Its both scary and reassuring how accuratley the first minute of this video describes my problems. I play fine and normal so much of the time and then I just punt in these huge spots and I don't even know why. Looking forward to working on it with this vid, thanks
I feel extremely called out in this video. Especially the first 4 bet example. The funniest part is I know people are under 3 betting massively, so why would I think I get folds to 4 bets?
Maybe I'll make a video about overbetting in the future, but a big part of the overall theory is that when you don't get checkraised and the turn is a blank, your equity advantage is supposed to have gone up, which allows you to overbet a wide range. Also turns where a lot of draws are possibly but no key draws have completed to downgrade hands like overpairs, overbets are common because of equity denial and trying to get chips in before action killer
Don't forget that if you're betting x < 100%Pot, you can still be printing while getting called more than half the time. The times someone makes an absurd call will also tend to stick in our heads a bit more. But definitely if you play in a named pool and you see someone call a jam with ace high (etc) then you'll want to adjust vs them. I think in general, weak players don't play well vs strong pressure in smaller pots with weak ranges.
Its both scary and reassuring how accuratley the first minute of this video describes my problems. I play fine and normal so much of the time and then I just punt in these huge spots and I don't even know why. Looking forward to working on it with this vid, thanks
Good stuff !
I feel extremely called out in this video.
Especially the first 4 bet example.
The funniest part is I know people are under 3 betting massively, so why would I think I get folds to 4 bets?
Any ideas about studying overbets in general? I could probably go look around in gto wizard for spots, but wanted to see if you had any ideas. Thanks
Maybe I'll make a video about overbetting in the future, but a big part of the overall theory is that when you don't get checkraised and the turn is a blank, your equity advantage is supposed to have gone up, which allows you to overbet a wide range. Also turns where a lot of draws are possibly but no key draws have completed to downgrade hands like overpairs, overbets are common because of equity denial and trying to get chips in before action killer
some of the players i play are so bad they always have trash when they check but when i bet they call most of the time anyway
Don't forget that if you're betting x < 100%Pot, you can still be printing while getting called more than half the time. The times someone makes an absurd call will also tend to stick in our heads a bit more. But definitely if you play in a named pool and you see someone call a jam with ace high (etc) then you'll want to adjust vs them. I think in general, weak players don't play well vs strong pressure in smaller pots with weak ranges.