check to you on this turn card.

    • @charliew7516
      @charliew7516 Před rokem

      but with this runout, 76ss might just wanna go to the showdown on the river anyway lol.

  • @zillavanilla6353
    @zillavanilla6353 Před rokem

    Are you cutting off their implied odds because you have less in your stack now? How exactly does that work?

  • @webguy943
    @webguy943 Před rokem

    If a flush hit it would be a tough fold for QQ. I think he’s still calling an all in.

  • @ruanribeiro1484
    @ruanribeiro1484 Před rokem

    usually when they check raise it is nuts

  • @YTSparty
    @YTSparty Před rokem

    He was dead on, biggest tell was the guy didn't raise pre-flop. So he wanted to see a flop, meaning he was looking for a draw or low set. He raises big post-flop meaning his draw hit or he hit a set.. Safe to assume the guy didn't have a 5 or set at the end. Or he wouldn't have peacocked. He was screaming PLEASE FOLD. Not "I have the nuts, please call".

  • @TrendingCurrently
    @TrendingCurrently Před rokem

    I would’ve folded lol. Thanks coach

  • @micarobles3248
    @micarobles3248 Před rokem

    Tks coach,readdy to join..valentine special?

  • @Solwa54
    @Solwa54 Před rokem

    They're definitely value heavy in 5NL online.

  • @beachliving3127
    @beachliving3127 Před rokem

    When this has happened to me on the flop, the player has the set. Now back to the video to see what happened.

  • @oldterry9476
    @oldterry9476 Před rokem

    sets

  • @christopherhorn4744
    @christopherhorn4744 Před rokem

    I thought middle pairs like 77’s-10’s

  • @richierichBTC
    @richierichBTC Před rokem

    What's with the lazer eyes? Is Jaman a bitcoiner? :)

  • @justmagicmostly
    @justmagicmostly Před rokem

    "RuPaul and Little Richard" haha two black queens!

  • @joshuacoleman4451
    @joshuacoleman4451 Před rokem

    i would think they have a flush draw

  • @jeromemagquilat3050
    @jeromemagquilat3050 Před rokem

    2pair at least on my game

  • @Hammer.J.Helmer
    @Hammer.J.Helmer Před rokem

    ANSWER: They usually have premium hands

  • @briankuzawa1683
    @briankuzawa1683 Před rokem

    Two black Queens: RuPaul and Little Richard... classic

  • @vigiracer
    @vigiracer Před rokem

    Draw

  • @rppoker8541
    @rppoker8541 Před rokem

    100% draw in my opinion

  • @flipinfin
    @flipinfin Před rokem

    Amateur move to a good player

  • @danielmeuler2877
    @danielmeuler2877 Před rokem

    Draw