3 HACKS To BUILD A BIG Stack! [Poker Tournament Strategy]

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  • Опубліковано 1 сер 2024
  • Learning how to build a big stack in poker tournaments will help make the difference between making a run to the final table rather than just scraping by with a min cash!
    In this poker strategy video Jonathan is going to teach you 3 hacks to build a big stack in poker tournaments! Use these poker tips to help you become one of the chip leaders in a poker tournament rather than one of the short stacks!
    So many players run deep, but always fall short of the final table. They let their stacks dwindle down and never have a huge stack! In this poker tutorial you’re going to learn how to build a big stack in poker tournaments:
    - Preflop hacks and why nits typically don’t chip lead
    - Deep stacked postflop tips to stack more people
    - How to abuse the bubble & steal tons of pots
    If you want to build a big stack you have to stop being so tight preflop. You need to keep your opponents guessing! You do that by 3-betting often, looking to steal pots that don’t belong to you, and by fighting hard for pots preflop!
    When you’re deep stacked, position is everything! You get to control the size of the pot and put the last bet in. You have the most information on the hand as you will be the last one to act, this is extremely powerful. Imagine playing a game of rock paper scissors but your opponent had to make their move before yours? You would win every time! Position is power! Focus on playing wide ranges when you’re in position and use the deep stacks to your advantage!
    Too many players are so happy to cash in a poker tournament that they just watch the blind levels increase and their own stack decrease throughout the bubble period! Min-cashing in a poker tournament should not be the goal. The goal should be to make the most money that you can so make sure that you are battling hard as the bubble approaches!
    Very often in small stakes tournaments, the person with the chip lead doesn’t totally realize the pressure that they can put on other players. So once you recognize a passive chip leader, it’s time for you to act as if you’re the chip leader and crank up the aggression!
    0:00 - Intro
    1:20 - #1 - Don’t Be A Nit Preflop!
    3:01 - Increase Your 3-Betting Frequency
    7:14 - Defend Your Big Blind Very Wide
    11:06 - #2 - Play Pots In Position When Deep Stacked
    11:45 - Poker Hand Example #1 - 86ss
    17:09 - Poker Hand Example #2 - K5ss
    20:06 - #3 - Stop Over-Valuing A Min-Cash
    20:53 - As You Approach The Bubble - Gamble HARD!
    22:56 - Take Advantage Of Passive Chip Leaders
    23:25 - Poker Hand Example #3 - A5o
    25:18 - Poker Hand Example #4 - A5o
    28:16 - 3 Hacks To Build A Big Stack
    On this Poker Coaching channel we cover a weekly poker topic to help improve your poker strategy!
    In order to take your poker game to the next level it is vitally important you learn all the nuances of the game.
    Do you know what ranges of poker hands you should be playing from each position? When should you 3-bet, call or fold? When is the right time to make a hero call or a huge bluff? Do you know how to play preflop, flop, turn & river effectively and how should your poker strategy change depending on the street? What difference does it make if you are playing multi-way vs heads-up?
    #pokerstrategy #pokertournament #poker

КОМЕНТАРІ • 143

  • @PokerCoaching
    @PokerCoaching  Рік тому +10

    What do YOU do to build a big stack in a poker tournament? 🤑

    • @knasttrast7168
      @knasttrast7168 Рік тому +12

      When I started playing poker I always went wild before the bubble burst, just went after nearly every blind. By the time someone dared to oppose me I had usually already doubled or tripled my stack so I could take a hit, sometimes I happened to have the better hand or just lucked out, making my already large stack even bigger. I won several tournaments with thousands of players this way. Then I started studying poker and I thought I was being too reckless, but I can tell you I have never since been close to as successful as I was back then so I have started to play more aggressive again. I think that most people dont play properly when they are in fear of losing their tournament life and that is something you should take advantage of.

    • @MugawumpTazer97
      @MugawumpTazer97 Рік тому +7

      Bluff in position and widen my ranges preflop. That's my plan when I do my very first WSOP tournament this summer. I am playing the $400 Colossus

    • @PissyKnish
      @PissyKnish Рік тому +2

      @@MugawumpTazer97 Good luck man!!

