Mastering The Fundamentals: Poker Ranges

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  • Опубликовано: 15 май 2024
  • Understanding ranges is one of the most IMPORTANT lessons you will ever learn in poker!
    The first step to CONSISTENTLY win money in poker is to learn how to think in terms of ranges. Stop trying to put your opponents on 1 EXACT hand. Instead, analyze ALL of the possible hands that your opponents could have in any given situation and adjust your strategy accordingly!
    Ranges are everywhere in poker, and how ranges interact with eachother will be the backbone for most of the decisions you will make at the table!
    Learning preflop ranges will give you a huge advantage over recreational players, as a lot of these players are choosing at random which hands they want to play!
    Ranges will also help you make good decisions postflop. By deciding to play your range instead of your two hole cards, you can start to put your opponents into a guessing game where they are forced to make mistakes!
    Poker Range Guide Chapter 1 - Understanding Poker Ranges:
    Consider your opponent's betting actions, bet sizes & general tendencies (and of course, any tells they display!) and try to narrow down a selection of hands that they will likely play this way - this grouping of hands is your opponent's 'range'.
    Poker Range Guide Chapter 2 - Assign Reasonable Ranges:
    Not all players play the same way! Learning GTO (game theory optimal) ranges will give you a fundamentally sound strategy to base your decisions off of, and act as a guide to deviate from as your opponent's play-style becomes more clear.
    Poker Range Guide Chapter 3 - Preflop Ranges & Postflop Ranges:
    Understand that ranges will change constantly! Developing a fundamentally tight preflop range for all of your preflop spots will give you a huge advantage going to most flops - however just because a hand starts strong does not mean that it will stay strong. Make sure you are constantly considering how your range AND your opponents ranges interact with a board BEFORE deciding on your action.
    Poker Range Guide Chapter 4 - Get Experience!
    Make sure that you assign ranges in every hand you play. Make it a puzzle you enjoy playing! Putting players on ranges will become routine and (with practice!) you will become excellent at narrowing your opponent's range, allowing you to make the best decisions possible.
    I have a fundamentals quiz! Take it for free: pokercoaching.com/fundamental...
    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?
    #ranges #jonathanlittle #pokerstrategy

Комментарии • 80

  • @PokerCoaching
    @PokerCoaching  Месяц назад +7

    Let me know if you have any more questions about ranges! 📈

    • @AlexD0513
      @AlexD0513 Месяц назад +1

      Thanks for the videos they were a great help in studying for WSOP event in Tunica.Finished 3rd

    • @garrettmckuin7294
      @garrettmckuin7294 Месяц назад

      Great video man. Could you do one about positional play and how ranges differ preflop based on position?

    • @Chino-bk9fd
      @Chino-bk9fd Месяц назад

      you left out the most important and fun part! 2 tone and monotone flops! 😂 but great example for beginners

  • @MicaRobles-pc3px
    @MicaRobles-pc3px Месяц назад

    Glad to be back, you're still the man,Tks

  • @brettmorton6513
    @brettmorton6513 Месяц назад

    THIS MAY BE THE FLUCKING GREATEST POKER VIDEO I WILL EVER SEE!! MY CONFUSION WAS JUST CRUSHED LIKE A WEAK, FAVORABLE NL 1-3 CASH GAME!!! Love and thanks to you. Please come back to Stones in Antelope, Ca. in the near future brother Jonathen!

  • @UncleJoeLITE
    @UncleJoeLITE Месяц назад +1

    Thanks JL.

  • @garrettmckuin7294
    @garrettmckuin7294 Месяц назад

    Great video man. Could you do one about positional play and how ranges differ preflop based on position?

  • @kevinmclain6741
    @kevinmclain6741 Месяц назад +1

    Thanks Sir Little

  • @silentkaster
    @silentkaster Месяц назад +1

    Jonathan, although I don’t play NLHE yet very much (I play every other poker game) the few times I do, I always hear your voice and try to remember things you’ve said/mentioned about particular situations.
    By the way, will you be in Vegas the entire series? I will be there playing in a couple mixed events and would love to get my (your) book signed by you!

