Poker Video: Pot-Limit Omaha by DJ Sensei (Micro/Small Stakes)

Solid State PLO: Episode One

This video is a two minute preview. To view the entire video, please Log In or Sign Up Now
Get the Flash Player to see this player.
 

Solid State PLO: Episode One by DJ Sensei, delcrossb

DJ Sensei and Delcrossb discuss the series as a whole and then delve into the topic of hands that are good vs. hands that are trash.

About Solid State PLO Subscribe to

DJ Sensei and delcrossb bring you an entry-level PLO series that focuses on building solid a theoretical framework for preflop and postflop play.

Tags

dj sensei delcrossb solid state plo plo pot limit omaha omaha powerpoint ipod friendly

Video Details

  • Game: plo
  • Stakes: Micro/Small Stakes
  • 82 minutes long
  • Posted over 1 year ago

Downloads

Premium Subscribers can download high-quality, DRM-free videos in multiple formats.

Sign Up Today


Comments for Solid State PLO: Episode One

heh

Avatar for heh

770 posts
Joined 02/2009

Congrats on your first and premier episode, Kevin!

Posted over 1 year ago

walrusbear

Avatar for walrusbear

170 posts
Joined 10/2009

Congrats. I get off work in an hour and can't wait to give this a watch.

Posted over 1 year ago

jjd323

Avatar for jjd323

591 posts
Joined 08/2008

Good stuff, I've been looking forward to material from you Kevin; I'm always happy to see vids from Dan.

Posted over 1 year ago

Onraad

Avatar for Onraad

631 posts
Joined 08/2008

Really looking forward to this series!

Posted over 1 year ago

PATheDeuce

Avatar for PATheDeuce

264 posts
Joined 08/2008

Really looking forward to this series!



+++1

Posted over 1 year ago

Acombfosho

Avatar for Acombfosho

2964 posts
Joined 06/2008

very nice breakdown

the same as PLO fundamentals by LFTV yet more simple/elegant in your expression of the concepts

5 stars

Posted over 1 year ago

FlamingMoe86

Avatar for FlamingMoe86

545 posts
Joined 04/2008

I guess I have to watch this episode about 5times to get all the information out of it!

thanks a lot for this fantastic video!

Posted over 1 year ago

walrusbear

Avatar for walrusbear

170 posts
Joined 10/2009

I'm kind of curious as to what your thoughts are on how the presence of antes should impact your ranges in the small blind in overlimping or stealing. Your argument seemed to be that we shouldn't be too concerned with the pot odds we're getting but are antes widening your small blind ranges in any real significant way?

Posted over 1 year ago

delcrossb

Avatar for delcrossb

Coach
4129 posts
Joined 04/2009

I'm kind of curious as to what your thoughts are on how the presence of antes should impact your ranges in the small blind in overlimping or stealing. Your argument seemed to be that we shouldn't be too concerned with the pot odds we're getting but are antes widening your small blind ranges in any real significant way?



I am considering devoting some discussion to dealing with antes in a future episode since playing with antes almost certainly also means playing deep. In general though the presence of antes should make you more incentivized to steal the blinds but not necessarily change your OOP ranges until you notice your opponents are adjusting to the antes.

Honestly though I think people mostly over adjust, rather than under adjust, to the presence of antes.

Posted over 1 year ago

HRPaperstacks

Avatar for HRPaperstacks

2046 posts
Joined 07/2009

Time Link to 00:00:37

Congrats on the new series! The only thing bad about it is the lack of "long and thought out responses" to posts in the forum -- you went dark while making this vid. Don't be a stranger. Wink

Posted over 1 year ago

DJ Sensei

Avatar for DJ Sensei

Exec Producer
3096 posts
Joined 10/2007

I'm kind of curious as to what your thoughts are on how the presence of antes should impact your ranges in the small blind in overlimping or stealing. Your argument seemed to be that we shouldn't be too concerned with the pot odds we're getting but are antes widening your small blind ranges in any real significant way?



Agree with Kevin that we should be stealing more when it folds to our SB (one nice thing is that we can raise bigger to drive out the BB more often), but that otherwise our VPIP should remain low. Remember, implied odds are much more important than pot odds when we're oop in a small PLO pot, so we definitely need to have some nuttiness to get involved.

Posted over 1 year ago

PATheDeuce

Avatar for PATheDeuce

264 posts
Joined 08/2008

Great start to the series guys! I agree with the interest in more coverage of PLO with antes, I think I'm one of the ones who over adjust Undecided.

