Nail Your Bet Sizes When You Flop HUGE Hands!
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- Опубликовано: 31 июл 2024
- In this video, we cover an essential aspect of poker strategy: "Nail Your Bet Sizes When You Flop HUGE Hands!" Our caller flops the nut straight on a monotone board with the king of the flushing suit and seeks advice on the best bet sizes for each street to maximize value.
We break down the hand step-by-step, discussing optimal bet sizing strategies to extract the most value from your opponents. Perfect for live cash game players looking to enhance their betting tactics and improve their overall game. Learn how to perfect your bet sizes and make the most out of your monster hands.
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0:00 - Intro
2:12 - Preflop
2:59 - Flop
8:28 - Turn
10:54 - River
12:22 - Hero Decision
13:11 - Reveal
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What's your default instinct when flopping a huge hand? Check to slowplay, bet small to rope them in, or bet big immediately to build a pot?
Hard to say without more info. I suppose I lean toward sizing up a bit so as to not draw the ire of Bart 😉
It's a board and opponent profile dependant.
On a scary board like this one, bet to prevent him using it to bully me. If opponent is a sticky one, keep betting mid size stakes; it's just like taking a thirsty donkey...() he will keep calling all the way to river. Just to realize: _"ohhh, damn! This river is dry!?? Gotta go to the next one"_
There is a difference between top boat where you can get value from not very much than flopping str8 on wet board. To sum up it all depends on board texture and ho i perceive opponent or opponents and preflop action ofc as well
I think fast playing this hand against most pp is the right play here, if he has the flush u are losing money anyway, why not 3 betting the flop to target the top part of his range . There are so many off suite 2 pairs combo and bottom straight and Ax that might make a mistake here by shoving. So many cards will kill the action on the turn.
I tend to bet big. Probably more to push them out before they outdraw me.
I used to hate the lack of a reveal but the more I learned, the less it bothered me. I need to be able to learn from hands that aren't tabled.
You can learn a ton from a hand with no showdown. Even if the hand ended on the flop, or pre-flop, you can still learn a whole lot. Once you realize this, you will become a better poker player.
Have to agree with Bart on the flop: if villain is described as a VIP he’s not going to fold 2-pair or a set on the flop to a 3-bet. I don’t think they would fold an A of spades with a pair or straight draw either. VIPs generally want to see more cards.
Tank Call at the end means Hero made a good sized bet, IMHO. People don't play that way at the end unless it is a "close" call or fold scenario. I think that is a good read by the Hero for correctly sizing THIS particular Villain.
Getting Max out of opponents is a hard skill to master. Gotta know the players more than what GTO and Solvers can tell you. People are weird and not always GTO or solver proficient.
You don’t know that. A lot of times people have an easier time calling a huge polarized bet than a medium sized bet
@@Young-ep8ik maybe. I've not seen that much at these stakes.
I agree completely. The tank means he got max value.
On the flop, I think solver’s usually like to check or use smaller bet sizings on monotone boards, is this larger size something that you would only recommend against VIPs? Because if you deviate from theory against someone who studied, it usually looks a bit fishy.
This one is a classic, sir
Hero suggested if villain check-jams on river: what are his bluffs? I think we should consider hands that he over-values.. Perhaps a single J type of hand for a straight? A of spades, Jx?? QJ off-suit? There are plenty in his range.
Regarding $1-$2 with $10 straddle. Rounders in San Antonio just purchased by The Lodge and Doug Polk. Played Sunday in $1-$2 and $1-$3. UTG straddles in $1-$3 (not mandatory) up to $25. UTG straddles in $1-$2 (not mandatory) up to $10 over 4 1/2 hrs play. Buy on on $1-$2 now max $300. Much bigger on $1-$3.
Same SA card house runs around the same lol. 1-2-5 sometimes $10 straddle. $300 max at 1/2, $1000 max at 1/3. But it’s match the stack so not true cap.
What about villain with J of spades?
nah...Js would not hesitate to call or even raise the river.
The old school adage of having a plan doesn't apply here for a river c/r, cause hero's never folding. Easy game. But the wisdom stands the test of time when deep.
Aces up is a pair of aces?? Been confused about that one.
This game can be boring and bad and can be really good but GSR is the cleanest casino I’ve been to in Reno
I’m guessing A-10off with ace of spades
2mins is a very long time in poker.
Call a river check-raise. There are so many hands he can have that have showdown value if it goes check-check, but are always losing if the hero bets.
I think villain had AS/Q
Comments help. You’re welcome
I would lean towards betting big with such a strong made hand on a soaking wet board like that.
Your mom is soaking wet
I hate straddling
The turn killed the action.. could of gotten more money in earlier.. imo
Yes Bart made exactly this observation - that's one of the reasons he likes a flop 3-bet
V had QT. He was wondering should he raise, or just call river bet.
The GSR room can be really profitable even at 1/2. The "pros" usually play at Peppermill and the drunk degens play at GSR.
Nerd
On flop he loses to a flopped flush and drawing dead to J8 of spades.
he does...yet, no one wants to talk about it, because they knew that was not the case! lol
Yeah but if you fold to every raise you’re extremely exploitable. Can’t be scared of monsters under the bed. He flopped the nut straight. Has the K of spades for backup. It’s a straight up call, you should never be folding to a reasonable check/raise sizing on this flop. For the exact reason in this video, hero is in position and the villain CHECKED on the turn! There’s almost no flopped flushes that villain is gonna slow down with when the turn brings in a one liner to a straight. Hero is good here so often.
Yep youre right, he shouldve folded because he was drawing dead to exactly 1 combo
The river here is a huge mistake imo: we have the effective nuts and a little more than pot left behind, and we're playing live poker where people hate folding. There is only one size that makes any sense, and it's definitely not betting $250.
Are you suggesting ripping $695 into $560? I agree we have the effective nuts, but it has nothing to do with hand strength and everything to do with what we can get called by. What are you getting called by? Everything got there besides the hero just blasting off with JUST an As and even that at least has top pair on the river, so what the heck are we bluffing with? KQ with the K of spades might be basically the only hand anyone live ever finds to bluff with here. Which means no even vaguely sane person is ever calling a live 1/2 player without a J or better and we already said we don't think he has even a J after checking turn. You're also wrong about them hating to fold. They hate folding draws and top pair+ on dry boards, but they love assuming they got unlucky again and folding on wet runouts.
Wildly awful size that makes him snap fold all of his two pairs and sets.
I bet if he tank called .. he is not calling an over bet on the river,,,imo
$250 I think is Fair price the way this played out IMO. If vilian was willing to check, raise Bluff with what was easily 2 pair+. Plus, it's a good size for him to think about the river bluff, probably what the tank was again, IMO.
_...we have the effective nuts..._
Disagreed. (V profile dependant, of course), assuming V is a decent player, it's very possible that he might had an A high flush or straight flush.
Why? There is no sign to the contrary. This starting from his PF action to river check. b/c H was not afraid of flop x/r, he also C-bet turn...that kind of hand won't check river back; this even more if H had air (AX). If I were V and holding A high flush or straight flush, I'd played turn and river the same as V did.
@@pot_kivach160 the turn check call and river check are horrendous if he has an absolute monster.
Villain had AJ with a spade. Probably Js.
Zero chance. You never check the turn with that. Either open ended straight-flush draw or nut-flush with a straight.
@@therealjackwhite1523 he’s playing a 1/2.
Villian probably had a flopped low flush and looked over and thought hero had a higher flush after the reveal. Since hero’s hole cards suits 🃏 looked identical.