Fedor can you please do a video with Stefan I love the way you're guys minds work. Please do ICM quizzes in different spots. I score high on them but there are some spots I don't agree with like calling 33 in the BB if your opponent shoved and u barely cover them 5 handed.
One mistake I think doesn't get addressed often is acting too quickly. Whenever I lose a hand due to a mistake of my own, often I will realize that if I had just taken a bit longer to replay the action I would have realized what my opponents actions meant, and might have made a better decision.
I came here to see 3 Biggest Mistakes. 1st BIG mistake i already found on Thumbnail - which is Phil Hellmuth. Now i am about to see the video for other 2 mistakes :)
thanks for all the advice. I've been playing for a really long time but don't get to play all that often so I find it difficult to really improve that much, unfortunately
Absolutely correct, especially the first one is like the most important ever. You could also divide it in 3 different mistakes as Fedor tells it. I can tell you as a pokerpro, this is the most important video ever.
My biggest mistake when I 1st started was playing tight passive. I think it's even worse than loose passive cuz it's so easy to put that player on a hand. At least a loose passive player is hard to put on a hand
I was hoping if you would take the time to share, "How do you know if you are sitting in a cash game with player who are better than you? Also, what are signs that the game is no good?". I enjoy your videos and hope you continue to share your knowledge with the world.
I feel like people start of playing either loose passive or a bad loose aggressive strategy (overbluffing a ton), then when they improve a bit they start playing TAG. Then as they improve and learn more they start to play more LAG
I get that limping is mostly bad, but doesnt it make sense to limp in with lets say A5 in a game where the blinds are 0,10-0,20 with biggest pots reaching 50-80 EUR ? So even if someone kicks you out of the hand you just lost a very cheap big blind, but 1 out of 10 times if you win a medium sized pot you will pay for all your speculative hand limps and then some.
The thing with if you limp hands that are marginally -Ev opens (such as A5 from cutoff or earlier) is that your limping range is easy to exploit. All skilled opponents notice that they can raise over the limp wide and you would have to fold often. That would make the limp lose a lot of money in the long run. To counteract that the limping range should be balanced with strong limps such as AA, suited aces such as A6s and probably KQ. Because you would have to limp strong hands they would lose ev more than limps recieve so in full your strategy would lose Ev from limping.
So you can limp some too weak hands for opens from the more later positions if you notice that the other players don’t raise over it often enough. The thing is that you don’t gain much from doing it unless you have some really weak opposition.
Q should watch point 3 very very carefully... Maybe we can then see a single vid with him not saying something like "better than 99% of players, I'm the only good player at my table" and so on
Hellmuth is a perfect example of overestimating his own skills. He stages himself as one of the best in the world but realistically he would not even beat midstakes tournaments online. However in bigger live games he will still have an edge because fields are way softer an because of volume he plays he won a lot of titles too.
@@Der_Fabi Hey Fabsnb? 😉 Thanks for replying. Understood your point. Just wondering how he could then win so many WSOP bracelets? I mean other big names (who are then probably better players) are also playing a lot of those WSOP events since many years and did not win nearly as much bracelets.
@@gwi5553 You mean Fabian Bernhauser? Close but unfortunately not. Well, although Hellmuth is a weakish player for other pros nowadays he is not weak in general. The WSOP is so soft he still has an edge in these tournaments. He plays a lot of mixed games with smaller fields which increases the chances of success. A lot of the bracelets come from the pre solver area over 10 years ago where players were weaker in general. Phil's game didn't really improve since then but it worked out well in these times. So there is a lot of reasons why he got so many bracelets.
Poker is like golf, at any point, there are maybe 5 people in the world that are "good" at golf. Everyone else is just aspiring to suck less than the rest of the field. You're still ok Fedor!
Fedor, can you stop pretending that you can read off live tells. You can´t. I saw so many hands where you stared minutes at guys who gave away so many tells and you still couldn´t figure out a call or fold. You just got lucky in some spots or had a good read on a playing style / betting style of somebody. But were never able to read somebody by his physical tells
@RJ Biz I'm assuming you're about 15 if you think 26 is "old" and "ready for the home." You sure it's "RJ Biz" when it sounds like you are in the "BJ Biz" with your hans comment? I'm sure you're a fan favorite with the boys.
I hope you enjoy this vid, I tried to share the 3 biggest mistakes I observed over the years! What mistakes do you think are important to avoid?
Many sub-categories. But, overall you covered the topic.
Fedor can you please do a video with Stefan I love the way you're guys minds work. Please do ICM quizzes in different spots. I score high on them but there are some spots I don't agree with like calling 33 in the BB if your opponent shoved and u barely cover them 5 handed.
One mistake I think doesn't get addressed often is acting too quickly. Whenever I lose a hand due to a mistake of my own, often I will realize that if I had just taken a bit longer to replay the action I would have realized what my opponents actions meant, and might have made a better decision.
Fear of making mistakes in front of others and the need to assert oneself against others, by chasing revenge in future hands.
Tilt 🤣🤣 thank you for the videos
I think you have become my favorite poker player. You seem very humble, kind, and just a cool dude. Keep up the good work bro.
-Chad Prince
I came here to see 3 Biggest Mistakes. 1st BIG mistake i already found on Thumbnail - which is Phil Hellmuth. Now i am about to see the video for other 2 mistakes :)
thanks for all the advice. I've been playing for a really long time but don't get to play all that often so I find it difficult to really improve that much, unfortunately
Absolutely correct, especially the first one is like the most important ever. You could also divide it in 3 different mistakes as Fedor tells it. I can tell you as a pokerpro, this is the most important video ever.