Posted over 1 year ago

delcrossb

Avatar for delcrossb

Coach
4129 posts
Joined 04/2009

I will make an effort to address antes in a future video. Something else that I will try to address that should be relatively quick is calling 4bets preflop, as a lot of the hand histories I received were about whether or not a 4bet can be profitably called (assuming villain has AAxx). Feel free to make any further suggestions.

Posted over 1 year ago

Schweig

Avatar for Schweig

Coach
980 posts
Joined 10/2008

Agree with Kevin that we should be stealing more when it folds to our SB (one nice thing is that we can raise bigger to drive out the BB more often)



Are we assuming that opponents are somewhat stupid and think that a 4.5x pot raise with antes is somehow bigger than a 3x pot raise without antes even though he's receiving the same pot odds in both situations and we aren't technically raising bigger?

I'm kind of curious as to what your thoughts are on how the presence of antes should impact your ranges in the small blind in overlimping or stealing. Your argument seemed to be that we shouldn't be too concerned with the pot odds we're getting but are antes widening your small blind ranges in any real significant way?




The thing about ante games is that people adjust to the fact there are antes but don't adjust to the fact that effective stacks are deeper, the latter being the far more important factor in how you should play because it vastly changes how post-flop play runs out.

Here's an interesting thing to note about ante games and depth. Some say the inclusion of antes don't really differ in depth from a regular 100BB game despite being deeper in BBs because of the larger size of the pot to start. To counter that, let's take a 50c/$1 200BB effective stack game with antes vs a 1/2 100BB game (note I am only taking two different stakes to use similar stack sizes, but there is no reason why we can't compare antes vs non antes at the same stake and only talk about SPRs). In the first, assuming 6-max, pot to start is $2.70, while in the latter pot to start is $3, both with $200 starting stacks. At first glance, you might think this is only a 30c difference so the games must be fairly similar right? After all, they have the same buyin and one is 74 SPR and the other is 67 SPR.

Wrong. Here's why. The way a pot sized raise is calculated makes a massive difference on future street SPRs. Because pot is calculated by calling first, the pot raise will be much larger when you are calling a $2 bb instead of a $1 bb before you raise. In the first, it's an open raise to $4.70, while in the second it's an open raise to $7. Assuming one caller from the BB, the pot is $11.10 in the first, but it's $15 in the second. Now suddenly we're dealing with ~17SPR vs ~13SPR and this gap only widens the more callers there are. Assuming an extreme example of all 6 players in the pot pre to one raise it's $29.40 vs $42, which is something like a 6.7 SPR vs a 4.8 SPR. To illustrate this even better, we could devise a game with no blinds and only a 50c ante and compare it to a $1/$2 game; both have the exact same $3 pot to start but you can see how the first has a limiting raise of $3 pre-flop that it changes true stack depth completely.

Now back to the idea of open stealing in SB in ante games vs non-ante games. Assuming our opponent in BB is slightly competent and realises that he is getting 2-1 in both scenarios against a pot raise when we steal from the SB, he should really be thinking about his SPR in this spot. In typical ante games, I believe SB can only pot to 4.2bbs, while in a non ante game SB can pot to 3bbs. If you are 200bb deep as you typically are in an ante game (on PS you can typically be 250bb deep so this is even more pronounced), this raise is a smaller % of your stack than the 3bb in the 100bb deep non-ante game. SPRs are higher in the ante games therefore position has more power postflop. This means in SB we should be stealing less in general (again assuming our opponent is competent.)

Apologies for the long post, but my point is stack depth should be the main concern in adjusting our ranges, not whether there are antes (unless our opponents are stupid and get confused by this easily and only think in terms of BBs.) I hope I also illustrated how the existence of antes messes with pot size raises that you should take this into account when thinking about stack depth.

Posted over 1 year ago

DJ Sensei

Avatar for DJ Sensei

Exec Producer
3096 posts
Joined 10/2007

very nice post, but yes I do think that this:

Are we assuming that opponents are somewhat stupid and think that a 4.5x pot raise with antes is somehow bigger than a 3x pot raise without antes even though he's receiving the same pot odds in both situations and we aren't technically raising bigger?


is probably true to a significant extent.

Posted over 1 year ago

Schweig

Avatar for Schweig

Coach
980 posts
Joined 10/2008

very nice post, but yes I do think that this:

is probably true to a significant extent.



Yeah I think it might be too to an extent.

