Getting Wrecked in a $2/$5 Wynn Session- Poker Vlog #11

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After busting a Venetian tournament earlier in the day, I head over to the Wynn $2/$5 cash game and things do not go well.

Here’s a fun podcast interview I did with CardsChat:

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Getting Wrecked in a $2/$5 Wynn Session- Poker Vlog #11

10 thoughts on “Getting Wrecked in a $2/$5 Wynn Session- Poker Vlog #11

  1. Have you ever lost to the same opponent over and over again and felt like they were owning your soul? Asking for a friend…

  2. The muck was bad for two reasons, not just one. Yes, you want the information as to what she was playing but you also want to show the table that you don't always play just premium hands. Your image at the table is important. For me, maniacs are hard to play against because you don't know if they are doing it with the nuts or with 72o. You might want to study a couple books on poker tells, Mike Caro has some good stuff. If one or two players are always three or four betting you, they might have picked up something you are doing that you aren't aware of consider a seat change or even a table change. Everyone handles TILT differently, some have the mental discipline to keep playing good poker, others start steaming lose not just their stack but everything they have in their pockets too. I vape so I get up and go outside for a vape. If you don't vape or smoke, get up anyway and go watch the craps or blackjack table and try not to think about your bad beats or losing when you have the second nuts. Always remember that it is a part of poker, variance, and that what goes around will also some around.

  3. Sometimes the cards don't go your way and make you feel like your opponents know what you have or always have a better hand than you do. Ya can't be afraid of monsters under your bed.

  4. My assessment for what it's worth is you played the best you could given the situation. Not much you can do with a table full of players playing that loose, with reckless abandon so to speak and pretty much playing every single hand regardless of what they're holding LOL. At least you knew when to put the brakes on and just give up on a hand and get out as cheaply as possible, how many times have you seen players who play like that get lucky on the turn and or river n get away with playing questionable hands like that right. I really didn't see much wrong with your play, but as you said with that one hand, always make your opponent's show their cards (you need to get as much information on your opponents as possible right?) when you get the chance to force them to do so. Lesson learned for you I'm sure, just don't make that mistake ever again. To answer your question yes, I've been in that situation before several times when you seem to have that one player at a table that seems to just have your number that night and no matter what you do or how you play a hand, they just can't seem to lose to you. Your coach I think would be proud how you played n handled yourself in this session and I'd give you a grade of a B could've been higher but that rookie mistake of mucking your hand and letting your opponent get away from showing their cards was a bad one. Good luck in your next session and or tourney, looking forward to your next video and you have a good, safe n blessed day and I'm out.

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