    • @nomilknosugar4900
      @nomilknosugar4900 Рік тому

      Unrelated question:
      Should you stop mixing when you know your opponent is unbalanced?
      I was commenting on a hand where villain open limps from EP, hero raises IP from CO with AA and villain calls. Heads-up, the flop was middling connected cards (T97 rainbow) and villain checks to hero and I said 'here we shouldn't c-bet very much because we don't have the nut advantage, but I don't mind mixing with AA'. Someone responded, 'villain is not playing close to GTO, so we shouldn't mix at all'. What do you think?

    • @craigerc713
      @craigerc713 Рік тому +2

      I just wait for pocket aces and fold everything else. Works every time.😊

  • @a7xdude87
    @a7xdude87 2 місяці тому +4

    watched this video, and for the first time in ages made it to the final table. Didn't realize how tight of a player I was. just a few well timed bluffs and 3 bets (and some luck at showdowns) and it was surprisingly successful. Thanks!

  • @heathstring9914
    @heathstring9914 Рік тому +20

    Thank you so much for these great tips! I regularly cash at tournaments however I have never won, I now realise that I am playing way too tight on the bubble and overvaluing a min cash! Will definitely put these tips to good use. Keep up the great videos!

  • @mikeyluk5113
    @mikeyluk5113 Рік тому +14

    I feel cheated…I’m an engineer and I thought this was literally about building tall, majestic stacks.

  • @nigelvarney4042
    @nigelvarney4042 10 місяців тому +2

    G'day Jono, another highly valuable coaching video. I must say, you have made and are making a very positive impact on my poker journey. On behalf of all of your students, thank you very much.

  • @Sebastian-bj3zg
    @Sebastian-bj3zg Рік тому +3

    Thanks again for this great lesson Jonathan, learning a lot here (and hoping to be able to apply it in the next tournament or cash game :) )

  • @westsidecourtesy9949
    @westsidecourtesy9949 Рік тому +5

    Always a pleasure to see new uploads from you, coach.

  • @EfficientRVer
    @EfficientRVer Рік тому +6

    Overall I agree, and I know I successfully struggled to learn these lessons the hard way before improving a lot.
    But on the flip side, I learned an equal amount from playing "survivor" tournaments where 10% of the field gets paid exactly the same amount regardless of stack size when the field reaches that size and the tourney ends. While a survivor tourney might give you exactly the bad habits this video tries to correct, it also shows you the incredible number of mistakes people make by automatically being overly aggressive in spots where it's not only unnecessary, but absolutely risks their tournament life in spots where they CAN coast into the top prize.
    In one survivor tournament with Will "The Thrill" Failla, someone shoved into his KK when he could coast to the win. He agonized for only 20 seconds, said "I'm the only player here who would ever fold this" and showed the KK as he folded. I laughed, looked at him, pointed to our two big-enough stacks, and he said "OK, two players here would fold it".
    I cashed in 1/3 of all the survivor tourneys I played. It sometimes teaches you who is a thinking player and who is on autopilot. It sometimes teaches you how to build a stack while you can, how to establish a table image to help you when you're card dead. It sometimes teaches you how to hang on by your fingernails for longer than you think possible, which can apply to laddering up in a real tourney when that has more EV than going for the win, due to your small stack and the dynamics between the bigger stacks. It also teaches you about situations where a smart big or medium stack will want to keep you around and even almost feed you chips, if it helps them abuse other players and force them to play hands rather than wait for you to be gone and ladder them up.
    Last but not least, if you play both cheap and expensive tourneys with the same pool of players, it pays to be more nitty at the cheap tourneys, so that in the expensive tourneys, your image carries over there, and you can have extra fold equity anytime you need to run a bluff. Especially because most players do exactly the reverse, splash around for small money and nit up for big money.

  • @shadylady2327
    @shadylady2327 Рік тому +5

    Hi Jonathan this video is awesome and I love your candor and straightforward manner it’s so good! Learnt a lot 🥂

  • @civilman43
    @civilman43 29 днів тому

    Been getting close to cashing and just missing the money. Saved this vid thanks for producing it.

