Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Should I Do It Right?

So the big question is.... do I just erase it, or should I do it right? If I did it for real I would pull the best lessons from the best players and compile them here in a convenient forum. Would it be useful for you to see a new professional lesson every few days from players like Alan Cunningham, Patrik Antonius, Andy Bloch, Mike Caro, Hoyt Corkins, etc.?

Curious.

This Blog is B.S.

Okay folks,

So many people have figured out my blog here is complete B.S. - so I've decided to either shut it down or start the thing over.

It worked for a while... but I don't have enough people reading this thing for my image to be changed significantly in the Austin games I play. And those that do read this are good enough to know BS when they see it. As those who know me know, I don't play anything like what I have demonstrated on this blog... it was actually a stupid idea gone terribly wrong.

Monday, November 30, 2009

Jeffrey Goodman Getting a Lesson From Johannes Strassmann

When I feel like I'm playing well and on a card rush, I like to push my limits a little and use more of my poker bankroll to play a couple of hours at tables higher than what I normally play. This is a case where my bankroll suffered because of it. When I was living in Houston, I was playing poker to pay bills and living expenses, trying to move out of Houston. Later, Doyle Brunson told me if I ever wanted to be a successful poker player, I should keep a poker bankroll that I never touch... no matter how hard life gets, never touch it. This is a case where I'm glad I wasn't depending on this money for bills. The player I was up against is Johannes Strassmann whom I didn't know anything about at the time of this hand. I do now. You can check him out at here He is also a member of Team PokerStars Pro found here. Not a REAL heavy hitter, but he obviously can hang with the big boys. Watch this video of our hand together and see if it doesn't make you cringe. I had to change the location, game ID number, took out other players' names, etc. to stay away from copywrite infringment. Please comment on the way both of us handled this hand.

Click on the Video, then press pause, then click on the video again to view in a bigger window on YouTube. Or, simply right click on the video and choose "Watch on YouTube" You will likely have to watch it in full screen mode.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Advanced Strategy in a Rebuy Tournament

Last night, I watched a friend of mine, Mark, an outstanding local Austin player, make a great move at a freeroll tournament at Third Base on Sixth Street. The league allows for one "gracious loser" per table before the first break. It's basically a rebuy for the cost of a round of drinks for the drinkers at the table.

In the dealer position, he's dealt Q 4 suited. There was a moderate raise in early position, and nearly everyone called until the Small Blind made a huge raise. Four players called ahead of Mark, and he went all-in for about the same amount of chips given at the start of the tournament (about the same a rebuy would be, too)... everyone called. All the players were all-in except one, so everyone flipped over their cards to reveal that Mark had two live cards. He won a HUGE pot with a pair of Queens. If he'd have lost, he would have bought a round of drinks and received a new stack of chips... nothing lost as far as chips went. It was a well calculated risk with the potential of a very large reward. If you are nearing the time of a rebuy... think about doing what Mark did if the risk is worth the reward. Mark didn't just shove his chips in... he knew exactly what he was doing and moved into the chip lead in one hand.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Watch Out for the Royal Flush

Today I lost with pocket aces early in a tournament (with a nut flush draw). Then I watched this hand unfold online... it was pretty cool. I haven't seen a Royal Flush in about 18 months

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Review this old video. Last night I tripped up on a similar board. There was not as much percentage in the pot but basically the same action. Preflop raise-reraise etc. Pot odds were not as good for me as for Daniel, but I tripped on middle pair just like him and the same action (raise-reraise, etc). I thought about this showdown - and I really put the guy on higher trips... not a straight or quads. turned out he had the same hand as on this video. I did not call all-in, and I wonder if Daniel regrets this hand. Maybe wishes he still had the money, but I would guess he would stand by his play. I'm sure he would. He's lost more than that on a single par 5, so maybe it wasn't that bad.......... However, put this hand in front of Doyle or Caro or Hellmuth... what do you think they would do? I honestly would like their commentary - let me know what you think they would say?

Since the video is copywrited, it has been taken down. Daniel spikes trips and has to call when he rightly suspects his opponent to have higher trips.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Beginners - Starting Hands and Texas Hold'Em Basics



Click to enlarge - reference is at bottom

INTERMEDIATE PLAYERS, DON'T WASTE YOUR TIME READING THIS PARTICULAR POST.


I've been asked to provide the beginner with an idea of what they keep and what they throw away before the flop. I simply Googled it and found a wikipedia page that will work, so I'm posting it here for reference. Note - if you are only going to play Hellmuth's top ten hole card possibilities, then you need to be raising/reraising pre-flop most of the time and knowing exactly what to do after the flop to get more information. I'll post something on aggressive play, or preferrable play as I like to call it, in a subsequent post. In meantime, I hope this helps my beginners.

If you are a beginner - don't play anything other than these cards and you will fare better. I would suggest learning how to play the top 15 cards well before adding any others.

The reference for the above images is: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_hold_'em_starting_hands

Here is an easy to understand video for the first-time player just learning the rules.