Thanks for this video! This helped me to understand that I'm good and I'm on the right way to improve my game! Cheers! 🙌🏻👋🏻😁
My biggest mistake when I 1st started was playing tight passive. I think it's even worse than loose passive cuz it's so easy to put that player on a hand. At least a loose passive player is hard to put on a hand
I am a Filipino poker vlogger ( in Filipino language). I'm happy to see you finally share your ideas.
In interested in mooving to Asia for grinding May i contact you somehow
I was hoping if you would take the time to share,
"How do you know if you are sitting in a cash game with player who are better than you? Also, what are signs that the game is no good?".
I enjoy your videos and hope you continue to share your knowledge with the world.
Really like your videos man, talk a lot sense
My man fedor with the knowledge
all this stuff you put out can also help people who try win at sports betting
Great advice for all Skill Levels.
Love this Videos, just mind blowing, Thank you for sharing this tips.
Thanks for the great tips. Keep up the good work
If it wasn’t for bad luck and a lack of skill, I’d be the best in the world!
-everyone in the world playing poker
Great video ! Thanks!
Really nice video I will work on it sir 👌👍
Really good. Putting people down in any situation never does good. Thanks for that reminder.
I feel like people start of playing either loose passive or a bad loose aggressive strategy (overbluffing a ton), then when they improve a bit they start playing TAG. Then as they improve and learn more they start to play more LAG
Thank you Cham...
Hi . Thank you
🙏
KEEP THE GOOD JOB.I LOVE YOUR VIDEO!!!
Fedor for President!
It would be good to cut to real live footage for each one of your examples, more fun to try and spot the situation and then hear your explanation.
thanks Fedor :)
gr8 stuff champ
The game starts when I finish a massive toke out in the parking lot.
Lmao As it should 👌
I get that limping is mostly bad, but doesnt it make sense to limp in with lets say A5 in a game where the blinds are 0,10-0,20 with biggest pots reaching 50-80 EUR ? So even if someone kicks you out of the hand you just lost a very cheap big blind, but 1 out of 10 times if you win a medium sized pot you will pay for all your speculative hand limps and then some.
The thing with if you limp hands that are marginally -Ev opens (such as A5 from cutoff or earlier) is that your limping range is easy to exploit. All skilled opponents notice that they can raise over the limp wide and you would have to fold often. That would make the limp lose a lot of money in the long run. To counteract that the limping range should be balanced with strong limps such as AA, suited aces such as A6s and probably KQ. Because you would have to limp strong hands they would lose ev more than limps recieve so in full your strategy would lose Ev from limping.
So you can limp some too weak hands for opens from the more later positions if you notice that the other players don’t raise over it often enough. The thing is that you don’t gain much from doing it unless you have some really weak opposition.
Q should watch point 3 very very carefully... Maybe we can then see a single vid with him not saying something like "better than 99% of players, I'm the only good player at my table" and so on
What does the Click bait with Phil Helmuth mean? I'm not that much into the professional scene but he seems to be very successful isn't he?
He rarely turns up on time and definitely overestimates himself, but he's on balance a very good player, even if he doesn't study gto style.
Hellmuth is a perfect example of overestimating his own skills. He stages himself as one of the best in the world but realistically he would not even beat midstakes tournaments online. However in bigger live games he will still have an edge because fields are way softer an because of volume he plays he won a lot of titles too.
@@Der_Fabi Hey Fabsnb? 😉 Thanks for replying. Understood your point. Just wondering how he could then win so many WSOP bracelets? I mean other big names (who are then probably better players) are also playing a lot of those WSOP events since many years and did not win nearly as much bracelets.
@@gwi5553 You mean Fabian Bernhauser? Close but unfortunately not. Well, although Hellmuth is a weakish player for other pros nowadays he is not weak in general. The WSOP is so soft he still has an edge in these tournaments. He plays a lot of mixed games with smaller fields which increases the chances of success. A lot of the bracelets come from the pre solver area over 10 years ago where players were weaker in general. Phil's game didn't really improve since then but it worked out well in these times. So there is a lot of reasons why he got so many bracelets.
Maximized my fun… now I’m broke
Poker is like golf, at any point, there are maybe 5 people in the world that are "good" at golf. Everyone else is just aspiring to suck less than the rest of the field. You're still ok Fedor!
N1
💎
Such a luckbox.
How the F.....you guys ibky have 36,000 followers is disturbing. You should have 200,000 at the minimum.
👏👏👍
With your luck….
Fedor, can you stop pretending that you can read off live tells. You can´t. I saw so many hands where you stared minutes at guys who gave away so many tells and you still couldn´t figure out a call or fold. You just got lucky in some spots or had a good read on a playing style / betting style of somebody. But were never able to read somebody by his physical tells
genau sags ihm Hans! Hans der Crusher 🤣
@RJ Biz Sounds like you're familiar with the term.
@RJ Biz I'm assuming you're about 15 if you think 26 is "old" and "ready for the home." You sure it's "RJ Biz" when it sounds like you are in the "BJ Biz" with your hans comment? I'm sure you're a fan favorite with the boys.
@RJ Biz ok ok ok i think you going to far here. or you speak out of experience?
@@NeedforSteep I'm not the one with the "common" knowledge of "Hans is typically the name of a man who services other men." Yikes.