This Week's News in Poker TrainingCheck Out the New Curriculum Available on CP.com |
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This week at CardPlayer.com we bring your awareness to some of the brand new tools, lessons, articles, and more, available at the leading online training sites.
Check out this week’s happenings on the following sites:
This week at Bluefire Poker, lead instructor Phil Galfond discusses the action at two $5-$10 pot-limit Omaha tables, and one $3-$6 table, on PokerStars in a Thursday training video. You can watch the nosebleed regular analyze his play on the six-max tables.
At CardRunners this week, instructor “Nikachu” released a training episode where he is focused on bet-sizing mistakes at $400 no-limit hold’em, and their impacts on subsequent streets. The key concepts in the video include min-raising, three betting, ranges, among others.
DeucesCracked’s “DJ Sensei” released an 67-minute training video on Friday, on two-tabling $0.50-$1 Rush pot-limit Omaha on Full Tilt Poker. The episode is the fifth in his series, and he gets into the use of the hand replayer.
This week at Tournament Poker Edge, Jon “Wein” Wein reviews several hands where he narrows people’s ranges from any two preflop down to a few specific hands. The video, which is made for the beginner to intermediate player, focuses on finding where your opponent is in the hand based on betting patterns and action on various streets.
This week at Drag the Bar, students of the game can watch part two of a training video series with Jordan Morgan, who is a red pro on Full Tilt Poker and plays primarily heads-up and shorthanded cash games. In the video Morgan plays four tables of $200 no-limit Rush Poker.
At Card Player Pro (Powered by PokerSavy Plus), instructor Tony “Bond18” Dunst reviews tough tournament hands he’s played recently. The hands in this multitable tournament training video come from mostly $100-$1,000 buy-in events. Tony discusses hero Calls, hero Folds, unusual flop and turn lines, semi-bluffing on the turn, and much more.
This week at Deepstacks University, poker enthusiasts can take advantage of Alex Outhred’s training video on how to play the ever tricky K-Q.