Get the Flash Player to see this player.
Previous Video: Surfdoc (#1)
Next Video: Oink (#6)

This Series: Ghost

Ghost the best of DeucesCracked in the shorthanded games they play in today.
Subscribe to Subscribe to this SeriesSubscribe to this Series

Crablar (#1) by Crablar

DeucesCracked.com coach Crablar makes his first Ghost video, two tabling 3/6 NL and discussing his style of play.

Posted 9 months ago

tags: ghost crablar $600 nl 3/6 nl shorthanded nl 2 tables

Video Details

No Limit Hold 'Em Mid Stakes, 56 min long


High-Quality Downloads


Rating: 3.8/5 Stars (20 total)


Comments for Crablar (#1)

Mynewgirlcopy

thac

The first half of this video was really good, talking about the adjustment to 3/6 and even higher, and about avoiding CTS and why you should/shouldn't. The second half of the video kinda drags (I'm at 40 minutes now) compared to the first half, but still a good first video.

Posted 9 months ago

Dangerlion

KRANTZ

Founder

So happy that Jeff is producing videos, he is naaaaaasty

Posted 9 months ago

Avatar

actionjacson

i got a smily face when i saw that crablar is making videos

Posted 9 months ago

Boston_celtics_old

Joe Tall

Founder

I feel this video is excellent for Jeff's first vid. I talked to him extensively about the QQQ hand at the end, and as he says at the end he though it was a fold, and failed to mention the timing tells that lead even more to a fold. I, for one, being a learning NL player from a limit background, thought it was close.

Posted 9 months ago

Avatar

derosnec

very nice

Posted 9 months ago

Avatar

rsxpunk

i dont feel like you can ever fold that top set hand, think his range is definetly still wide enough to get it in....anyways nice vid

Posted 9 months ago

Avatar

Kirb

lol you're one of the guys I kept sitting out hu when building a roll on ftp -.-

Posted 9 months ago

Avatar

Pure17

Good video. Look forward to the next one.

Posted 9 months ago

Zyi42

tapped_out

I'm about 16 minutes in and the 67s hand confuses me. I understand that downswings can make you a little timid, but I think you need to shove that king turn. Put him to the decision...scared poker is bad poker and I do the same thing sometimes when running bad, I also pack it up and take a break or move down when I start doing that stuff.

Interesting discussion so far though.

Posted 9 months ago

Avatar

dd3mon

Crab is definitely a good player, but imo many of his though processes in this video are flawed. It's definitely a result of his current downswing though, I've been there many times. He's questioning himself constantly even in fairly standard spots, being a bit too timid, rarely coming up with solid plans for different potential situations and following through, etc.

I think this vid is still valuable and shows the effect that a big downswing can have on any player.

Posted 9 months ago

Crablar

Crablar

'm about 14 minutes in and the 67s hand confuses me. I understand that downswings can make you a little timid, but I think you need to shove that king turn. Put him to the decision...scared poker is bad poker and I do the same thing sometimes when running bad, I also pack it up and take a break or move down when I start doing that stuff.



I hope I mentioned that nomed is loose and stationy in the video. I don't think I get him to fold JJ or AT on the turn, so I didn't bluff.

ddemon,

I question myself constantly whether I am downswinging or not. The best players are dynamic and think of every possibility at every crux. My thoughts were a bit clouded, maybe, but didn't influence anything significantly in this video.

Posted 9 months ago

Echo

Entity

Founder

Hey Jeff,

I thought this was a really great vid and I'm pumped to have you doing vids here @ DC. Welcome to the team. Smile

Rob

Posted 9 months ago

Vinylbird

Kwantum

Crablar,

Very good video. I liked a lot of your commentary.

You said once "Ooops, I should have raised to $24 there" and then later you raised to 4x when you were UTG. Any reasoning behind that? Does it have to do with your position or just the guys behind you who you want to discourage from 3-betting you?

/k

Posted 9 months ago

Avatar

Suwalski

great video, youre a bit tighter than I. Is that QQQ hand really a fold? i mean i'd call that all day. Do all of you agree that this is a fold?

Posted 9 months ago

Crablar

Crablar

great video, youre a bit tighter than I. Is that QQQ hand really a fold? i mean i'd call that all day. Do all of you agree that this is a fold?



I think his range on the turn when he shoves is sets, two pair, and flushes. He instacalled on the flop, which could be indicative of a set, but I think most people, even donks, tank for a bit before deciding what to do with a set. More likely, he's a donk who is hardwired to check call his flush draws, so he didn't even consider raising. Any two pair hand with a queen is pretty unlikely seeing as I have three of them. That leaves flushes as the most likely hand. Obviously I am getting a sick price (2:1 or so if I recall, so calling only has to win me the pot 1/3 times), plus I have outs, so calling can't be a huge mistake. And folding may not be a hugely +ev play. It helps me to think of big pots like this, where I might have made a minor error that may not cost me too much money over time but nonetheless stacked me in the short run.