  • @steriopticon2687
    @steriopticon2687 Рік тому

    This is exactly where I am on my learning curve. Thanks.

  • @denisfolcik1373
    @denisfolcik1373 Рік тому +2

    Going to try the first tip a bit when I play next. Don't have much of an issue getting to, or atleast close to the money most of the time, just can't seem to get there with a big stack often enough. It however has atleast given me enough practice at nursing a short stack haha.

  • @KarlenBell
    @KarlenBell 11 місяців тому +2

    8:30 That music added was a good touch 😂

  • @arminlangenscheidt6139
    @arminlangenscheidt6139 Рік тому

    Helpful Tipps.
    Thank you, Jonathan!

  • @aching6652
    @aching6652 3 місяці тому

    I watched this vid and another one before a tourney and won it using your different levels of stacks = different levels of aggression and when to play and not to. Appreciate you!

  • @billzepp69
    @billzepp69 Рік тому +37

    You should do a video about building crazy castles when you have a massive chip stack lol. Haven’t seen an elaborate creation with a giant stack in a while.

    • @DustinJames-mk1gl
      @DustinJames-mk1gl Рік тому

      I'd build a wall to hide behind so my opponent can't get any reads
      200IQ play

    • @tcandrewtam228
      @tcandrewtam228 Рік тому +1

      I was here to see a huge chip castle, but I’m sad now 😢

    • @buckleup8962
      @buckleup8962 Рік тому +1

      Hahahah with the video photo, I thought this was what it would be about, building a literally chip stack hahaha

    • @hushpuckena126
      @hushpuckena126 Рік тому

      rofl

  • @oquic
    @oquic 24 дні тому +1

    Im glad I'd i was right i had AK the near the bubble 10 bb the Chip leader put me all in i call he had pushing around he had A5 he hit his 5 o well

  • @benallen4668
    @benallen4668 Рік тому +5

    You tend to espouse significantly smaller 3bet sizes IP and OOP than pretty much any other training authority I’ve found. It would be interesting to hear an exposition on the reasons for that disconnect.

    • @Pyrrhic537
      @Pyrrhic537 Рік тому +1

      I thought 4X was standard but add 1bb for each limper plus 1 bb for OOP. Jonathan did say it would be fine to go higher on the A5 8bb/64K 3 bet. Think he said 70 to 80K/8.5 to 9bb.

  • @jasse389
    @jasse389 Рік тому +1

    Gr8 video man! Could you please explain what the reason is that you should be blasting on dynamic boards?

  • @Dumpst3r09
    @Dumpst3r09 7 місяців тому

    Very informative video! Thank John!

  • @Malcolm_Way
    @Malcolm_Way Рік тому

    Thank you for the information 🎉

  • @ianshirreffs5604
    @ianshirreffs5604 2 місяці тому

    Man, did you just light my fire. I know this is what I'm supposed to be doing because I do at a low frequency, but now I'm going to increase my frequency. Thanks, Jonathan. I'm not going to be a maniac, but I definitely comprehend what you're saying.

  • @bartsupino813
    @bartsupino813 Рік тому

    Great info time to put this to work

  • @Eliht01
    @Eliht01 Рік тому

    Thank you coach!

  • @energyhealerJJ
    @energyhealerJJ 10 місяців тому

    Thanks for sharing

  • @sergiobernal553
    @sergiobernal553 16 днів тому

    Hi Jonathan.
    I like your tips I think have a little problem I am so aggressive player I win couple small money tournament s but always want to get to the big ones but I need help

  • @TheOlimpian666
    @TheOlimpian666 7 місяців тому +1

    Hi Jonathan. I tried to re-raise every time i got those hands, and i was about 35% of the time in the pot, not quite every hand or something like this, but the thing is very soon folks at the table started to realise i fuck around. What you do when people at the table starts to get your game, what do you recomend?