  • @jayvoncrunx8287
    @jayvoncrunx8287 Месяц назад +4

    Won my first MTT right now!! Again THAAAAAANK YOU YOU ARE THE MAN😀 After 1 month of adjusting to the new environment (only played for fake money before this) I am now steadily crushing it on microstakes

    • @PokerCoaching
      @PokerCoaching  Месяц назад +2

      Well done that's awesome!

    • @stinky3_
      @stinky3_ Месяц назад

      Would you say playing for fake money is worth it at all? Or should I go straight into microstakes for the risk factor?

    • @jayvoncrunx8287
      @jayvoncrunx8287 Месяц назад

      @@stinky3_ there are certainly things you can practice like bankroll managment and trying not to tilt for example, but people play very different when it's fake money so I think the microstakes is way better for experience. Also there is alot of freerolls on these sites so even if the money is short you can still play tournaments

  • @patrickzimowski9150
    @patrickzimowski9150 Месяц назад +3

    Always jump out of my seat when I see the new JL video notification!

    • @barygol
      @barygol Месяц назад

      Sounds like a boring life bro

    • @jayvoncrunx8287
      @jayvoncrunx8287 Месяц назад

      @@barygol maybe he just rly likes poker

  • @jamesjones2675
    @jamesjones2675 Месяц назад

    Thank you Jonathan

  • @EfficientRVer
    @EfficientRVer Месяц назад +4

    I really like this video for its simplicity and lack of assumptions about how the audience already thinks or plays. I also really like how it doesn't assume every opponent is using GTO ranges.
    I know one older player at Foxwoods who will never raise preflop with AK or even AK suited. When I say never, I mean 0.00% of the time. The amazing thing is that he is easily a breakeven player at 1-2NL in that pretty skilled-player casino, more likely a slight winner long-term. How can that be possible? One reason is that everyone rules AK, AQ, or even AJ out of his range when he limps preflop, then they overpay him when he hits. I'm not sure he realizes that his preflop play is being mocked when a player losing a pot to him says "Nice kicker, sir."
    With enough discipline yourself, against players who treat everyone as a generic/identical player, you don't need to play anywhere near a GTO game to be a winning player.
    At the other end of the spectrum, you can also abuse players who form the wrong table image of your play. Either by their being wrong, or falling for some deceptions you do, or just placing too much value on too few observations. One simple example is if they carefully track your VPIP for the first 15 minutes they play against you, then being either card dead or getting hit by the deck, gives them the wrong impression of you. If they enter a "player type" into their notebook, they might be misjudging your ranges for a long time before they realize their error.
    How to abuse players who literally pull a little black notebook out of their pocket, especially if they only do it during their first session against someone, might be a good topic for a future video. The ones who do it every hand, even after they've played against you for years, are a whole different story. But they are few in number.

    • @user-kb1hw2yq2f
      @user-kb1hw2yq2f 10 дней назад

      I could be wrong here but its never a good idea to limp with such hands. Many people like to limp. When you're limping w AKo, you're preflop equity might be just slightly above average of 4 or 5 other limpers.

  • @tphuynh85
    @tphuynh85 Месяц назад

    Always have mid pairs 77 to JJ. This helps

  • @WarrenD55
    @WarrenD55 Месяц назад

    Do you have any tricks for remembering multiple ranges for multiple opponents? I'm thinking of something like the old Hellmuth method I read in a book once where he categorizes each player as a type of animal. If there were a few different flavors of preflop ranges based on the players' category and you labeled them as "that type of player" I think it would help. What about remembering the ranges themselves? The chart looks a bit daunting to memorize.

  • @chrislee4392
    @chrislee4392 Месяц назад

    Are there any videos on blockers?