Posted 9 months ago

Avatar

chomp

It's so nice to hear someone like Crablar say "$400 is a lot of money". Sometimes I think the top pros forget just how much money that really is to lower stakes donks (like me) who watch these videos, so I really liked his humility on this. Makes me feel less distant from the nosebleeders.

Nice vid, look forward to more.

Posted 9 months ago

Avatar

lastcardcharlie

I think his range on the turn when he shoves is sets, two pair, and flushes. He instacalled on the flop, which could be indicative of a set, but I think most people, even donks, tank for a bit before deciding what to do with a set. More likely, he's a donk who is hardwired to check call his flush draws, so he didn't even consider raising. Any two pair hand with a queen is pretty unlikely seeing as I have three of them. That leaves flushes as the most likely hand. Obviously I am getting a sick price (2:1 or so if I recall, so calling only has to win me the pot 1/3 times), plus I have outs, so calling can't be a huge mistake. And folding may not be a hugely +ev play. It helps me to think of big pots like this, where I might have made a minor error that may not cost me too much money over time but nonetheless stacked me in the short run.



Plus Villain was getting involved in a lot of hands at the time. You were commenting on this in the lead up to the hand.

Posted 9 months ago

Avatar

RushingOver

Hey man
Nice vid.

About the QQQ hand,i would call it anyday,you just had some action vs the guy and picked up most pots and ofcourse he could have a lower set.You still had 10 outs on the flushSmile

Posted 9 months ago

Avatar

irock

Nice video man. Instead of getting down about your downswing, just remember the bad feeling to make upswings all the tastier.

Love,
iRockhoes

Posted 5 months ago

Avatar

JammyJenny

honestly i thought you looked pretty weak in this vid, probably an off day but that king turn should 100% be a shove imo. nice insight into more general stuff though.

Posted 4 months ago

Avatar

moe

(Late to the party, I know, but I just wanted to watch this video before looking at the new one from Crablar.)

About the top set QQQ vs nut-flush hand: am I the only one here who thinks the big mistake in the hand was betting the turn?

I mean, the guy's giving you a chance to catch up to his most likely holding for free on the river, why not take it? And if you miss, at worst you would have to sigh and call off a ~$100-140 value bet there, getting away cheap?

I'm checking behind there nearly 100% of the time -- the only exception is if I'm playing someone aggressive who I *know* would check-raise a flush draw on the flop, so flushes are eliminated from his range when he just check/calls.

I mean, the board (Q62T) was super-dry apart from the 3 diamonds. About the only worse hands you can get a call from on the turn with your large bet is 22/66/TT/QT.

(I believe you mention KJ/AdJx when you are trying to find a reason to call his c/r, but come on... KJ/AJ doesn't float that flop OOP. Besides, any draw he decides to semi-bluff with is much more typical to be a c/r *push* on that board.)

But hardly any of those combos makes sense up to that point, in my opinion. TT would most likely have been a 3-bet pre-flop. 22 and 66 would have either led out or -- perhaps more likely -- c/r the flop, because of the flush-draw. QT is unlikely because of card-removal factors, plus it would be a loose call pre-flop, OOP vs a 4x UTG open.

Crablar bet so quickly on the turn aswell, hardly taking more than 2-3 secs before firing out the bet. Is that turn bet really such an easy decision? Seems terrible to me, to be honest.

Actually, the whole session seemed pretty bad to me. I haven't played a lot of $3/6 yet, just a bunch of full-ring, and haven't played too much 6-max above $1/2, so I might not be competent to comment upon the session.

But there seemed to be a lot of spew... at least 3/4 the pot for every c-bet, usually with no draws or anything, and usually with no consideration to the flop texture, nor your opponent in the hand. And when you hit decent, flopping top two with QJ, you insta-checked in a nano-second. Huge timing tell, which repeated itself several times over. Lots of 3.5x - 4x pre-flop opens with weak holdings in EP, lots of calls with weak holdings in position where you just played fit-or-fold on any and every flop, again without even commenting on the flop texture.

Admittedly you ran bad aswell, set-under-set in BvB, flopped top set vs turned flush, flopped top two (with QJ) got a horrible runner-runner board with 4 to a straight (QJxTA), etc, but you were bleeding a *lot* of chips in addition to those cooler hands.

Posted 2 months ago

Avatar

moe

I mean, the board (Q62T) was super-dry apart from the 3 diamonds. About the only worse hands you can get a call from on the turn with your large bet is 22/66/TT/QT.



Correcting myself; I suppose AQ/KQ/QJ should be in the mix aswell. But of those, the only ones you're afraid to give a free river is AdQh/KdQh/QhJd. The other, let's see.. 9 combos of those, you should be happy to give a free river, as he might hit top two pair and pay off a large value bet if he checks in front.

Posted 2 months ago