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Doyle Brunson NLH Theory

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  1. #1
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    Default Doyle Brunson NLH Theory

    Doyle Brunson said in his book. " a tight image and tight play equals poor play" Anyone have any views on that?
  2. #2
    To an extent hes right. A tight passive player isnt making any money because hes never getting paid off. When i get check minraised by a player whos 11/0 im folding any pair. A tight player isnt losing much money, but he isnt making any either.

    A TAG player is different, and I dont think that doyle is talking about this type of player when he makes that statement. A TAG player who is raising whenever he enters the pot doesnt have the best image even tho his preflop play is tight. A good tag can have a poor image while seeing few hands
    Me? I always tell the truth.

    Even when I lie.
  3. #3
    DB is *almost *always talking about strategy at games most of us are never going to play. $10,000 buyins and up. He is able to set the entire tone of the game with his play. Constantly pushing everyone off of pots is very effective at certain tables, but does not fly at smaller stakes, or online.
  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by LeFou
    DB is *almost *always talking about strategy at games most of us are never going to play. $10,000 buyins and up. He is able to set the entire tone of the game with his play. Constantly pushing everyone off of pots is very effective at certain tables, but does not fly at smaller stakes, or online.

    i read DB original SS , and he doesnt go to far off from LAG/TAG play ,he said when he bluffs he usually does it on the flop to pound the tight passive players , and this is what most TAG players do when they play , and this works all the way down to NL10 ....
  5. #5
    He also says he has long runs where he just hammers away and opps are so weak they go "Take it, Doyle" over and over again. I don't see a lot of that at 10NL.

    If you raise twice in a row at 10NL, you've got crosshairs on.
  6. #6
    Ragnar4's Avatar
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    I think what he meant by the part where they are saying "take it Doyle" and their cards are hitting the muck is that if he's in the hand, he's defending the hand. Which is much different than any two cards over and over and over.

    Sometimes it's hard to bet at a pot for him. But the image he wants everyone at the table to know, is that people either call them, or fold. Because if they play back at Doyle, he's going to shove all in, and let the cards fall as they may. That's why he takes down so many little pots, because people realize they need very strong hands in order to confront with Doyle.

    Moreover. He doesn't care about any of the money he makes off of his original stake. Remember if he buys in for 100, and picks up 50 by being aggressive, he's willing to risk all 50 of that on a drawbecause he considers it a "free roll". Ie, use the money you build up by picking up pots to gamble with.
    The Dunning–Kruger effect is a cognitive bias in which unskilled individuals suffer from illusory superiority, mistakenly rating their ability much higher than average. This bias is attributed to a metacognitive inability of the unskilled to recognize their mistakes
  7. #7
    BankItDrew's Avatar
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    it all depends on who you are playing against. some players don't notice, while others will wtfpwn you.

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