8 Steps To Start WINNING At Poker!

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  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
  • In this poker video Lexy Gavin-Mather takes you back to the basics. She teaches you all of the factors you should consider when just starting your journey in poker!
    Lexy covers how important it is to learn your raise first in ranges (RFI). If you have mistakes in your preflop game then your mistakes will compound drastically and you will find yourself in many tricky postflop situations that you should not be in!
    You should also be using equity calculators to familiarize yourself with poker hand equities. Tools like Equilab & Poker Cruncher are perfect to use for this. By learning equities you will start to become more familiar with whether you should continue in a poker hand if you calculate whether you are getting the correct implied and reverse implied odds.
    Lexy also covers information you should know about correct bankroll management. Proper bankroll management is crucial to your success as a poker player. The general rule is that you should have at least 30 buy-ins of any stake that you play. Remember to treat your money as an investment, try not to think of them as just poker chips. You should always separate your poker money from your life money!
    Before taking a shot in poker you should always feel confident that you are beating your current stakes and are ready to move up!
    Preflop raise sizing should differ depending on your stack depth. The deeper your stack the larger you should raise!
    0:00 - Intro
    1:17 - Learn Your Raise First In Ranges (RFI)
    3:37 - Familiarize Yourself With Poker Hand Equities
    6:50 - Poker Bankroll Management
    11:45 - Shot Taking In Poker
    18:17 - Preflop Raise Sizing
    23:29 - How To Count Outs And Equity
    26:42 - Understanding Your Position In Poker
    30:46 - Pot Odds In Poker
    32:54 - Poker Hand Categorization
    34:00 - Continuation Betting In Poker
    On this Poker Coaching channel we cover a weekly poker topic to help improve your poker strategy!
    In order to take your poker game to the next level it is vitally important you learn all the nuances of the game.
    Do you know what ranges of poker hands you should be playing from each position? When should you 3-bet, call or fold? When is the right time to make a hero call or a huge bluff? Do you know how to play preflop, flop, turn & river effectively and how should your poker strategy change depending on the street? What difference does it make if you are playing multi-way vs heads-up?
    #pokerstrategy #lexygavin #howtoplaypoker

Komentáře • 47

  • @PokerCoaching
    @PokerCoaching  Před rokem +5

    How long have YOU been playing poker for? 🧐

    • @romanianmike106
      @romanianmike106 Před rokem +2

      since 2008!

    • @jppagetoo
      @jppagetoo Před rokem +2

      Nearly all my life! I started when I was around 10 years old or so and that was almost 50 years ago now. When my family gathered we played poker. Usually a ring game of dealers choice, real money but low stakes (to a kid any money is big stakes!). Everybody joined in the game from my great grandmother to us young kids. Back then NLHE wasn't a game anybody played that I knew. So I learned "general poker" not NLHE. Variations on 7-card stud were the most common games called, but low-ball, 5 card draw, and others got played often. I also was part of the Full Tilt poker boom in the mid-2000's. Poker is in my blood.

    • @uliaritonangchilds7819
      @uliaritonangchilds7819 Před rokem +1

      Thank you....now I understand a little bit more poker.

    • @adolfobeltran2428
      @adolfobeltran2428 Před rokem +1

      8months 😅

    • @jacorymccrary6192
      @jacorymccrary6192 Před rokem +1

      I been playing for about 7 months.. I downloaded the pc app about 2 months ago and realized I didn’t know nothing and was giving away all my money 😡 I’m coming back for all of it and a lot more! Thanks to you and your team! 🙏🏽

  • @AudleyHarrisonMBE
    @AudleyHarrisonMBE Před rokem +3

    The concept of 4 & 2 😊 I remember reading this in Phil Gordon’s book back in the day - even though GTO & Exploitative strategies are rampant today, those old school fundamentals are still valid today. Good recap Lexy G 👏🏾

  • @sapg9837
    @sapg9837 Před 6 měsíci

    An absolute gem! All steps are soooo concisely outlined!! Thank you for going back tot the basics, never underestimate the fundamentals 👏🏼

  • @parbhdeepsangha4823
    @parbhdeepsangha4823 Před rokem +1

    This is just what I was looking for, great video.