  • @brettbaker8357
    @brettbaker8357 Місяць тому

    I’m confused between #1 and #2
    First said 3 bet more with suited connectors to balance your range and steal pots
    Then tip #2 with 86s you called the 2.5 raise in position.
    Are we flatting our draw heavy sneaky middle/low card hands in position?
    The bottom of our range for 3 betting in position should be T8s or A suited / A9o? 88+?
    And call with all middle low pairs and fold?
    I thought the strategy was basically 3-bet or fold, im looking for the situations in which it’s best to call instead of 4x 3 bet
    Amazing videos thanks

  • @patrick6455
    @patrick6455 Рік тому +2

    Can you do a video on how to exploit limping players in MTTs?

  • @wompwomp7177
    @wompwomp7177 Рік тому +1

    I used to play on ignition but now that I use ACR and I can play in BB instead of chips my bet sizings have gotten so much better. It’s a lot easier for me to 3bet a min raise to 6bb in position and then 7bb plus OOP. On ignition I definitely was only making it 5-6.5bb which is absolutely horrendous lmaoo

  • @bazzza4613
    @bazzza4613 Рік тому +1

    The smaller stakes I play the more does agression work before bubleplay. Last night I got to raise 8 times in a row before some one shoved on me.

  • @rasputinbrown9831
    @rasputinbrown9831 10 місяців тому

    Thanks for the tips!
    Thanks to his videos and guides I wouldn't be here at the bank right now!
    Cashing out this bank loan.

  • @zeus000.00
    @zeus000.00 10 місяців тому

    What would you do as SB with a 3-bet (10BB) bluff like T8s after a 17BB 4-bet by BTN, a player who seems to always 4-bet to low (small sample) but you don't know if they actually 4-bet wider than a ~23bb GTO 4-bet range? (100bb deep, equal stacks, no rake or ante, probably weak opponents or a strong one that is playing very exploitive agains a weaker field).

  • @benc4374
    @benc4374 Рік тому +1

    I watched this two days ago and just won a bounty hunter tournament last night 1/2238 players. These hacks are incredible!!

  • @marco_9325
    @marco_9325 6 місяців тому

    Deep in a mtt with icm and a shorter stack do a lot of hands in the sb v bu range become calls over 3b??

  • @sternbergjoe
    @sternbergjoe Рік тому +1

    Jonathan, it seems interesting that these charts say to 3bet A5o, but not A6-A8o when you're in BB to a Button raise. @8:40
    It seems like those 3bets would be just as profitable in reality vs theory.

    • @aleph4263
      @aleph4263 Рік тому +6

      A5o is bigger than A6o because A5o can form a streight, while A6o cannot.

  • @sambrightbart489
    @sambrightbart489 5 місяців тому

    Agree with tips 2 and 3. I'm sure tip 1 can work in some tournaments/metas, but in all my experience of live low stakes tournaments I've found that most players have loose limping ranges but tight raising ranges, so it doesn't really make sense to 3-bet bluff those players because they are always either calling or 4-betting, and basically never folding. Would be interested to hear if this matches other people's experience too.
    Perhaps the equivalent exploit in those scenarios is to raise bigger and more often against multiple limps, especially in position?

  • @mortenbonde5411
    @mortenbonde5411 Місяць тому +1

    great video, super helpful

  • @paulriddell2585
    @paulriddell2585 Рік тому

    Best poker video guy there is

  • @john78lewis
    @john78lewis 11 місяців тому +3

    the 69s sound effect 😀

  • @ChristineMenthPoker
    @ChristineMenthPoker Рік тому

    Ty JL Without watching the video 1st I believe players don't look at betting as accumulating chips to build a big stack.. they bet to just win the hand therefore leaving massive amounts of value in their opponents stacks and not theirs. Like how some players are just happy to win a tiny pot pre flop w JJ or AA because they don't want to lose with them. Ty again

  • @ItsEverythingElse
    @ItsEverythingElse 11 місяців тому +3

    People don't really fold much to a 3-bet that often. You better have a really strong hand if they call or 4-bet. Sometimes I'd rather have 78s than AK in that spot and hope I smash the flop. If you do smash it you may get all their chips if they have two over cards to the board.

