This week, Daryl Jace continues his latest series while Andrew Brokos debuts a new WCOOP review. Also, Matt and Andrew bring us new Stop and Go hands. We get a new article n my tournament players should play cash and tons of member scores. Check it out.
Videos
$215 OPS Hand History Review with Daryl Jace
https://www.tournamentpokeredge.com/215-ops-hand-history-review-with-daryl-jace-part-6/
https://www.tournamentpokeredge.com/215-ops-hand-history-review-with-daryl-jace-part-5/
Daryl Jace continues his hand history review this week. In part 5, we get a bonus with Paul Gees sitting at the table as well. Daryl uses ICMizer to construct a 4-bet shoving range. He gets a few bigh hands and runs up a big stack. In part 6, we start with 80bbs. This time we also get Nick Yunis at the table. Daryl avoids the best players a attack the fish to continue running up his stack before the final table. I cannot wait for part 7. Should be epic.
WCOOP Sunday Warmup Hand History Review with Andrew Brokos
Andrew Brokos returns this week with a hand history review of a WCOOP event he played. In part 1, Andrew bluffs a busted straight draw and gets paid on top two TWICE to secure a big stack. In part 2, he gets two spots where he could have bluffed villain off of a chop but didn’t. This is his signature move and he admits to being frustrated that he didn’t take the spots.
Stop and Go: Gutshot Barrel by Andrew Brokos
https://www.tournamentpokeredge.com/stop-and-go/gutshot-barrel/
Andrew brings us a Stop & Go hand where he opens QTo from the HJ as the big stack. The big defends and he flops a gut shot on a AJ7 board.
Stop and Go: Deep Stack Suited One Gapper by Matt Hunt
https://www.tournamentpokeredge.com/stop-and-go/deepstack-suited-1-gapper/
Matt Hunt brings us a Stop & Go hand where he plays 86s from early position as the big stack. The big blind defends and he flops a flush draw on a AKQ board.
Articles
Why Tournament Players Should Learn to Play Cash Games
https://www.tournamentpokeredge.com/why-tournament-players-should-learn-to-play-cash-games/
In this article, we discuss why tournamen players (especially live pros) should learn to play cash games. They help to smooth out variance in your results. If you play live tournaments, you can travel to a spot and bust early in the game and be out of action for the day unless you jump into a cash game. This provides an added incentive because it just so happens that the juiciest cash games are run during live tournament series.
Member Scores
Ben Reasons shipped Event 5 of WSOP-C Choctaw for $20K
acesfull44 took 7th in a Bovada 2K for $300
Joe LaPinta chopped the Borgata 100K for $9200
mikewebb shipped the WSOP Nightly 10K for $3300
Killingbird shipped a WPN 5K for $1250
jacobcardshark took 4th in a Bovada 4K for $500
Carlos Welch took 5th in a Bovada 5K for $300
Hawkeye shipped a Bovada 500 for $230
Nervous Mike shipped the Big 22 on Poker Stars for $7300
If you would like your name to be included next week, please make sure you post your score, IN DETAIL, in either the sweat or BBV threads, or use the hashtag #TPEdge on Twitter! You can also tweet them to @HipHop101Trivia directly.
https://www.tournamentpokeredge.com/forum/sweat-threads/
https://www.tournamentpokeredge.com/forum/brags-beats-and-variance/
Take one down for the good guys!
Carlos Twitter: @HipHop101Trivia