  • @ludovicpiejos4379
    @ludovicpiejos4379 Před rokem

    Amazing video and content from Lexy. Definitively saving this for later.

  • @philiplicarter
    @philiplicarter Před rokem

    I've been playing small stakes for over 10 years and this was still useful! Memorize the odds vs equity! Good advice about when to continuation bet and what size.

  • @Jermo484
    @Jermo484 Před rokem +3

    This is a nice explanation of a lot of solid concepts. The only thing I'd say is the c-betting part should maybe have three different types of boards. I think it's fine to continue less often for bigger sizing on wet boards that have a lot of draws, but the wettest boards either shouldn't be continued on or it should be incredibly small, even though you're not doing it often. If you 3-bet pre and get called by the button and the flop comes 89J all spades, you almost certainly shouldn't continue and you definitely shouldn't take a large sizing if you do.

  • @nathanthomson3554
    @nathanthomson3554 Před rokem +1

    ❤ your work keep up the content

  • @deviongants3724
    @deviongants3724 Před rokem

    Thanks great video

  • @jdolby513
    @jdolby513 Před rokem +1

    Lexy's a GREAT teacher

  • @anthonykent00
    @anthonykent00 Před rokem

    As someone who just got back into poker since Black Friday, this was great!

  • @Jealod24
    @Jealod24 Před rokem

    For preflop charts, such as the utg chart you showed, people should also include a few mid suited connectors as bluffs as well… not just ace4/5 and some offsuit broadway. It’s important for you to give yourself board coverage regardless of position. If you’re utg and j9s, 10 9s, 78s, etc, and are called or 3 bet by the button or blinds, you can call. And if you find a piece of the board against the button or cutoff 3bettor, check all flops to his range advantage and then raise his inevitable continuation bet. Many won’t give you credit for hitting the board and you can up your win %. Don’t go crazy, but the last thing we should be doing is allowing our opponents to have access to our preflop percentages… and if everyone follows the same charts, it makes it much easier for an opponent to range find you.

  • @daremo50na76
    @daremo50na76 Před rokem

    Thanks lex!

  • @jamesjones2675
    @jamesjones2675 Před rokem

    Thank you

  • @curiousk4854
    @curiousk4854 Před rokem

    When you add A4 A5 on rfi charts you talk about balance. What do you mean by adding those hands for balance?

  • @classifiedsincebirth
    @classifiedsincebirth Před rokem

    excellent video

  • @nici_1003
    @nici_1003 Před rokem

    Do you think that when you master those basics it is possible to be a winning player on the smallest stakes online already?

  • @SENSUI347
    @SENSUI347 Před rokem +1

    SUPER VIDEO ❤❤

  • @Matthew-gg8ep
    @Matthew-gg8ep Před rokem

    Great stuff Lexi as always oh and less Bob more Lexi

  • @hearthat1334
    @hearthat1334 Před 8 měsíci

    checked

  • @michaelchin8934
    @michaelchin8934 Před rokem

    How does one join the EPT? Do I just have to get filthy rich and then be able to go on these crazy pokerstars cities to play?

  • @patrick_kyker
    @patrick_kyker Před rokem

    I thought my raise with 54 suited was legitimate on the button. Short stack big blind called with K5s. some of the other players looked at me like wtf was I doing?

    • @keepitsimplestupid3703
      @keepitsimplestupid3703 Před rokem

      Sounds like your raise was to small. Or you should have just called, And don't worry about how people look at you. You are a student,
      And they wouldn't be like "wtf " if you flopped the nuts. Always consider what the stack sizes are before you take action.

  • @sirleef7567
    @sirleef7567 Před rokem

    30 tables! 😅

  • @cubanhack3r
    @cubanhack3r Před rokem

    I just cant think of ways I would play against you lol! To beautiful for me to push you and slow play you...! GREAT WORK!