    • @ronaldmcdonald1977
      @ronaldmcdonald1977 6 місяців тому

      lol. 100%. Im in a tourney now and people arent afraid of 3 betting. Theyll go all in and its like a trigger to make others go all in.
      This stuff works with conventional old players. With the young blood entering the ranks, they arent afraid at all.

  • @francozamboli3850
    @francozamboli3850 8 місяців тому +2

    I don’t understand why Little focuses on 6 handed poker (online) when most games are 8 to 9 handed especially in tournament a

    • @PokerCoaching
      @PokerCoaching  8 місяців тому +3

      Most online cash games are 6 handed. Also, most 8-9 handed games are effectively 6 handed when the first two people fold.

  • @Momenthshhsh
    @Momenthshhsh Рік тому

    Please can you analyse this spot for me and tell me what I should do? I raise K9 of diamonds in the CO, the Bb calls, flop is Q34 two diamonds, Bb checks I bet half pot, he calls, turn is a 4, it goes check check, river is the Ace of diamonds, giving me the nut flush, bb checks, I bet pot, he goes all in, this is a tight player with very low VPIP, solver says 100% call but is it? Board is Q344A 3 diamonds I have K9 diamonds? Should you call the shove

  • @sawg4607
    @sawg4607 Рік тому +1

    Is it just me or does Ax Suited seem to be extremely overvalued when they only work a small percentage of the time when called on after 3 betting?

  • @BeastBurger2024
    @BeastBurger2024 5 місяців тому

    I play online tournaments and never made the final table. I placed 88th place playing for 5 hours, another time 17th place playing for hours also. Sometimes it’s so stressful bussing out and never making the final table. I’ll try these tips and play a bit more aggressive and see how it plays out for me.

  • @johnnywilliams7427
    @johnnywilliams7427 Рік тому

    What do you do when you got pocket Queens and raise then somebody calls you with king 4 and hit the king and keeps on calling you

  • @EfficientRVer
    @EfficientRVer Рік тому

    It never hurts to stack a few wild drunks, though sometimes that requires a hero call, and I hate calling off and being wrong.

  • @MichaelJamesActually
    @MichaelJamesActually 2 місяці тому

    The thing that I had to realize, these bluffs have a much higher chance of going thru than normal. The players who normally call you down with Q-high have hopefully busted out by now.

  • @G0DofRock
    @G0DofRock 7 місяців тому +1

    I see a lot of people value betting so thinly at my local tournaments.
    I play pretty standard sizings, but last week this maniac goes all in for about $1125, guy to his left calls, and I just call with A4s flushdraw on the flop. I figure the other guy has at least 2-pair or flushdraw.
    Frontdoor flush gets there and I value bet $3k into a pot of $3400 and the old guy says "You bet over the size of the pot..." to which I say "Pretty sure I didn't overbet..." and he says "you bet too much, I can't call you even with my flush." And I just laughed my ass off, like how nitty can you be? I'm gonna run you over! Especially with my bluffs. They just wanna see a cheap river and maybe have to debate calling blockbets they are comfortable with.

  • @davidasquino2411
    @davidasquino2411 11 місяців тому +1

    Can I celebrate my IT if I did it with ONE ANTE.? 😂😅😎

  • @MrZola1234
    @MrZola1234 10 місяців тому

    Much more valuable than 60bb charts is 20bb or 30bb 3 betting charts... because that's where even big stacks live after 3-4 levels of most tournaments

  • @tylercarder581
    @tylercarder581 Рік тому

    This video has showed me I'm a Nit. 😅 I haven't 3 bet in over 6 months.

  • @mgrizz1123
    @mgrizz1123 5 місяців тому

    “Sixty-nine suited”
    Hahhahahhahhahahaha!

  • @Jermo484
    @Jermo484 Рік тому +2

    Good video, but I'm not sure about your JJ versus AK thing. Not because that exact scenario is wrong, but because that's not a realistic thing that happens. At most lower stakes tournaments, no one's ripping it in with 50 bb on the bubble with AK. So even though I'd call with JJ if I knew I was flipping, JJ is definitely not even close to flipping against a 50 bb jam from the average rec tournament player. If YOU jam there, I'm snapping it off because I know you'll play better, but not against players at my local casino $250 buy in tournaments.

