Thanks for watching! If you play tournaments, pre-register for the upcoming Road to Victory course by Darren Elias and Nick Petrangelo here: upswingpoker.com/road-to-victory-pre-reg/
really some of the best free content out there! straight to the point, well structured, comprehensive and yet easy to follow and practical to implement. keep up the great work!
this was one of my favourite episodes so far. it definitely helped me to finally better understand the difference between nut advantage and range advantage.
Amazing content, been a nice change seeing the consistent quality content come out. This type of top tier analysis from Doug years ago is what made me an upswing fan originally.
Great content :) The whole series is awesome. If I may suggest the topic for the next video, it would be great to hear about cbetting OOP (there was one about IP already, but I know that OOP play differs a lot)
pls explain smaller cbet sizes (on dynamic boards) in 3b pots !! ive always argued with my friend, coz intuitively i thought on easily-changing boards, a small sizing is best as a form of pot control, but he would always counterargue saying why not go for check simply, especially if hero IP? but i think theres utilities from a small bet that is not addressed by a check pls do an episode on this! much appreciated love the podcast so far
Assume value hands also include small flopped flushes. Curious about donk lead vs 3B OOP - ran this line the other day for two streets of value before opponent folded on the river. Why is C/R the preferred line when opponent can check thru to realize equity? Thanks for putting this together
Assuming you are talking OOP SRP, I think the small flushes check-raise significantly less often than the high ones because they suffer on 4 flush turns and rivers. Gonna depend on the exact board how often those smaller flushes are included in the flop range. In theory leading is higher EV, which is why the solver does it, but in practice it's very difficult to implement in an effective enough way to captures that EV. If you try to add a lead strategy to your game, you'll end up doing a lot of work for a very small gain at best. And if you mess up, you'll end up losing EV. We prefer to keep it simple when possible.
Playing monotone flops can be tricky, but understanding range advantage and board textures is key. It's crucial to stay disciplined and avoid overplaying marginal hands. Careful bet sizing and recognizing your opponent's tendencies will help you navigate these situations more profitably.
A good topic: when to check-raise with top pair... explain the GTO logic and explain how that should be implemented in low stakes live where human players don't bluff enough and usually when you check raise with top pair.. you only get called by better.
So then why check raise top pair in those spots? If villain doesn't bluff on flop in position, nor bet for thin value...why would you check raise top pair in spots like that? You'll get called by better and fold worse hands. Take an exploitative line with that.
I have always read that on "wet" or "dynamic" boards you should bet larger, the basic idea (overimplifying) being to force draws to pay too much if they want to see the next card. Doing a quick search seems to show this is a common idea as well. Is this outdated, or am I misunderstanding the video, or is something else going on?
I just listened Gary's advice about not being scared of doing something because of some possible negative result that happens with very low frequency. Now im jail for trying to cross the border with illegal drugs.. hope my dad bail me out and im never watching this podcast again
This content is amazing...! Glad to hear there are people that still care for the poker community sharing such great content, instead of talking poker trash and nonsense like Polk...SMH
Thanks for watching! If you play tournaments, pre-register for the upcoming Road to Victory course by Darren Elias and Nick Petrangelo here: upswingpoker.com/road-to-victory-pre-reg/
Good shit boys, I have one of your vids playing hours everyday. In thr car, walking the dog, playing online sessions etc. Mucho appreciated-o
really some of the best free content out there! straight to the point, well structured, comprehensive and yet easy to follow and practical to implement. keep up the great work!
These podcasts are great value
this was one of my favourite episodes so far. it definitely helped me to finally better understand the difference between nut advantage and range advantage.
So much value in this content. Cheers Gazzy and Mike!
A great episode to make, and one I learned a lot preparing for! Hope you guys enjoy
Thanks
you guys are putting some truly amazing content, thanks so much for it, keep it up
Great video. Thank you guys. Can you guys make a episode about how to play muti-way pots vs HU pots ?
Amazing content, been a nice change seeing the consistent quality content come out. This type of top tier analysis from Doug years ago is what made me an upswing fan originally.
Just killing it with these podcasts. Leveling up indeed... Thanks guys!
Thin value...my nemesis...great job
this is a real masterclass, thanks for the content
Absolutely love it!! Great Great content!! Keep it up, guys!!
These podcasts are so cool!
An episode on river betting would be super helpful.
Great content :) The whole series is awesome. If I may suggest the topic for the next video, it would be great to hear about cbetting OOP (there was one about IP already, but I know that OOP play differs a lot)
Will add it to our list! We have the next few already recorded so it will be a little while before we cover it.
Great stuff! Kudos boys!
Thank you for this information guys!
Great stuff! Thank you!
pls explain smaller cbet sizes (on dynamic boards) in 3b pots !!
ive always argued with my friend, coz intuitively i thought on easily-changing boards, a small sizing is best as a form of pot control,
but he would always counterargue saying why not go for check simply, especially if hero IP? but i think theres utilities from a small bet that is not addressed by a check
pls do an episode on this! much appreciated love the podcast so far
We happen to be recording an episode about when to bet small tomorrow! Will come out next week.
Assume value hands also include small flopped flushes. Curious about donk lead vs 3B OOP - ran this line the other day for two streets of value before opponent folded on the river. Why is C/R the preferred line when opponent can check thru to realize equity?
Thanks for putting this together
Assuming you are talking OOP SRP, I think the small flushes check-raise significantly less often than the high ones because they suffer on 4 flush turns and rivers. Gonna depend on the exact board how often those smaller flushes are included in the flop range.
In theory leading is higher EV, which is why the solver does it, but in practice it's very difficult to implement in an effective enough way to captures that EV. If you try to add a lead strategy to your game, you'll end up doing a lot of work for a very small gain at best. And if you mess up, you'll end up losing EV. We prefer to keep it simple when possible.
Discussion Topic Request: Runouts that cause check-check-check IP strategy and the properties that enforce this strategy.
Playing monotone flops can be tricky, but understanding range advantage and board textures is key. It's crucial to stay disciplined and avoid overplaying marginal hands. Careful bet sizing and recognizing your opponent's tendencies will help you navigate these situations more profitably.
A good topic: when to check-raise with top pair... explain the GTO logic and explain how that should be implemented in low stakes live where human players don't bluff enough and usually when you check raise with top pair.. you only get called by better.
So then why check raise top pair in those spots?
If villain doesn't bluff on flop in position, nor bet for thin value...why would you check raise top pair in spots like that?
You'll get called by better and fold worse hands.
Take an exploitative line with that.
Can you overbet turns after small flop bets with ace high king high flush draws
I have always read that on "wet" or "dynamic" boards you should bet larger, the basic idea (overimplifying) being to force draws to pay too much if they want to see the next card. Doing a quick search seems to show this is a common idea as well. Is this outdated, or am I misunderstanding the video, or is something else going on?
How do we get 1 on 1 coaching?
I just listened Gary's advice about not being scared of doing something because of some possible negative result that happens with very low frequency. Now im jail for trying to cross the border with illegal drugs.. hope my dad bail me out and im never watching this podcast again
3 bet to 80 in mp folds to the raiser who calls, 10 5 suited lolz
Great quote to maximize ev you gotta be put in tough spots
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This content is amazing...! Glad to hear there are people that still care for the poker community sharing such great content, instead of talking poker trash and nonsense like Polk...SMH
Lol
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Monotone refers to sound doesn`t it ?
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Next time I’m ever playing button vs bb I’ll remember all of this. Which is literally never. Ever.