However, although most players probably haven't thought about antes that much, they may automatically be playing looser as their standard adjustment (just because there are antes). This hurts them in a lot of situations like when they are peeling too light OOP vs button raises, but in this specific SB vs BB situation it happens that they are accidentally adjusting correctly by defending looser, especially if we are stealing too much, just because of how great position is.

Whatever happens, opening up more in the worst position is never going to be amazingly profitable for us anyway, that I wouldn't suggest it as a standard.

Posted over 1 year ago

PATheDeuce

Avatar for PATheDeuce

264 posts
Joined 08/2008

TalkMeIntoIt

Avatar for TalkMeIntoIt

136 posts
Joined 02/2010

Time Link to 00:38:54

Great video, looking forward to the rest of the series!

BTW, the hands in the top right of that graph that are both floppable and nutty are called "flutty" or "the fluts", right? Smile

Posted over 1 year ago

orestto

Avatar for orestto

Coach
1337 posts
Joined 07/2009

Very solid first episode, look forward to rest of series.

Posted over 1 year ago

fishtastic

Avatar for fishtastic

204 posts
Joined 07/2008

I really enjoyed the detailed breakdown of the preflop scenarios in this episode. Thanks guys.

Posted over 1 year ago

slycebu

Avatar for slycebu

853 posts
Joined 09/2009

From a noob - great stuff, loved the "fundamentals" approach, looking forward to the rest of the series. I've heard all these ideas in other series here on DC, but this setup (goals of pf play, position/nuttiness/flopability, the "hand chart") really drove home some key ideas for me in a framework that I expect to really help me out.

I immediately recognized I have two very incorrect thought patterns after watching this - just in case you get some hh's that give you an opportunity to bring up these points.

One (simpler) is calling/overlimping with a wide range in position - I'm so used to this being spew in NLHE that I've been folding the button way too often, this (floppability/nuttiness/position) gives me a way to re-evaluate what I'm doing in position.

The second is that I'm getting smoked when facing 3bets, and hadn't really understood why. I knew enough to fold hands that are high nuttiness/low flopability oop, but wasn't paying enough attention to position and evaluating nuttiness+flopability relative to position.

Congrats delcrossb on your first series, you and DJ make a great team here. Careful, you've set a very high standard for the rest of the series. Smile

Posted over 1 year ago

Bigvee

Avatar for Bigvee

999 posts
Joined 10/2008

I think this is going to be a good series... I really respect both these guy's opinions when it comes to poker.

I needed the refresh for sure - might actually get back into playing some more PLO now hehe.

Posted over 1 year ago

payerikplz

Avatar for payerikplz

68 posts
Joined 02/2009

vanHelsing

Avatar for vanHelsing

52 posts
Joined 01/2008

delcrossb, you recommend to fold 5678ds UTG and at
http://www.deucescracked.com/videos/5601-Episode-One?seek=3047
you recommend opening 30-40% OTB.

Well, I am one of the tighter regulars (like 24/18), still I'd open 5678ds UTG 100% of the time and roughly open 50% OTB.
So your recommendations seem to result into a very nitty preflop style, right?

BTW very promissing start of the series...

Posted over 1 year ago

DJ Sensei

Avatar for DJ Sensei

Exec Producer
3096 posts
Joined 10/2007

delcrossb, you recommend to fold 5678ds UTG and at
http://www.deucescracked.com/videos/5601-Episode-One?seek=3047
you recommend opening 30-40% OTB.

Well, I am one of the tighter regulars (like 24/18), still I'd open 5678ds UTG 100% of the time and roughly open 50% OTB.
So your recommendations seem to result into a very nitty preflop style, right?



1) I think its probably too tight to fold 8765ds in any position.
2) We probably will advise generally tight play at first, at least until you build up a solid framework and gain more experience.

Posted over 1 year ago

Schweig

Avatar for Schweig

Coach
980 posts
Joined 10/2008

These small rundowns like 5678ds are overrated in general and I don't think it's too tight a fold at all UTG.

If the players behind you are quite loose then I think it's a definite fold; it just plays poorly multiway OOP. I think people overestimate the amount of nut flops it has and vastly underestimate the amount of trouble ones.

If they are tight sure it's fine because you'll probably get it HU and the low double suitedness has more value HU, but in general you should be lagging it up more if you had that table.

I think if we were to construct a loose range and a tight range for UTG, shifting between the two depending on table dynamics and opponent tendencies, a hand like 8765ds would be one of the first to drop out of our range when we tighten up.

IIRC in Nowhereman and KasinoKrime's video series, Hellomaha, they share a similar view of only suggest playing T high rundowns and above UTG as default.

