TIPS To CRUSH From The SMALL BLIND

Texas Holdem Tips Video Source & Information:

Playing from the small blind can be extremely difficult as you will always be out of position and therefore first to act postflop. I decided to sit down with PokerCoaching coach Justin ‘JustGTO’ Saliba to help you crush from the small blind!

We analyze an interesting spot from a $10,000 PokerGO Poker Masters tournament and we show you what adaptations you should make to help maximize your advantage at the poker table!

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TIPS To CRUSH From The SMALL BLIND

10 thoughts on “TIPS To CRUSH From The SMALL BLIND

  1. What hand do YOU think the opponent had in this spot and HOW did you come to that conclusion?

  2. Thanks for this video. I tend to agree with Jon that te sizing on the turn could have been bigger. I dont think that vilain's calling range is very different between 20K and 25 or 28K, you get more value turn + more calls river (the shove river is now less than pot size).

  3. This one was exceptionally enjoyable Jonathan. It was nice to see a pro who did not necessarily lineup with your thinking. These videos actually help a lot. Thanks for posting them. To me the hijack play the story just like ace king ace queen and 44. I really thought that he had ace king or 44. Easy game.

  4. Not good enough to leavd there yet. I am definitely a check call almost any bet from that position with that hand.

  5. I think the guy the younare helping here Jonathan is not the brightest bulb.
    He makes up his own terminologies, and he says after 6 comes down how HJ could have a set of 9 or 6's?
    He really thinks HJ would have taken pockets 9s or 6s to the river with those bets?
    I think I would like to play poker against the friend you were helping here Jonathan……

  6. When opponent takes a lot of time folding and states he'd would have snap-folded against anyone else, I presume he thinks of me as a frequent bluffer and I probably adjust my bluffing frequency down a little against him. Whereas if he had snap-folded, and I don't think he has a missed draw, I'd assume he thinks I don't bluff that much and I'd increase my frequency. Likewise when making a tight fold (like his alleged AK in this hand,) I'd make a manipulative statement. If I want to lower his bluffing frequency, I claim I folded A4, but would have definitely called AJ. There is very little downside to trying to create a false table-image by mixing some lies or misleading statements in with your honest ones. Players who don't know you may believe them.

  7. I would love to see your analysis of the same hands but the straight doesn't come in.

  8. Had to re watch this to see your facial expressions in certain spots…we agree alot 💯

  9. I was thinking a strong king when he raise the flop bet, and also calls turn. Easy fold to the river jam in that case, because in my opinion people who 3-barrel on such a wet board almost always have it. By "it" I don't always mean the absolute nuts, but many sets, many two-pair and such.
    I think I might check-call the flop, and check the turn because if I suddenly lead turn after QT 'gets there' I think it signals the hand. Maybe this line does not get enough value when the draw gets there. On the other hand, doesnt put too much money out there when the draws miss. The flop raise tells me that he at the very least hit the board (or gives hero 0 credit for anything), so calling and then missing the turn feels rough. I would be interested to hear JustGTO's approach if the turn had been a 7 instead of a 9. Can you bully villain off his strong king by repping a set, or will you have to give the hand up here?

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