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HUSNG #1
HAND 2: I don't mind raising in position anything, but raising K4o is pushing your luck. Just check and take the flop. It's too early to make OOP moves, especially after your opponent has shown that he'll make loose calls with all sorts of [censored].
Hand 4: Fold the flop after strong raise. Loose chasers are never bluffing here. You've got what you asked for.
Hand 6: Meh, I would fold this. But limp is fine if you like.
Hand 8: LAP raises PF for the first time? Give him credit and fold. K7o is awful hand to take into war OOP. If he starts raising more, then you adjust.
Hand 9: After his strong turn value bet I would fold.
Hand 21: Flops like this I cbet close to 100% of the time.
Hand 22: Flops like this on the other side are tricky to play. Cbet is fine but not always. I would make a small-ish (1/3 pot or lower) value bet on the river - usually enough to extract some extra chips from loose opponent with obvious weak pair.
Hand 28: How about forgetting slow-fancy-play and raise PF? TT can get into lots of trouble on most flops. Flop shove is pure gambling.
Hand 35: Calling AI with K5o is B A D . Against most of all possible hands you are close to coinflip and dominated/crushed by (premium) rest.
HUSNG #2
Hand 3: Call with intention to float is OK since you know the opponent but at least give yourself some equity with draw or A-high - i.e. flop call is ewww IMO.
Hand 7: I'm sure some will disagree, but A8 is not that strong in this spot and blinds not yet too big. Had the blinds been higher and pot bigger I'd call, but not here (it's close actually) for pure strategical reasons: against his range I'm not that much of a favorite; against this opponent (bad) my expected win rate is >60%; if I accept this flip I'm reducing my edge - blinds are not that high and I have the stack advantage.
Hand 8: It sucks to fold TP but was this the first time he c/r-ed the (scary)turn? Of all streets, donks are usually the most honest on turn.
Hand 19: This you should fold cause you're beating nothing but semibluff. Notice the few hands preceding this one. He's tightened up (always pay attention to overall rhythm) and you are no longer playing the spewtard.
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