Posted over 1 year ago

Bigvee

Avatar for Bigvee

999 posts
Joined 10/2008

I think low nut type hands are difficult to play, especially OOP - the type of board we want is difficult to come by and difficult to get paid off on.

Id like to have your guy's thoughts - maybe in a later part of the series about how to deal with absolute maniacs. Like the 89/70 kinda guys, I think I start cold calling a few more marginal hands in position, but rarely hit and have problems playing back against it.

Posted over 1 year ago

PATheDeuce

Avatar for PATheDeuce

264 posts
Joined 08/2008

Id like to have your guy's thoughts - maybe in a later part of the series about how to deal with absolute maniacs. Like the 89/70 kinda guys, I think I start cold calling a few more marginal hands in position, but rarely hit and have problems playing back against it.



I find these guys flat 3bets oop a ton, so I've been just 3b'ing the heck out of them when I'm in position (is this the right adjustment?). A lot of times they just call down with a ton of non nut draws and ironically, when you bet two streets they often try c/r'ing the river and allow you to check back when the draws come in.

Posted over 1 year ago

esporro

Avatar for esporro

367 posts
Joined 11/2009

Hey DJ Sensei and Delcrossb

I enjoyed your 1st episode of this series. I thought you had some really good discussion of concepts and theory.

One thing I would like to hear about it a future episode is common mistakes people make. I think this would be useful for correcting our own leaks and finding tendencies of opponents which we can exploit.

Thanks.

Posted over 1 year ago

inonno

Avatar for inonno

31 posts
Joined 10/2009

I liked this video very much but I'm not quite sure of the terminology:

run-down: four cards of adjacent value (5678) - can they also have a gap (4678)?
wrap: what is a wrap?

Posted over 1 year ago

DJ Sensei

Avatar for DJ Sensei

Exec Producer
3096 posts
Joined 10/2007

I liked this video very much but I'm not quite sure of the terminology:

run-down: four cards of adjacent value (5678) - can they also have a gap (4678)?
wrap: what is a wrap?



A run-down refers to a starting hand which is very connected. Obviously 5678 is a rundown but I'd consider connected hands with a gap (like JT87) to be rundowns too.

A wrap refers to a postflop connection with the board, where at least 3 of our holecards work together to create a large straight draw. QT98 is a wrap on a 762 flop or a J92 flop. 9764 is a super wrap on an 853 board.

Posted over 1 year ago

Mcdonkey_

Avatar for Mcdonkey_

75 posts
Joined 08/2009

At 58:00 You are talking about 3 bet folding as an option, but if someone opens for full pot and we 3 bet for full pot, than it seems to me that it is almost always a call cause we are getting 2 to 1 and we have always at least 30% equity.
On the left table a lose opener opens for fullpot and you suggest to 3 bet Jc3cTh7h. I guess 3 betting this hand is very marginal when we shouldn't have some considerable fold equity which I don't think we have vs this opponent.
Nice Vid and thank you for your effort.

Posted over 1 year ago

Easy Squeezy

Avatar for Easy Squeezy

994 posts
Joined 07/2009

Nice vid. The nuttiness/flopability chart that you guys referred to many times helped to vision what type of hands you were discussing vs where people many times just quickly rattle off some random hands.

Posted over 1 year ago

DJ Sensei

Avatar for DJ Sensei

Exec Producer
3096 posts
Joined 10/2007

At 58:00 You are talking about 3 bet folding as an option, but if someone opens for full pot and we 3 bet for full pot, than it seems to me that it is almost always a call cause we are getting 2 to 1 and we have always at least 30% equity.
On the left table a lose opener opens for fullpot and you suggest to 3 bet Jc3cTh7h. I guess 3 betting this hand is very marginal when we shouldn't have some considerable fold equity which I don't think we have vs this opponent.
Nice Vid and thank you for your effort.



I think you might have posted in the wrong video thread.

However, I also think you need to give more consideration to future streets of action when considering preflop plays. While its true that we usually have at least 30% equity preflop, that only matters if we're calling off our stack. When there are several more streets to play and plenty more $ in the stack, preflop equity is less and less relevant and its more important to consider our implied odds and postflop playability. Some hands just don't have either of those against a tight 3betting range, and we should fold them.

Posted over 1 year ago

Mcdonkey_

Avatar for Mcdonkey_

75 posts
Joined 08/2009

I think you might have posted in the wrong video thread.

However, I also think you need to give more consideration to future streets of action when considering preflop plays. While its true that we usually have at least 30% equity preflop, that only matters if we're calling off our stack. When there are several more streets to play and plenty more $ in the stack, preflop equity is less and less relevant and its more important to consider our implied odds and postflop playability. Some hands just don't have either of those against a tight 3betting range, and we should fold them.


