Poker Video: No Limit Hold'Em by Grindcore (Micro/Small Stakes)

The Thin Red Line: Episode Two

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The Thin Red Line: Episode Two by Grindcore

Grindcore plays "out of control" showing you what you can get away with at 100NL without your opponents adjusting.

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DeucesCracked welcomes fan favorite and new instructor Grindcore to the fold with this original video series about that thin, red line – nonshowdown winnings. This winter Bart will take a look at some common misconceptions about the red line and discuss the ins and outs of how small stakes 6max players can pick up previously unreachable profit.

Tags

grindcore the thin red line 100nl 100 nl 2-tabling loose

Video Details

  • Game: nlhe
  • Stakes: Micro/Small Stakes
  • 60 minutes long
  • Posted over 3 years ago

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Grindcore

Avatar for Grindcore

2370 posts
Joined 11/2008

What other people do doesn't matter. Donking there is good for protection. It's very unlikely someone will bet without having you beat or good equity vs your hand, so when your hand is best you give 4 people a freecard on a wet board, which is horrible.

Also if people really put you on sets/2pair when you donk, then why don't you donk 100% of the time?

Posted over 3 years ago

TheChosenOne

Avatar for TheChosenOne

93 posts
Joined 04/2008

Time Link to 00:32:53

what do u think about a double barrel here w/ 33, since so much of his calling range is a medium PP?

Posted over 3 years ago

longple

Avatar for longple

4 posts
Joined 07/2009

It's kind of a leveling thing. Some find a $50 raise look stronger and the jam more like a draw, some fold more to a jam and call the 50 because it's smaller... I thought a jam would look most like a draw there. Also, I'm 55+ VPIP on that table so I don't think they'll fold top pair to me.




allthough u take away the possibilty for one of the 2 villains to jamm a draw if we mae like a 35-45ish raise or something, if we jamm they might just fold their like X high flushdraw or w/e

ppl are bad, even though we like never bluff when we raise there and it is potcommiting its a psychological thing, ppl like putting the last bet into the pot even when it makes 0 difference. atleast bad 100nl players imo!

and as u said since u have such loose image they will prolly stack off w TPTK ++ anyways so?

Posted over 3 years ago

Grindcore

Avatar for Grindcore

2370 posts
Joined 11/2008

what do u think about a double barrel here w/ 33, since so much of his calling range is a medium PP?



The VPIP/PFR gap suggests he's call happy from the blinds so he has more Ax than PPs imo. And he also might not fold a PP on the turn anyway. And my image is bad.

Posted over 3 years ago

longple

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4 posts
Joined 07/2009

Ulkis

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671 posts
Joined 10/2007

Time Link to 00:07:50

J2o - would c/f be too weak in this spot?

I typically like to c/c marginal made hands on (ultra)draw-heavy flops and thought J2 here was worse than marginal. And we don't know much about villain's postflop tendencies yet.

Posted over 3 years ago

Sugar Nut

Avatar for Sugar Nut

842 posts
Joined 03/2008

Also if people really put you on sets/2pair when you donk, then why don't you donk 100% of the time?


It's funny that you mention this, because I thought about this myself the other day. I wouldn't go so far as donking 100% when OOP multiway but I do it a lot more now.

Poker Stars $0.50/$1 No Limit Hold'em - 6 players -

BTN: $108.40
SB: $61.35
Hero (BB): $100.00
UTG: $63.55
MP: $62.00
CO: $100.00

Pre Flop: ($1.50) Hero is BB with Q Heart J Spade
UTG calls $1, 1 fold, CO raises to $4, BTN calls $4, SB calls $3.50, Hero calls $3, UTG calls $3

Flop: ($20.00) 9 Club 8 Diamond 4 Spade (5 players)
SB checks, Hero bets $14, UTG folds, CO folds, BTN folds, SB folds

Final Pot: $20.00
Hero mucks Q Heart J Spade
Hero wins $19.00
(Rake: $1.00)

Posted over 3 years ago

Grindcore

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2370 posts
Joined 11/2008

J2o - would c/f be too weak in this spot?

I typically like to c/c marginal made hands on (ultra)draw-heavy flops and thought J2 here was worse than marginal. And we don't know much about villain's postflop tendencies yet.



Why would you c/f with a pair in BvB? If you're gonna c/f you should just cbet. I check to let him bluff because when I check I look like air that's giving up. And as you see it worked.

Posted over 3 years ago

Poemmel

Avatar for Poemmel

1025 posts
Joined 03/2009

very good video again!
thanks DC for getting grindcore to make videos here now!
very huge plus for this site!

keep it goin Smile

Posted over 3 years ago

Kesky

Avatar for Kesky

39 posts
Joined 07/2009

I would prefer 4 tables in one of the future videos. That way we get to see more spots, a wider variety of players and table dynamics.

Posted over 3 years ago

pr0wler

Avatar for pr0wler

82 posts
Joined 05/2008

Time Link to 00:04:22

Can't we make a small raise on the flop to extract value from a T? I agree with your assessment that he probably has a T when he check min-raises, but I find a fish is often doing that to "see where they're at" as opposed to doing it for value. He raises with the intention of folding if he gets played back at, but if you make the raise small enough (say to like $35 or $40) he won't be able to fold.

Then the pot on the turn is like $90, assuming the turn card doesn't kill your action/create a bunch of draws, you can just extract value by betting small like $40 and then he'll talk himself into calling the river given the great odds he's getting. I normally don't take this line, but on a board with basically 0 draws and you essentially have the nuts...I like making very small bets/raises to price in the fish for 3 streets.

Posted over 3 years ago

Grindcore

Avatar for Grindcore

2370 posts
Joined 11/2008

Can't we make a small raise on the flop to extract value from a T? I agree with your assessment that he probably has a T when he check min-raises, but I find a fish is often doing that to "see where they're at" as opposed to doing it for value. He raises with the intention of folding if he gets played back at, but if you make the raise small enough (say to like $35 or $40) he won't be able to fold.

Then the pot on the turn is like $90, assuming the turn card doesn't kill your action/create a bunch of draws, you can just extract value by betting small like $40 and then he'll talk himself into calling the river given the great odds he's getting. I normally don't take this line, but on a board with basically 0 draws and you essentially have the nuts...I like making very small bets/raises to price in the fish for 3 streets.



He's never c/mr folding for value so I might aswell jam to prevent action killers. If he can be bluffing or doing it with a 2nd pair type hand, CiB or calling becomes better. Completely readless I'm assuming it's mostly Tx so I take the highest EV line vs Tx, which is jamming.

Posted over 3 years ago

StoppingFist

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67 posts
Joined 01/2008

Like you, I take a lot of notes and cant really keep up the analysis w/ too many tables. How many tables do you usually play at once?

Posted over 3 years ago

Grindcore

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2370 posts
Joined 11/2008

Anything between 1 and 10, usually 5-7

Posted over 3 years ago

peten2toms

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362 posts
Joined 01/2008

Time Link to 00:30:21

We just took a note on villain that he didnt play his draws fast. You didnt even check your note or think twice about getting this in. Just curious if your read was correct, say you had seen overtime villain played draws passively, how would you continue?

Posted over 3 years ago




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