The Simple Skill That Makes You a Winner at 1/2 Live Poker

The Simple Skill That Makes You a Winner at 1/2 Live Poker

Max has good instincts and solid reads. Here is where the money was leaking out anyway.

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Most players who struggle at 1/2 are not making big preflop mistakes. They are not calling off their stack with nothing. They are losing in spots they barely notice, on the flop and turn, one missed bet at a time.

Max plays 1/2 at Morongo Casino in Palm Springs. He has good instincts, patient preflop habits, and solid reads on his opponents. He came to the session prepared, with real hands and real thought processes behind each decision.

And we still found the leak.

It was not a preflop problem. It was not a read problem. It was value. Specifically, how to size bets correctly against passive calling stations and how to think in multi-street decision trees so you extract the most money possible before the river.

Hand One: Ace Ten on an Ace-King-Nine Flop

Max is in the big blind with A♦ T♥ against three passive limpers. He raises to $15. The small blind calls. Flop comes A♥ K♦ 9♣. Top pair, solid kicker.

He bets $10 into a $34 pot. About a third of the pot. His reasoning was to keep her range wide and let her float with weak aces and middling pairs.

The sizing was not wrong, but it was not right either. Against a passive calling station who floats wide and plays face up, you want to build the pot now while you are clearly ahead. Not after the board gets messy.

Think about the turn cards you are not going to like. Any five, six, seven, or eight gives her a sneaky two pair. Any heart puts a flush draw out there. Getting more money in on the flop, at $15 or $20, sets up a cleaner turn jam and puts real pressure on all those ace-x and king-x hands before the board changes.

The turn came a five of clubs. She checked. Max checked back. This was the bigger mistake. The SPR was roughly 1.1 at that point. A small bet of $15 into the $50 pot looks like weakness to a passive player and she floats it. Now you get to a bigger river pot where jamming is easy and getting called is easy. By checking back, you give a free card and make the river decision much harder.

The river came the jack of hearts. She led out for $30. Max made a great fold. She showed a jack, two pair or better. Good instincts. But that decision should have been obvious, not a tank. The turn bet makes it obvious.

Hand Two: Flopping the Nut Flush Draw and Making the Nuts

Max is on the button with K♦ T♦ against a weak reg who opens under the gun to $15. He calls. Flop comes A♦ 7♦ J♣. Max flops the nut flush draw and calls a $20 continuation bet. The turn is the 4♦. Max has the nuts. Villain checks. Max checks back.

His reasoning was that the SPR was already one and he would jam most rivers. The problem is, after two streets of no action, a lot of aces are folding to a river jam. And if the river goes check-check, you get nothing.

When you have the nuts and the SPR is around one, a small bet on the turn is almost always the highest EV play. Not a jam, not a big bet. Something like $15 into a $70 pot. At that level, passive players view small bets as weakness. They float. They call. Sometimes they raise. Now you get to the river with a bigger pot and a much wider calling range facing your jam.

Max ended up jamming the river after two checks. He used some speech play, said ace king is no good, and got the call. Villain showed ace king. It worked. But it should not have required speech play. A small turn bet makes the whole thing clean and simple.

The Skill That Ties It All Together

Both hands tell the same story. Great reads. Good instincts. But value left on the table because of bet sizing and street selection.

The fix is learning to think in multi-street decision trees before you act. Not just asking what you should do right now, but running through what happens if you do this and he does that, across all three streets. When you have the best hand, find the line that extracts the most money while keeping your opponent's range as wide as possible for as long as possible.

Against passive players at 1/2, that almost always means betting earlier, sizing smaller, and letting them float into a bigger pot where they cannot get away.

Preflop is straightforward. Postflop is where the money is made and lost. Build the process now and the results follow.

Free Coaching (Work with me directly):

https://wa.me/526692685329?text=free%20coaching%20session

Bring your hands. We will find exactly where you are leaving money on the table.

The Poker Delusion (Book):

https://www.vintonpoker.com/book

I'm Vinton Mojdeh. Precision In. Profits Out.

#pokerstrategy #pokertips #pokercoaching #livepoker #handreview #vintonpoker #1-2poker #pokerleaks #valuebetting #lowstakespoker

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