Top 5 Best Poker Advice I’ve Ever Received

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Phil is back facing his new challenge (#102040Challenge) and has some excellent advice- in fact the BEST advice he’s ever received in his poker career (and now he’s passing it on to you!) from poker heroes like Tom Dwan and Tommy Angelo. Watch ’til the end to hear all of the important points Phil has used to build up his game and let him know here in the comments or in response to this tweet what you thought and want to see more of! https://twitter.com/PhilGalfond/status/1602377141705900041?s=20&t=YfPm_V4L6v2SQHP3kFNPJw

00:00 Top Five Best Poker Advice I’ve Ever Received
00:12 You’re Not Playing Poker to Try to Get Lucky, You’re Playing Poker to Earn Over a Long Period of Time
02:11 You Will Eventually Run Worse Than You Ever Thought Possible
04:05 Bluffing When You Have Something, Instead of Bluffing When You DON’T Have Something
05:30 Some Things are Just Supposed to Happen, Don’t Let it Effect You
07:13 No Matter What Your Opponent Does, it’s Just Another Turn for You to Make the Right Play

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Top 5 Best Poker Advice I’ve Ever Received
Producer: Thomas Deming-Henes
Post Producer: Anne Johnson
Music: DJ Spinello

Source: YouTube

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Top 5 Best Poker Advice I’ve Ever Received

10 thoughts on “Top 5 Best Poker Advice I’ve Ever Received

  1. I remember years ago you talking about Tom saying you should raise in that spot. My biggest lesson there was to talk to people I know in real life about hands. That was a huge help for me. Tommy did about a one hour interview on Poker Road back in the day with 2 hosts of some show that was on that site. Any idea where I could find that interview again? I probably listened to it about 20 times and sent it to many people. Thanks Phil, great video!

  2. The thing about being down 5k in that scenario is your win rate likely isn’t what your A game win rate is. You’re actually playing your C game most likely, which means you’re staying for an hour not for $67, but probably more like $20. Tommy taught me that as well. And the concept of reciprocity, which is huge.

  3. Hi Phil, learned a lot from you since Bluefire Poker, thank you very much! Can you please do a video about when to/not to slowplay the turn out of position? Since check/raising the turn shows a lot of strenght. Thank you, success in your new channel!

  4. My favorite–and the only one I wasn't already familiar with from other sources–was the last one. For some reason I'm remembering when I used to play pool seriously, and I'd botch a runout in an embarrassing way by getting the cue ball somewhere terrible instead of where I wanted it. I taught myself to pretend my opponent had just played a safety, or missed, and I was just now coming to the table. The balls are laid out in a bad way and it's my shot–what's the best play? I see that the same idea applies to poker. Every time it's your turn to act, you have a new chance to make a good decision. Thanks for that one!

  5. I just started seeing you on Twitter and finally found you here thanks for your experiences

  6. It says something that 4/5 of these are sort of meta-advice, and only 1 is strictly about how to play poker. Not sure what exactly it says, but definitely something.

  7. Stop being nice, Phil. You need to win the prop bet. Tell us to click the subscribe button and the notification bell to catch the next video. Do it now, dammit

  8. I love #5. Reminds me of some good advice I once got. I was taking a shot at higher stakes and I told my friend I was nervous about it. He shrugged his shoulders and said, "just play right." So simple, but it's the best advice I ever got.

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