Yeah my all-in graph is below this post. There were a lot of spots I was glad I was 50bb deep rather than 100. It made my decisions easier with TPGK hands just like fnord said.

KingNat:

This strategy is about making the best hand as fast as possible while your opponents are still drawing. So playing drawing hands is obviously not the correct methodology. Flop hard, go all in, get paid.

So high cards that make TPTK and overpairs are going to be your bread and butter, along with the 22-TTish type hands you play for set value (speaking from a full ring point of view). Suited connectors and the like are imo only suited toward stealing blinds and I guess calling along with other callers. Maybe a PFR and 2 cold callers and your 56s is playable.

But most of the time with suited connectors youre NOT going to flop a made hand, youre going to flop a draw. And drawing is not the point.

The main mistakes I made during that 1200 session:

1) 3 or 4 stacks to bluffs. A few bluffs I attempted did indeed work, but overwhelmingly I don't think they're worth it. People call. We want them to call. We should not then expect them to fold. Thats idiocy.

2) Too much drawing. If you have a draw worth drawing to (which would have to be a big draw, definitely >9 outs) then you should just shove and add on *some* folding equity.

3) FR players don't really defend their blinds. When someone at the blinds suddenly plays back at you especially as a shorty, you need to have the goods. There is no room for a game of chicken.



My allin chart for the last session: