Late Game Play WCOOP Deep Run Hand History Review with Andrew Brokos (Part 6)
[Total: 29    Average: 9.5/5]

MORE IN THIS SERIES : Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5

11 Responses to “Late Game Play WCOOP Deep Run Hand History Review with Andrew Brokos (Part 6)”

  1. cliffvettej

    What the hell was all that noise on this video? Is someone running a vacuum cleaner under his feet? Are they mowing the grass right outside his window? Whatever it was it was extremely distracting and annoying.

  2. biju

    Really liked the series (first I’ve watched of yours as a new member) esp like the way you detail your thought process. Most enlightening for me were the two different ways of playing the pair flush draw with the the differing hand strengths that on first glance some might think the same. Will make me look at those scenarios in a different way and in much more detail rather than “great, pair and a flush draw, favourite lets get some chips in there”. I was initially shocked at the first one where you checked – until you explained why and it was like a light bulb clicking on.

    Anyhow my questions. Second flush/pair hand Starts @3.05. You talk of the overlay at 90k once he shoves.Is that correct with 55k in the pot and your 16k bet to include his 16k call as part of the overlay? I realise in this scenario it’s not changing the decision as a pot odds to equity call, but in some close instances with larger bets it would be. If so can you explain.

    How do you think villain played this hand versus your range. A x20 eff shove seems very high and surely only gets a call in terrible shape in a bigger buy in WCOOP Event? What’s the bottom of your calling range here? What is the max you would shove with his hand if roes were reversed and how would you have played his hand if differently?

  3. biju

    OK getting in a right mess here using the back button to delete and it’s taking me back a page rather than deleting.Ho hum.

    So ignore above comment. Hand is Part 6 but starts at 5.03 not 3.05. Mods feel free to clean this up and delte last two posts.

  4. JoStylin

    At the 10 minute mark I had that exact hand and flop recently and lost a set of 2’s to a set of 3’s causing me to lose just before the bubble. Still salty about that right now lol

  5. JDsk8s

    Hey Andrew. Great insight and nice job on these videos. Around 9:18, you are talking about your odds to set mine. Seems like you’re saying you need 10 to 1. I was under the impression that you need more like 20/ 1. Another coach told me this quite awhile ago, and I thought I heard you mention something about 20/1 in one of the earlier videos where I think you had 3’s. Thanks. Keep the good content coming. 🙂

  6. JDsk8s

    Hey again Andrew. Around 18:25 with the AQo, you use a smaller sizing with your 3bet than the previous hand you played with QQ. Is this because you’re willing to get it in with CO, and you want him to jam a wider range? Would you say this is exploitable vs better players?

  7. EladGordon

    HI Andrew! Q about last hand: you said you thought villain played the hand well; Can you explain why you think his turn bet is good?
    I mean I don’t think there’s value for him in betting unless you have the 99. And if you have flush draw with big cards, i don’t think a small bet is enough to get you to fold the turn.

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