WCOOP Main Event Warmup Hand History Review with Andrew Brokos (Part 5)
[Total: 10    Average: 8.9/5]

MORE IN THIS SERIES : Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 6

6 Responses to “WCOOP Main Event Warmup Hand History Review with Andrew Brokos (Part 5)”

  1. Chuck Blaze

    At ~13 min you shove from the small blind for ~40bb (too many ~?). Two questions :

    1) With your holding AKo what do you like doing if you were on the button?

    2) As played in the small blind. What are you doing with AQs, AQo, JJ, 1010?

  2. Foucault

    You have to think in terms of the size of the pot, not just the number of BB. If I were to call the raise, there would be ~20K in the pot and barely twice that in my stack, so there’s really no way I can put any chips into the pot here without committing them all. Any hand I played from any position (provided I hadn’t already put money into the pot, ie I wasn’t the pre-flop raiser) I’d be shoving with this kind of action in front of me. There really isn’t room to have a calling range or a range for 4-betting less than all in.

  3. Yagasmurf

    You mention that when an decision is close if you have a small stack you lean tighter and if you have a big stack, y ou lean more agrresively. How does this apply to early tournament play when you have a stack size in the 200BB + range (like a live tournament with 8000 chips to start and blinds at 25/50)

  4. W1ispher

    with regard to last hand 94os I would never be keen to call as there , as there are far too many flops which I would hate after he c bets flop.I understand that you are saying about being able maybe to take away flop if he has aq but I would guess this could only happen in the event of him checking the flop(more likely in gonna c bet). Also does this mean you are gonna defend any two in he bets into you from sb to your bb in future hands for your same reasoning(assuming similar stack sizes). Yet again a brilliant video from you Andrew, hard to better. Thanks

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