Sorry, sorry, sorry, I did mean Bustacap 1. Can someone remove this? Either way, when playing cap, there will not be any future street. If someone opens fullpot and we 3bet fullpot than his 4 bet means full cap.

Posted over 1 year ago

DJ Sensei

Avatar for DJ Sensei

Exec Producer
3096 posts
Joined 10/2007

Sorry, sorry, sorry, I did mean Bustacap 1. Can someone remove this? Either way, when playing cap, there will not be any future street. If someone opens fullpot and we 3bet fullpot than his 4 bet means full cap.



Yes, even in a cap game I'll 3betfold sometimes! ProPokerTools Omaha Hi Simulation
600,000 trials (Randomized)
AKK* 28.55% (167,813 wins, 6,967 ties)
AA** 71.45% (425,220 wins, 6,967 ties)

Posted over 1 year ago

donnyz11

Avatar for donnyz11

7 posts
Joined 09/2010

I hear a lot about playing hands that make the nuts and avoid situations where we get freerolled. But how do we go about doing that? is it in the preflop hand selection? I mean, if we have the nuts on a flop but there are redraws, what do we do?

example if we have AK89 on JQTtt and we have no flush draw, and get lead into. do we just call then get it in on the turn when flush misses or do we get it in knowing there are possibility we are getting freerolled.

I guess I understand the concept of not getting freerolled, but how does one avoid that?

Posted over 1 year ago

orestto

Avatar for orestto

Coach
1337 posts
Joined 07/2009

You'll never avoid it completely, but you can usually do so by playing better hands. Instead of AK98, play AKQJ, or AKQTds, so now you're free rolling the other guy with bare AK whenever you do flop the nuts. You can't avoid it because even if you play AAKKds and flop QJT you might not flop a flush draw and the other guy might with the bare AK, sometimes it's just running bad. But yea, you can minimize it by playing strongly connected suited hands that usually flop nuts + redraws.

By the way, I wouldn't worry too much with AK on QJT since at least you know there's not bigger straight redraws. Having 78 on 69T is much much worse.

Posted over 1 year ago

DJ Sensei

Avatar for DJ Sensei

Exec Producer
3096 posts
Joined 10/2007

I hear a lot about playing hands that make the nuts and avoid situations where we get freerolled. But how do we go about doing that? is it in the preflop hand selection? I mean, if we have the nuts on a flop but there are redraws, what do we do?

example if we have AK89 on JQTtt and we have no flush draw, and get lead into. do we just call then get it in on the turn when flush misses or do we get it in knowing there are possibility we are getting freerolled.

I guess I understand the concept of not getting freerolled, but how does one avoid that?



With "naked nuts" on the flop and a high SPR, we should almost never be raising. We want to avoid getting stacks in while being freerolled, and we also want to keep worse hands in so we can get some value. So, check-call oop is often a good play, at least in a multiway situation. You should certainly bet when checked to in position, but facing a bet you should probably just call.

Posted over 1 year ago

onehundred47

Avatar for onehundred47

393 posts
Joined 10/2009

Time Link to 00:23:20

why AAA2 ? and not AAAK. and why do you want to have 3 Aces. It will reduce de probability that you hit one A . Can't have quads. Less FH's.

Posted 10 months ago

DJ Sensei

Avatar for DJ Sensei

Exec Producer
3096 posts
Joined 10/2007

why AAA2 ? and not AAAK. and why do you want to have 3 Aces. It will reduce de probability that you hit one A . Can't have quads. Less FH's.



Well, we don't want to have 3 aces, but its still an equity favorite over most hands if we get all the $ in preflop. The point here is that it plays very poorly postflop with money behind because it has extremely low floppability. Thats not to say its unplayable with deep SPRs (for instance, naked ace bluffs, which we'll have available fairly often, work better with high SPR), but you have to be cautious and not overcommit yourself.

Posted 10 months ago

deadguy

Avatar for deadguy

16 posts
Joined 02/2008

Thanks for a great first EP. Really liked the presentation style.

Peace out

Posted 10 months ago

Moneyball16

Avatar for Moneyball16

22 posts
Joined 02/2007

Great stuff, The nuttiness/floppabilty differences and the concept of treating preflop mostly to set up good postflop situations really clicked for me. Downloading the rest of the series now.

Posted 4 months ago



HomePoker Videos → Solid State PLO → Episode One