Big Pot Review (part 2)

Posted by

You’re watching:

Big Pot Review (part 2)

user avatar

EluSiVeMark

Elite Pro

Video Player is loading.
Current Time 0:00
Loaded: 0%
Duration -:-
Remaining Time 0:00
  • descriptions off, selected

Resume Video

Start from Beginning

Watch Video

Replay Video

10

You’re watching:

Big Pot Review (part 2)

user avatar

EluSiVeMark

POSTED Apr 19, 2015

Mark picks up where he left off looking at hands where he won or lost 200+ BBs.

15 Comments

Loading 15 Comments...

motown 9 years, 11 months ago

not sure the purpose of this video.....how to run good? how to play the nuts? how to hit the nuts getting it in multi-way as a dog ? lol entertaining i guess

EluSiVeMark 9 years, 11 months ago

There were a few persons asking for a second part of the big pot review. I filtered for the biggest hands played, including the ones i lost.

The purpose of this video is how we can play certain, mostly nutted hands or draws with deeper stacks.

I think there are a few lines or sizes you can take from this video, although i agree this is not the most educational video i've made.

What do u like to see or learn in a future video?

ninj7878 9 years, 11 months ago

Mark or any other RUNITONCE-coach, could you be so kind and make a HH-review-video (format like this one) and filter for: BTN raises, hero defends in BB and does not fold to FLOP cbet?

then just try to get through as many spots as possible
and teach us JUST the most important thoughts in your eyes (don't play around with crev, gtorb, etc. trying to solve a single hand in 1hour - if you want to use such software, do it when you are trying to come up with a whole strategy to compete with in specific scenarios)

Thanks in advance

Koos 9 years, 11 months ago

I enjoyed this even though the individual hands did not have a lot of interesting decisions.

Based on your sample of big pot hands, sets seem to be by far the most predominant way to win the really big pots in 6max games. I was expecting to see a bigger proportion of the big pots getting won by straights (versus someone overplaying two pair or a set) and/or nut flushes (versus smaller flushes). Perhaps my intuition was off base because my experience is mostly in live nine-handed games where big multi-way pots with lots of pre-flop callers occur much more frequently.

Castro 9 years, 11 months ago

I did enjoy some parts of the video, but I agree that there were too many standard / cooler hands, that did not add any educational value.

For future similar videos I suggest you do not discuss every hand that meets the criteria, but that you select a few to include in your video.

patuxz 9 years, 1 month ago

I liked the vid.
Gave some insight into deep stack play. Also nice to see people make big bluffs or overplay TPTK/AA.
Always nice to see results from big hands!

patuxz 9 years, 1 month ago

31:05 Do you like his call with 77?
I think if you jam AsAx as a bluff, he would get correct price on a call. If we had 87s ourselves, we would just call.
AsKx might not cb flop. If we played it that way we would be overbluffing and I think his call would be very good.

EluSiVeMark 9 years, 1 month ago

I think i'd bet all the AsKx nowadays. Hands like 87 probably double barrel this turn. AsAx is i think in most cases a check but there could be something said about continuing valuebetting the turn.

I think vs an overbet we can only valuejam A high flushes. So we need to be carefull with bluffing and can only include a few Asx hands into our bluffing range. Maybe As and the A without an heart would be the way to balance our bluffingrange.

Be the first to add a comment

You must upgrade your account to leave a comment.

Runitonce.com uses cookies to give you the best experience. Learn more about our Cookie Policy