  • @jacobnorman6242
    @jacobnorman6242 Рік тому +1

    Going down to WSOP here in a couple days to play the 500 freeze out. Thanks for the tips @PokerCoaching

  • @DCScotto
    @DCScotto Рік тому +1

    Is this 3-betting advice mostly for high-entry tournaments? I play a lot of low-entry tournaments online and virtually nobody folds pre-flop to anything short of an all-in raise, and even then you can expect to get called about half the time. Pot stealing just isn't a thing in low-entry tournaments.

    • @Zach-lz1zh
      @Zach-lz1zh Рік тому

      Same thing with me. I play a $20 daily tourney by my house and there are some degen gamblers that get mad you raised over them and just stick it in with 10 8 suited 50bb deep💀

  • @peteradnell
    @peteradnell Рік тому

    Saw people folding aa preflop before wsop bubble. Jesus!

  • @NineInchTyrone
    @NineInchTyrone Рік тому +57

    Shoved KK ran into AA. Shoved 55 ran into AA Shoved AA into 66 who rivered a flush.

    • @SydneyScream
      @SydneyScream 7 місяців тому +11

      He said to 3 bet not to shove everything lol

    • @NineInchTyrone
      @NineInchTyrone 7 місяців тому +1

      @@SydneyScream down to 10-15 BB in a tournament 2/3 of field already out 3 bet fold leaves me with no fold equity next shove

    • @pokerqAK47
      @pokerqAK47 6 місяців тому

      @@NineInchTyroneso? Rebuy 😄

    • @user-ki2nx9bd2u
      @user-ki2nx9bd2u 6 місяців тому +3

      Was his 66s suited? Happened to me

    • @moss1245
      @moss1245 5 місяців тому +9

      *That's poker folks*

  • @virtualjoker9036
    @virtualjoker9036 10 місяців тому +2

    Tough to do when everyone watching this is doing the same thing against you..

  • @----sssxxxddd----7975
    @----sssxxxddd----7975 Рік тому

    Hey Johnathan,
    What course would you recommend for someone who has played poker for many years but has never done any courses or study off the felt, and has just recently moved to a big city where I would like to play alot more live poker NLH cash games mainly at 1/3 stakes and also live tournaments. Mostly small buy ins ranging from 30 dollars- 250 dollars?

  • @young7931
    @young7931 Рік тому

    How to play when you draw dead for 2 hours and looking from 40bb stack to a 10bb?

    • @agauerm
      @agauerm Рік тому

      yeah I participated in a couple of live tourneys this weekend, it was the same thing in all of them. I started alright, then it's just bottom of the barrel hands (72, 73, 82, etc...), and then when something playable comes you wend up getting fucked at the river and losing lots of chips. And when you bluff like he is suggesting in the video, usually blows up in your face too.

    • @conorm2524
      @conorm2524 Рік тому

      Get your bluff on.

    • @young7931
      @young7931 Рік тому

      @conorm2524
      Yeah I 3 bet 10 9s or a5s then flop comes nothing I keep betting and make it large then get called down with J high.

    • @StevenBeales1
      @StevenBeales1 Рік тому

      You are not drawing dead but playing too tightly in a tournament - on button you should be RFIing 45%+ hands and more than that if 2 passive players in blinds. You should be defending 70%+ of hands in BB, including all suited cards, so you really need to play loose, aggressive poker in tournaments with an ante with bigger pots to fight for.

  • @knasttrast7168
    @knasttrast7168 Рік тому

    64k

  • @andrehoffmann9048
    @andrehoffmann9048 10 місяців тому +2

    Wow i just won a live tournament because of this video today! 2300 plus :D Thx bro:D

  • @deviongants3724
    @deviongants3724 Рік тому

    64,000

  • @El.Espartano
    @El.Espartano Рік тому

    This is for online tournaments I suppose.