  • @dharryg
    @dharryg Месяц назад +2

    A player advances much deeper into a successful career once he realizes that he is not playing against an opponent with a mirror image of his own ranges in various positions.

  • @raziel0729
    @raziel0729 Месяц назад +1

    Can you do a video about the optimal poker ranges for full ring cash games?

    • @PokerCoaching
      @PokerCoaching  Месяц назад

      We have GTO charts at PokerCoaching.com!

  • @OddBall8888
    @OddBall8888 29 дней назад

    how do people go about studying charts and ranges and whatnot?

  • @0114mercury
    @0114mercury 2 дня назад +1

    Thanks for the educational videos! I have one question about GTO play: suppose I'm playing heads up trying to mimic GTO as much as I can. If the opponent at the end reveals cards that were not in the expected range, I could adjust his range estimates and try to exploit, but I can also make no adjustments and just say: "oh well, he didn't play GTO poker, otherwise his cards would be in the estimated range, so I'm profiting from his worse play". And this is a simple approach for study purposes, because I can focus on learning the GTO and not worry about my concrete opponent strategy. However, what to do if the opponent makes a move that is not part of GTO recommendation? E.g. opponent is an UTG preflop and makes a raise to an unusual amount of 37BBs, that solver never recommended for him. How should I proceed trying to play correct poker from that point on?

    • @PokerCoaching
      @PokerCoaching  День назад

      If the opponent deviates from GTO, you make money if you play the GTO strategy.

  • @vectoreyes
    @vectoreyes Месяц назад +12

    In my weekly family/friend game, the ranges are ridiculous. Some will raise or call with Ace high no matter what. Several of the players go all in with draws. It's crazy.

    • @nickcola4771
      @nickcola4771 Месяц назад +1

      Sounds like a family game to me lol......"all in" ok what do you have...."7 2".....ohhh grandma

    • @nickcola4771
      @nickcola4771 Месяц назад +7

      If she was playing online...she'd flop a boat somehow

    • @DavidMrKidcolombia
      @DavidMrKidcolombia Месяц назад +1

      ​@@nickcola4771The amount of times I've seen people with technically better hands lose to medium to week hands is ridiculous. Especially when it gets to the turn or the river

    • @AppalachianRancher
      @AppalachianRancher Месяц назад +1

      ​@nickcola4771 I was playing on full tilt poker I forget what stakes 2/3 maybe. In one week I got 3 straight flushes only to go all in and lose. After the 3rd one I was done with playing online poker for money.

    • @nickcola4771
      @nickcola4771 Месяц назад

      @@AppalachianRancher question.....how tf?

  • @RandyofWash
    @RandyofWash Месяц назад

    How many hands do you have to play with someone to be able to accurately assess their tells and tendencies to assign ranges?

  • @loganadolf7363
    @loganadolf7363 Месяц назад

    Hey Jonathan, I'm a novice & have a question...
    Say I'm at a table where I don't have too much specific player information yet. A middle position player open raises, & I call from BB. Flop comes something like Ah-Qh-7s. I check then pre flop raiser overbets pot...
    It seems to me the PFR has the range advantage & makes a mistake; instead of betting small with almost all of their range they put in a big bet, & I assume because most players aren't gonna make BIG bets nearly every time with all of their range, is that a situation where i can begin to put them into a more polarized range? i.e they flopped a great hand with the top part of their range/they are on some sort of draw & would be fine with me folding my hand?
    Obviously there are other factors that need to be considered with that player's tendencies (perhaps they never bluff & it's an easy fold or perhaps they just are terrible at bet sizing in general etc) but is this train of thought in the right direction?

    • @bradleyfarquhar1757
      @bradleyfarquhar1757 Месяц назад

      If they balance it with their worst hands too, it might work out just fine

    • @loganadolf7363
      @loganadolf7363 Месяц назад

      ​@bradleyfarquhar1757 why would they induce a fold with the top part of their range to begin with though? This board seems way better for the PFR to just bet smaller for value because I'm likely to have many more marginal hands in the BB unless I have that wrong 🤔
      For instance if they had the AQ monster they wouldn't want me to fold, & not need to balance a polarized big betting range with bluffs because they lose money if I fold to AQ in the first place
      Is my logic just way off?

