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Do you know what are the most common poker leaks? Knowing the answer to this question will help you find the most common leaks within your game.
I have been taking private poker lessons for over ten years. In these lessons, the same leaks appear over and over again. Check if any of these problems you can fix in your own game.
1. Too many pre-calls
People go to the card room precisely because they want to play poker. They want to hold chips in their hands. They want to gamble and gamble. If they wanted to watch poker, they would have stayed home and turned on the live stream.
Since everyone wants to play, they tend to see a lot of failures. It’s fun to see failures. There are endless possibilities. You never know when you’re going to hit a brutal hand. Resisting that siren song is what professional players do so well. Recreational players call frequently and bleed chips.
The bad thing about this leak is that it is not clear. You’ll lose some big drapes here. You’re going to lose a few great blinds there. It doesn’t sound like anything too awful. Then, an hour into your session, you look down at your chips and think to yourself, “Where did 20% of my chips go?”
The problem with pre slalom is that it alerts opponents to your left that you may not have a good enough hand to lift. They can then use that information to raise and isolate your vulnerable domain.
If you make an ante call, you also tell your opponents that you don’t have a good enough hand to bet three. The player behind you can press you and take you out of the bet.
When you want to make a cold call or limp on the pre-flip, ask yourself if the raise will work instead. If you’re in the center, don’t be afraid to bet three more. If you think you have the potential to have the best hand, you want to get more money in the pot. Don’t be afraid to be aggressive. Passive players never make money in this game.
2. Lots of hero calls
This exchange happens a lot in my lessons.
I say: “On this river, I called one pair.” “Do you think he was betting worse on value?”
“No,” the student answers.
“Would he bet on a lost tie like that?”
“I do not know maybe.”
“Was he aggressive? Does he turn couples into cheats? Does he shoot high energy like that?”
“I don’t know.”
“Well, why did you call then? That was a big bet.”
River bets are always the biggest bets in the game. You want to make sure you’re paying the river bets for a good reason, and “I don’t know” is a terrible reason.
Most people do not like to bow down to the river because it means agreeing to lose. If they are shown a trick, they freak out.
If they call a river, they roam freely to look like geniuses. If the other player has a huge hand, they can just dirty face down. Do no harm. If they catch the other player cheating, they get a huge dopamine bonus. They command a great deal and the respect of everyone at the table.
Resist this siren song. Don’t pay off big bets without a good reason.
3. Lots of preflop lift
It happens to the best of us. We are bored at the table. Then we decide to open a hand that we know is weak. We’re having a triple bet, and we call because we’re getting a good price. We flop an off-center middle pair. We check, then the horror show begins. We don’t know when to give up and when to keep pleading.
The way to make money without limits is to play the big bets on the position with the winning hands. The quickest way to lose money is to play big outside bets with weak hands. The easiest way to play the big out of position bets with weak hands is to ante with weak hands. This will trap you in a container you don’t want to play with.
If your poker results haven’t been motivating lately, try playing a more focused preflop range for a few sessions. You’ll have to be more patient, but you’ll notice that the utensils you play with become much easier to handle.
4. Inability to get thin value
Everyone knows that the two best hands are prizes, and they should be played for great value. Everyone also knows that when you miss the flop, you shouldn’t give up too many chips.
What sets poker professionals apart from recreational players is how they deal with the one-pair hands. A professional will know when his husband is no longer good and will fold him. But the pro will also know when the second pair is the best hand. They will get little value from it.
It takes a lot of practice to learn how to read by hand well, but you can’t give up the fight.
Many poker players give up the fight by not trying to rate the bet low when they fail a decent pair. They agree to control fate every time. This causes them to lose valuable bets.
Next time someone calls you out of the big blind, remember that they’re doing it on the wide. They will stumble into many weak pairs. If you fail at a decent second pair or a solid upper pair, try going three blocks. Don’t be afraid to overestimate the second best hand sometimes.
5. Too tight gameplay
There are players who just want to play installments. They may open some of the weaker hands, but they will only bet 3 AK, Jack or better.
The problem they have is that everyone at the table eventually realizes that they don’t want to take action unless they get the best of them. The other players start to turn away. They don’t pay the tighter player when he finally gets stuck in the hand.
If this player learns to treble just once or twice with a proper tiebreaker in place, that will really give him some cheating.
6. Pay off mega bets in multi bets
Imagine a multi-way pot where the initial raiser fires a big bet to four other players. The recreational player will receive a second pair without a kick or tailgate draw. They then proceed to call the flop bet with their weak hand, and then join each individual bet.
If your hand isn’t strong at first, and you don’t have balance in your drawing, it’s not of much value. If someone shoots a big bet on multiple players, chances are they either have the goods or are drawn to it. You can give up a modest husband in this case.
The problem is that many recreational players don’t know that they are allowed to hit the board and fold on a single bet. They think they are being taken advantage of if they do. They feel they have to call one bet and at least see the turn card.
What they miss is that giving away these hands is actually an exploitation of their opponent’s narrow continuous betting range. By being more apt to fold, they save valuable chips. This will add up in the long run. ♠
Learn how to play AK when he fails a flop!
Alexander Fitzgerald is a professional poker player Best selling author He currently lives in Denver, Colorado. that it WPT And ept The final table list, and it has WCOOP And scoop Online wins. His last win was the $250,000 guaranteed ACR Poker. He currently enjoys blasting bums on Ignition courses while listening to deathcore music. Free training packages It is offered to new newsletter subscribers who sign up at PokerHeadRush.com