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 Originally Posted by ponyboy
 Originally Posted by Robb
 Originally Posted by ponyboy
Great post - really puts things in perspective. Thanks!
Your welcome.
 Originally Posted by ponyboy
Great post - really puts things in perspective. Thanks!
Your welcome.
Whoops.
I mean
Whoops.
I LoL'd :P
 Originally Posted by ponyboy
So what's the best way to study post flop play? This is something I' m really trying to work on but at low limits it seems like donks don't know what betting means. And I hear your pain about winning small, losing big - seems that is all that's happening lately.
You can check out this post of mine: Problem Solving and Cbets. Warning, it's a long post that's mostly about how to attack a poker problem using the ideas mathematicians have analyzed about great problem-solving and the techniques they use. But I was working on my cbetting at the time, which is the hard part of flop play. I mean, hells bells, everyone knows how to play AA on an Axx flop.
Quick thoughts about made hands. Know which are vulnerable, and bet them hard: PSB or 3/4's minimum. Know which hands are likely to hold up, and NEVER slow play unless its quads: bet half to 2/3's pot.
Vulerable Hands? Two pair, TPTK, underpair like QQ on a KT2 flop. Solid hands? Combos (AKs on a K87 board with two of your suit), sets, flushes. Straights are great, but vulnerable in many spots. Big flushes on the turn are vulnerable with the board paired. That sort of thing.
Getting the made hand betting right together with cbetting often and productively, and your flop play will be very solid.
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