Studying poker with ICMizerby Jonathan Little | Published: Dec 07, '15 |
When I first started playing poker, I would spend 6 hours per day grinding sit n' go's and 4 hours reviewing my hands using a now-defunct program called Sit N' Go Power Tools. Eventually I moved to multi-table tournaments and stopped studying push-fold situations because I thought I knew them perfectly.
While watching the 2015 WSOP Main Event (I review 31 hands from the final table here), I saw someone call an all-in in a situation where I thought it could easily be bad. I knew ICMizer was the go-to final table push-fold authority, so I downloaded the program and saw that the player in question should call or fold based almost entirely on the payout structure. Continue Reading ...