Weekly Poker Hand With Jonathan Little (Video Podcast)
Summary: Each week, poker pro Jonathan Little will analyze a new poker hand. If his opponent shows his hand, he will also analyze the hand from his opponent's perspective.
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- Artist: Jonathan Little
- Copyright: Copyright 2012 Jonathan Little
Podcasts:
Here's a hand where I am relatively short stacked in a $50 buy-in online tournament. I'm under the gun with pocket queens and I have 12 big blinds. While I don't have too many options, I consider all of them in this hand.
Here's another hand from the same $10 online tournament as last week. In this hand, a short stack shoves, and the next player makes a fairly large reraise, which tips me off to the strength of his hand.
This week's hand is from a $10 online tournament. In this hand, I discuss how I figure out what range of hands my opponent is shoving with, and what range of hands I should call with.
This week's hand is from a $100 buy-in online tournament I played a few years ago. In this hand, we learn (the hard way) about reverse implied odds, and why it is such an important concept in tournament poker.
This week's hand is from a $100 buy-in online tournament I played a few years ago. In this hand, we learn (the hard way) about reverse implied odds, and why it is such an important concept in tournament poker.
This week's hand is from a $22 buy-in online tournament. A player, who starts the hand with around 40 big blinds, raises from early position. A player from middle position shoves for slightly less than 15 big blinds, and I have ace-king on the button with around 60 big blinds.
This week's hand is from a $22 buy-in online tournament. A player, who starts the hand with around 40 big blinds, raises from early position. A player from middle position shoves for slightly less than 15 big blinds, and I have ace-king on the button with around 60 big blinds.
This week's hand is from a $20 buy-in online tournament. I raise King-Queen suited under the gun. I have around 50 big blinds to start the hand and I get called by the button who has around 30 big blinds.
This week's hand is from a $20 buy-in online tournament. I raise King-Queen suited under the gun. I have around 50 big blinds to start the hand and I get called by the button who has around 30 big blinds.
Here is another hand from the $10,000 buy-in online event I played awhile back. I am very deep stacked, and I have ace jack offsuit on the button. My opponent, who has around 20 big blinds, raises from middle position.
Here is another hand I played awhile back from a $10,000 buy-in online event. My opponent, who I know to be very loose, starts the hand with 20 big blinds and I easily cover him. He limps in middle position and I have King-Queen offsuit on the button.
This week's hand is from a $10,000 buy-in event I played online awhile back. I made a couple of mistakes in this hand and discuss how I would play it today.
This week, I'll be analyzing a hand I played in a $10,000 buy-in online event. I thought this was a pretty interesting hand that you could learn a lot from. I raise jack-six suited from the hijack, and we are all very deep stacked.
This week, I'll be analyzing the big hand Jonathan Duhamel played against Matt Affleck at the 2010 WSOP main event. Duhamel has pocket jacks, and Affleck has pocket aces.
This week, I'll be analyzing another hand Joseph Cheong played in the WSOP main event in 2010. In this hand, Cheong 3-bets aces on the button vs Filippo Candio's 7-5 suited.