Tournament vs Cash Game: Strategy Differences | Learn with Lex

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So do you know what happens when a poker tournament expert tries out cash games? Well… now you do! Subscribe to my channel for more videos: https://bit.ly/SubscribeToLex

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Tournament vs Cash Game: Strategy Differences | Learn with Lex

10 thoughts on “Tournament vs Cash Game: Strategy Differences | Learn with Lex

  1. I´m a cash game player and IMO the transition from cash to tournament is more difficult, in cash you almost always play a 100bb strategy, whereas in tournaments you play various stack sizes, there´s ICM and payout implications to consider.

  2. Would love to see a Satellite strat video, for low stakes like 1dollar to 10dollar tournaments etc.

  3. I play fast-forward cash games, which format this seems to be so ranges are tighter as people fast fold until they have a strong starting hand. So you have to play even tighter ranges or call small pairs/suited connectors to try and stack someone who has a big overpair

  4. The guidelines you give are good ones and the larger the stakes the more what those guidelines matter. As stakes go down you get a lot of lmping, overcalling and weak hands opening out of position. Know your table, you can break the rules BBZ gave you because the players allow you to. Also, nits are noticed! If you don't play enough hands, you get no action. So if you are card dead, you still have to play some bad hands even if the rules say fold. For sure cash is way different. I love 6 handed ring games.

  5. 19:56 i think this is a must barrel, and it improves equity. protect/charge overs with club, and this is a 3bet pot…fight for it. OTR dial him

  6. My strategy for cash games is find the bluffer. Appear to be a bluffer also. Go a few rounds with the bluffer allowing them to feel comfortable bluffing you. Then you lay the hammer down when they least expect it. The added bonus is that the other people think you are a bluffer also and sometimes get caught up in a profitable hand. There is usually at least 1 bluffer per table. It seems it's a mind game in cash games and you just have to watch out and pay attention to the people that don't love around so you don't get burnt yourself.

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