  • @agauerm
    @agauerm Před rokem +2

    Hand equity for pot odds calculation is not really useful in tourneys... You want to win today, not be on the green after a 1million hands.

    • @funkgremlin2765
      @funkgremlin2765 Před 4 měsíci

      This is unequivocally not true. You still have to think about torurnaments in the long run you just have to put in more volume

  • @ianpayno8968
    @ianpayno8968 Před rokem +1

    20 - 30 tables at the same time........ how on earth did you even have time to think about your hand?

    • @Jermo484
      @Jermo484 Před rokem

      The vast majority of situations are automatic for experienced players. That said, I've never tried playing 20 tables. But you can definitely go hours at one table without really having a unique enough situation that it really requires much thought.

    • @manfredullrich483
      @manfredullrich483 Před rokem

      Still.....4 tables is easy, 8 parallel tables already will lead to mistakes (mix up reads or hands, or just hitting the wrong button).
      12 will guarantee that you won't play good at all of them.
      20-30 tables in parallel - recipe for disaster.

    • @lirielhotshoot1247
      @lirielhotshoot1247 Před 11 měsíci

      Wow. I used to play 9 tables at UltimateBet but it made my eyes bug out after about 90 minutes. 10-20?! Wtf

  • @xRakanishu
    @xRakanishu Před rokem

    Cheesy potatoes

  • @cubanhack3r
    @cubanhack3r Před rokem

    This is very misleading, especially the hand class. You cant just go saying TPTK is a class A hand. There are so many many factors...!

    • @Jermo484
      @Jermo484 Před rokem +1

      It's a basics video. The point is that good hands and good draws can continue, medium hands shouldn't (bad players love betting bottom and middle pairs aggressively and value own themselves constantly) and medium draws should usually check-call and garbage hands can often just give up at low stakes. Top pros against top pros aren't just betting all their value, check-calling all their middling hands and giving up on the pot with garbage - they'd give up way too often, but low stakes are different. You don't gain anything from finding creative bluffs against 1/2 players who can't fold a pair.

    • @cubanhack3r
      @cubanhack3r Před rokem

      @@Jermo484 You will be amazed of how often u can manipulate with both value and bluffs at low stakes. Again the most important point is to adapt to the player(s) you are against. Table dynamics, stack size and on on on…

  • @nickholmes-oj5tn
    @nickholmes-oj5tn Před rokem

    I really wanted to watch this one. But you said "you know" 8 times in the first minute. If I knew i wouldn't be watching an instructional video, ya know?

  • @TheMarceloSilva
    @TheMarceloSilva Před rokem +5

    Volume is not the answer. Learn how to lose less with the 2nd best hand and win more with the best hand is the key to reduce the variance.

    • @SENSUI347
      @SENSUI347 Před rokem

      HOW WILL YOU DO THAT PLAYING 4X A MONTH 😂😂..VOLUNE WILL DEFINITELY IMPROVE YOUR GAME, WHICH WILL IMPROVE YOUR WIN RATE WHICH WILL IMPROVE VARIANCE..MAYBE YOU MIGHT WANT TO SUBSCRIBE TO POKERCOUCHING OR WATCH LIKE 👍🏼 AND SUBS TO THIS CHANNEL GO TROUGH A LITTLE BRAINFUEL PLAYLIST FIRTS ❤❤ KEEP GRINDING 💪🏼

    • @aaronxue1100
      @aaronxue1100 Před rokem +2

      well like if you always knew when you were best or second best then you might as well print money huh?

    • @anthonykent00
      @anthonykent00 Před rokem +3

      You develop judgment and reading skills with volume. There's no substitute. Obviously, a combination of volume AND instruction will be the most efficient method of learning for most people.

  • @Cmelvin71
    @Cmelvin71 Před rokem +3

    Lexi doesn’t crunch poker. She isn’t very good even