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1. Yep 54o. Who cares just go ahead and do it. You are making a profit regardless if you fold always postflop which you won't. It's extremely easy to play. F it.
2. Yeah 6 handed ESP. when they are folding 390934% of the time you need to open up more. Take it step by step if you are uncomfortable but QJs is def. good enough.
3. K9o he'll fold to your initial raise often enough that I think it'll be +EV.
4. J5o had is at 16:30ish on the left table. The guy ends up limping on the button but you already had clicked "fold"
5. I think you played the 65cc hand well and probably most EV until the turn. Call turn! Go over pot odds again.
6. Been explained already and you basically have it covered. Unfortunately, I don't think you are really understanding a concept I tried to teach you in your old blog. "Shoring weak ranges" into strong ones. Regardless of the flop, would you rather have AA or 22 as the preflop caller against someone who cbets a lot? Should definitely be AA. Here we are forming a strong range against his weaker cbetting range. You can see this concept being flown around all over FTR. ISF basically calls this the ISF Low Stake's Theorem and you should read about it in the strategy article at the top. Form strong ranges against lines that will be aggressive. Since he's so tight he'll be aggressive a lot postflop thinking he has the goods. There's another concept I don't really have time to talk about involving this hand but basically you are making the mistake if you aren't adjusting correctly to his ranges.
Here I'll post edits after watching some more:
edit 1: you have 77 at the 27 minute mark. You immediately c/f turn saying he probably hit a flush. He has most likely 1 combo of flush draws. DUCY? I b/c. I'll explain why after you explain why. (BLAH just saw sample size but let's play the WHAT IF game). Regardless he probably only have a few combos. More combos of PP/Ahi crap.
Last edit:
37:00 - reasoning for 3betting AQs vs. the nit?
37:33 - you automucked J8s on the BU
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