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Poker Hand Discussion -- What Should We Do with Kings?

Tom 'LearnedFromTV' Chambers Plays $10-$20 PLO

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In this weekly series, CardPlayer.com and the Card Player Pro poker video training site (powered by PokerSavvy Plus) are giving you a free, full-length training video. In each article, we will highlight a particularly interesting hand from that video that features unconventional play, and we will ask for your opinions on the hand.

Tell us what you think and how you’d play this week’s hand in the comments below.

Tom Chambers Plays Kings in PLO

Video Title: Beating ‘Mixed Games’ Online

Coach: Tom “LearnedFromTV” Chambers

Video Description

In this week’s free, full-length poker strategy video from Card Player Pro, poker professional Tom “LearnedFromTV” Chambers plays in a $40-$80 mixed game online. Tom explains his strategy for each of the seven mixed games, from seven-card stud to pot-limit Omaha. Tom breaks down the interesting hands he plays and shows you the thought process a top player goes through when playing in a mixed game. This video focuses on advanced poker strategy.

Discussion Point:

Tough Decision with Kings

A highlight of the video comes at the 28:00 mark, when Tom encounters a tough decision with kings in pot-limit Omaha. He was playing in an aggressive four-handed $10-$20 PLO game (in this mixed-game format, the stakes are automatically lowered for all non-limit games like no-limit hold’em and pot-limit Omaha). Tom flat-called a cutoff raise on the button with KDiamond Suit KHeart Suit 7Heart Suit 7Club Suit, and the two took a flop heads up.

The flop came 10Club Suit 3Club Suit 10Diamond Suit, and his opponent checked.

Tom bet $70 into a pot of $140 — both to protect his hand and to extract value from worse pairs and draws. His opponent called.

The Turn brought the 8Diamond Suit, adding a second flush draw. Both players checked.

The river brought an off-suit 2Spade Suit — running out a board of 10Club Suit 3Club Suit 10Diamond Suit 8Diamond Suit 2Spade Suit.

Tom’s opponent thought for a few seconds and led out for $200 into a pot of $319.

What do you think Tom should do with his kings? Should he call his opponent and try to pick off a bluff? Should he fold and give him credit for a 10 or better? Should he raise with his kings and try to run a big bluff?

Watch now to see how Tom played his kings as part of this free, full-length training video.

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