Studying HHs Through a Critical Lense

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Studying HHs Through a Critical Lense

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thejericho2

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Studying HHs Through a Critical Lense

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thejericho2

POSTED Mar 18, 2022

thejericho2 discusses seven tough hands from a recent $500 zoom session. Next to the analysis of the action-loaded hands, he illustrates his routine of reviewing critical spots with a solver.

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number1pigeon 2 years, 11 months ago

Really great video, loved the format. Isn't the J6s on JJ8 a clear river fold given your assumptions that we remove the Q3/22/33 bluffs from their jam range, or was that not enough combos to start folding 100% w/ our combo? How many players are really finding those and going for them on a board like this?

SoundSpeed 2 years, 11 months ago

Great analysis video! I like that you will explore other cards amd lines in your sims.

25:30 I notice j4 and j5 love to raise but the middling jx does not. Why is that?

48:10 opponent is supposed to jam or fold overprs on the turn and prefers jamming overprs with a heart. I figured it would be opposite because if he has a heart he blocks our draws making us more value heavy increasing the chances he value owns himself.

Thanks!

thejericho2 2 years, 11 months ago

Thank you v much for your comment.

I believe that J4 and J5 are raising a lot because they are not blocking villain's bluffs (Q9, 98, 87), so they get extra value from raising when villain has to bet/call those.

As for jamming overpairs w a heart vs overpairs w/o a heart... I too thought like you at first. I'm not sure why. Like, if the board wasn't paired, I kind of get it because when IP bet/calls hearts vs the overpair jamming ott, if you have a heart in your hand, he has one less out right (you have better equity basically)?

But on a paired board, this logic doesn't apply. So i'm not even sure if this makes sense.

matlittle 2 years, 11 months ago

34.07 - 87hh on J95hh4Q
87hh is in the shoving range on the river as it blocks T8hh that BB can play as XC XC twice with the combo-draw. This happens quite often in fact - the flush draws that get bluffed first on the river by IP will be busted flush draws that block rivered straights if they block BB's hands that check called twice with combo-draws and managed to river the nuts. These hands are way higher in the river bluffing hierarchy than regular flush draws. Note that it goes in the shoving range, not the B75 range too. And as you spotted on this particular river IP doesn't give up any bluffs as the Q is so good for IP.

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