  • @DamonTate-qb1pi
    @DamonTate-qb1pi 5 місяців тому

    High quality

  • @JohnFarmer-ph4iz
    @JohnFarmer-ph4iz 3 місяці тому

    Ok

  • @sternbergjoe
    @sternbergjoe Рік тому

    I was confused by the title, thought we were learning how to stack one's chips

  • @stacanmart
    @stacanmart Рік тому

    Why not 3 bet the 86 suited from the button in the first hand? Seems like the first 12 minutes of the video was focused on this, and then you nitted it up with 200 BBs! 🤣

  • @user-tq8vk9ib9q
    @user-tq8vk9ib9q 9 місяців тому

    64000

  • @hugivachit6441
    @hugivachit6441 Рік тому +2

    Step one buy in at 1-2
    Step 2 shove repeat until you double up
    Step 3 ask the dealer to convert all your chips to $1 denoms (they love that)

  • @user-cy6fo6rc9v
    @user-cy6fo6rc9v 11 місяців тому

    Ill try it... I have huge stacks 20 min in tourny, then I throw it all away.
    After breaks, im short stacked and tilting...
    I do feel this will help,,, 3x to 5x bets or BB raises...
    Agro, but not to agro...
    Much thanks Profi.
    A5, I think, I would fold in BB... 50/50
    Not worth the gamble...
    330k in chips, out of Position !!!

  • @yeomanadventures1549
    @yeomanadventures1549 2 місяці тому

    ...ah, 2nd place is last loser. Gr8 cast

  • @user-cy6fo6rc9v
    @user-cy6fo6rc9v 11 місяців тому

    wow.... it works... but AJ amd JJ are bad hands...
    Final table wait for final 3...
    then i must learn heads up poker...
    2day I won 1 tourny, 2ns in 2 tourny, 2 or 3 bummed out.
    $200 profit... half days work.
    7,7 Million Baby

  • @gregorysgarrison
    @gregorysgarrison Місяць тому

    Not to criticize, but it seems all of your vids are pretty much saying to play a tight range in position.

  • @racermike1946
    @racermike1946 8 місяців тому

    HI, IVE BEEN STUDYING YOUR YOUTUBWE TUTORIALS. YESTERDAY, USING YOUR COACHING TIPS, I WON A SMALL LOW STAKES TOURNAMENT AT MY CLUB, ROUNDERS HERE IN SAN ANTONIO, I ACCUMULATED A HUGE CHIP STACK AT THE FIONAL TABLE AND WAS ABLE TO BULLY THE OTHER PLAYERS INTO FOLDING BETTER HANDS BY THREE AND FIVE BETTING. THE BLINDS WERE 1K/2K/2K, I WOULD CONSISTENTLY FOUR OR FIVE BET THE BLIND AND ELIMINATED 6 OF THE 8 OTHER PLAYERS AT THE TABLE, EVENTUALLY WINING $640. THE FINAL HAND I HAD A-2 OFFSUIT, I PUT THE LAS OPPONNENT ALL IN HE CALLED, & I ENDED UP WITH QUAD ACES.

  • @mrg7998
    @mrg7998 8 місяців тому

    Since I started 3-bet I been getting crushed

  • @kylek982
    @kylek982 11 місяців тому

    I love Jack-Off suits

  • @ML-sj3gi
    @ML-sj3gi Рік тому +1

    The reason most players can go deep sometimes but not win is that only one person can win.

    • @999waves
      @999waves 11 місяців тому +1

      Bro what

  • @chriskirby7785
    @chriskirby7785 Рік тому

    The pauses between words makes this hard to listen to. Speak more fluently. Writes your lines down or something

  • @edwardlamb803
    @edwardlamb803 11 місяців тому

    Angry Johnny probably has some good info, no doubt that he copied from someone else, to promote his real-money maker..his amateur coaching empire. But my loss, I guess, I can’t stand listening to the angry copier man…

  • @theofficialCrybaby
    @theofficialCrybaby 3 місяці тому +1

    So you are encouraging people to be fish. Great strategy man. They might be able to build a stack early on getting lucky doing this shit but once things get serous later on if they have bad habits playing like this better players will crush....

  • @nine_fingers_mike
    @nine_fingers_mike Рік тому

    Quality videa Thanks a lot mate. Im going for 9 dsys5grind some mtt in UK feel good and lucky.