    • @loganadolf7363
      @loganadolf7363 Месяц назад

      & as the BB player I think I'd just want to start by overfolding in that spot with most of the marginal hands that will rarely improve to nuttish hands, until I have information saying they're bluffing too much?

    • @bradleyfarquhar1757
      @bradleyfarquhar1757 Месяц назад

      @@loganadolf7363 I'm saying that if they balance their monster hands with their trash, it doesn't matter if you fold or call. because they'll win enough times to make it profitable by having you fold out hands with potentially higher value than theirs. they might have a heart flush draw, but it's only low cards. so they bet bigger because if you raisethey can fold more comfortably, and if you call you're likely going to check turn and they'll have the opportunity to see a cheaper river than if they had to double barrel. they could balance that with their top hands so that when you do call with your made hands, they're still ahead

    • @bradleyfarquhar1757
      @bradleyfarquhar1757 Месяц назад

      @@loganadolf7363 I would like to say, I'm definitely no expert. this is purely my understanding of it from watching many videos

  • @timothyishyc
    @timothyishyc Месяц назад

    Quick questions...
    1) How to assign ranges to more than one players?
    2) How to memorize these ranges?

    • @beanhoudini
      @beanhoudini Месяц назад

      1) the same way you assign a range to one player
      2) with experience

    • @timothyishyc
      @timothyishyc Месяц назад

      @beanhoudini so i guess i need to get better at 2 before i can do 1 🤣🤣 but also... the same way u do for one just mean u have to be really good at remembering the actions 🤣🤣

    • @beanhoudini
      @beanhoudini Месяц назад +1

      @@timothyishyc lmao it def takes some getting used to and concentration
      Experience is key tho, just don’t go broke tryna learn 🤣🤣

  • @CesarGomez-kp5lm
    @CesarGomez-kp5lm Месяц назад

    Where can i play poker online without betting or downloading stuff?

  • @carterbutler2535
    @carterbutler2535 Месяц назад

    Hahaha "ppl don't get loosey goosey and have a sandwich," daniel would be proud

  • @iulianirimia611
    @iulianirimia611 Месяц назад +1

    666 likes, poker iluminati confirmed

  • @kieranmagner3919
    @kieranmagner3919 Месяц назад

    What if my opponent says "Woohoo I have a straight?" Does this tell mean anything, or should I only read into it if they say they have a flush?

  • @harry011984
    @harry011984 Месяц назад

    That is not true. I can soul read them all.

  • @zeptime3473
    @zeptime3473 Месяц назад

    Where the deer and antelope play. Come on now, Let’s stick to poker!

  • @gunrok1779
    @gunrok1779 Месяц назад

    It's 2024, and we still can't play online poker legally in most states. BOOOO!

  • @authorjack
    @authorjack Месяц назад +1

    They are called hold cards not whole cards

    • @EfficientRVer
      @EfficientRVer Месяц назад +11

      Hole cards, meaning "in the hole" face down. If you were trolling for someone to correct you, we're all waiting for the punch line.

    • @DrMentosFreshMaker
      @DrMentosFreshMaker Месяц назад +2

      Texas wholesome

    • @authorjack
      @authorjack Месяц назад +1

      @@EfficientRVer we always called them hold cards because you're holding them. That's where the term "holdem" comes from

    • @denisfolcik1373
      @denisfolcik1373 Месяц назад +3

      ​@@authorjackit's 100% "hole cards". I have no idea where the name Texas Hold'Em came from but I highly doubt it's what you said, since you don't actually hold your cards.

    • @authorjack
      @authorjack Месяц назад

      @denisfolcik1373 some people do. Especially back then