WCOOP Deep Run Hand History Review with Andrew Brokos (Part 5)
[Total: 20    Average: 8.7/5]

MORE IN THIS SERIES : Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Andrew Brokos (Part 1 | Andrew Brokos (Part 2 | Andrew Brokos (Part 3 | Andrew Brokos (Part 4 | Andrew Brokos (Part 5 | Andrew Brokos (Part 6 | ith Andrew Brokos (Part 1 | ith Andrew Brokos (Part 2 | ith Andrew Brokos (Part 3

15 Responses to “WCOOP Deep Run Hand History Review with Andrew Brokos (Part 5)”

  1. W1ispher

    again andrew love the detailed analysis, I was wondering, do you so same thing in your daily life eg when considering what to eat at a restaurant? lol

  2. cap

    the 79s hand, i think as played its an easy fold. your good there very less than 25% of the time. if the villain is decent, he always bet his air on the flop or turn, even hands like kj, k10, j10 that chops ,his betting the flop.

  3. GaryLQ

    Loving this series, video hand analysis is a much better learning tool than the audio (podcast) equivalent.

  4. Foucault

    Thanks, glad you’re finding it helpful! Not at restaurants but when it comes to purchasing anything from, say, Amazon, or deciding which restaurant to go to, I can easily spend an hour looking at reviews and weighing various factors. 🙂

  5. Foucault

    I take your point, but I also have to disagree that a good player “always” does anything. Any player that easy to read in such a common situation can’t be too good in my book. That doesn’t by itself make the call correct, I’m just saying.

  6. cap

    yeh agree, not always but in this spot 3bettor will cbet his air close to 100% of the time. anyways, enjoying alot all your videos!! you rock!

  7. redvulture61

    I think flatting 3 bets out of position with 66s and flatting 3 bets is just terrible. I just see people get owned when they do it. I just 4 bet or fold. Its hard enough playing out of position in a 3bet pot with initiative let alone without it. I love flatting 3 bets in position though im all for that.

  8. Foucault

    Just because you’ve seen some people not do it well doesn’t mean it can’t be made to work. If you never float a 3bet out of position, then you make it really cheap for your opponent to 3bet bluff you since even a min-3bet is going to put you to a 4bet or fold decision.

  9. HTM

    27:25 A5o You say you are betting to get it in against Stanar, but isn`t this a bet-fold even against 13bb stack preflop?

    31:30 AQo I understand you have balanced flattingrange, but wouldn`t it simply be more profitable to 3bet-fold. I mean sometimes you get bluffed by some worst hands(maybe A9s-AJs,AT-AJ) but most of the time you just gonna take the pot down with this “blockerbluff”.

    I play smaller tournaments so perhaps avg. opponent has wider 4bet range in this particular tournament and the stacks are perfect for opponents 4bet bluff?

    Very nice series again btw =)

  10. PokerGod

    First of all, love your videos, and joined site because you joined also. Long time loyal follower for 4 years.
    Could you follow your reasoning behind this hand? (Minute 25) J7s flat vs nofingclue (you have history with him being aggressive, why do you call with a difficult hand in first place 4.2 to 1 on odds) whats the weakest range of hand you play on this spot?

    You Chk-float flop is he bets? Its a hard flop to CB for him, the 4 turn doesn’t change much so he checks (I think this is has to be a bet on turn for you, showing possibly more strength than you have and reducing his range)

    Now the river K,, what range are you actually putting him, for bluffing? AJ, A10 hands might check for value (not many other i see needing for bluff on river if he didn’t raise before) I think it’s a very thin range he has like 88, pair of A9, K9s, AK, AJ, A10, all the suited connectors would had raise on flop or turn. (and I think K10 or KJ might be in his range also)

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