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How to Train: Blind Play and Sizings

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How to Train: Blind Play and Sizings

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Frankie Carson

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How to Train: Blind Play and Sizings

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Frankie Carson

POSTED Sep 16, 2024

Frankie Carson uses GTOW to train specific scenarios this time turning his focus to blind v blind play and looks to establish heuristics for success in these tricky situations.

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SoundSpeed 7 months ago

Hey Frankie,

Appreciate the b vs b drilling. It is definitely something I am not well studied in.

29:00 so I'm trying to break this down to something more basic. It seems on the t93 board the nuts are more evenly distributed and as such we don't have that advantage so we bet smaller. On t73 we have a nut advantage and so we use more large sizes. Is that correct?

Thanks!

Frankie Carson 7 months ago

Of course Sound!

So I fudged up in the sense I didn't allow for overbet strategy on T95 when I was looking it up. It does like to overbet a lot more on T95 vs say T75. It has to do with IP 3betting more 99/T9 vs T7/77. I would say though this isn't a nuanced type spot. This patter shows up in many SRP situations.

Truthfully, you can't go wrong choosing any of these strategies. If you pick one, just understand how to construct your range based off that sizing.

777TripSevens777 7 months ago

Frankie,
Fun and interesting video on BvB play/drilling. What do you think about drilling very specific board textures, for example Axx or Kxx and so on, verses random board textures that simulate actual play for learning how to play BvB? Do you think you get a better understanding of the various spots by drilling one texture at a time or just getting in there and playing as many different spots as possible and trying to see what you need to work on that way?
Thanks Frankie.

Frankie Carson 7 months ago

Thanks Sevens. Unless you see yourself as very deficient on certain boards, I am not a fan as you are priming your mind to play the spot which isn’t reality. I don’t think it’s a great way to learn in general.

777TripSevens777 7 months ago

Frankie,
Thanks for the input. I have used both methods and have found each to be useful for the same reasons you stated. I do enjoy the random board/real world practice more, but you sometimes run into some less common spots that can make sense to drill a little bit (or at least take extra time analyzing). Enjoyed the content.

Thanks again Frankie.

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