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#11
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Oevg0,
The more I learn, the more I feel I'm behind. From this hand and other bad beats, I think no one can avoid taking one or two bad beats if you move-in with dominating hands; therefore, playing small pots and accumulate chips to offset bad beats seem to be the only way to survive. Back to the topic, I'll try not to call clock unless I have unbreakable nut. Indeed, the longer people think, the more likely they would fold. |
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#12
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[ QUOTE ]
From this hand and other bad beats, I think no one can avoid taking one or two bad beats if you move-in with dominating hands; therefore, playing small pots and accumulate chips to offset bad beats seem to be the only way to survive. [/ QUOTE ] If you have everyone covered, it is easier to survive bad beats. You are the guy who wrote the land mine article. Frequently you won't survive bad beats, but don't worry about it. Don't put money into tournament entry fees that you are not comfortable never seeing again. |
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#13
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[ QUOTE ]
Then again, I've played relatively few live events. [/ QUOTE ] n00b Regards, Woodguy |
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#14
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Don't remember the event. But last year Arieh called the clock on some lesser known pro when he wanted a call preflop with KK. The pro correctly folded JJ -- rather he timed out. There may be some validity to what your villain said.
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#15
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I saw this hand on PPT 2/3 weeks ago. Yes, JJ folded PF after being clocked.
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