Combinatorics & How To USE THEM! [Advanced Poker Theory]

PokerCoaching coach James Romero teaches why Combinatorics matter in the game of poker and how you can best utilize them to increase your win rate and get an extra edge over your opponents who know nothing about them!
James walks you through the basics of combinatorics in poker starting from the basics. Did you know that there are 1,326 preflop combinations of possible poker hands? This is a concept that you need to learn to start really competing with some of the best poker players in the world. It will help you to start crushing high stakes cash games and high stakes tournaments!
He talks through the removal effect of how many different combinations your opponent’s can have when the community cards are revealed. There are 6 possible combinations of aces, but when an ace is on the board there are now only 3 possible combinations.
A poker concept that might be new to some players is called weighting. You must always remember to factor in weighting when you are ranging your opponents. If you raise from UTG and the BTN calls with a flop of A73 then they should have 0 combinations of AA because they would 3-bet that hand preflop. They should have all combinations of 77 which would be 3, and then maybe they only call sometimes with 33 preflop so we can weight them to having that combination once.
James talks about when he tends to use combinatorics the most; when he is bluff catching or even when he decides to bluff!
0:00 - Intro
0:19 - Why Do Combinatorics Matter?
03:43 - The Basics
09:45 - Removal Effects
12:58 - Weighting
20:35 - Examples & Applications
On this Poker Coaching channel we cover a weekly poker topic to help improve your poker strategy!
In order to take your poker game to the next level it is vitally important you learn all the nuances of the game.
Do you know what ranges of poker hands you should be playing from each position? When should you 3-bet, call or fold? When is the right time to make a hero call or a huge bluff? Do you know how to play preflop, flop, turn & river effectively and how should your poker strategy change depending on the street? What difference does it make if you are playing multi-way vs heads-up?
#pokerstrategy #jamesromero #combinatorics

Пікірлер: 46

  • @PokerCoaching
    @PokerCoaching Жыл бұрын

    Did you know about combinatorics in poker before watching this video? 🤔

  • @kovado

    @kovado

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, but within the first 30 seconds James shows that I've underestimated it's importance.

  • @user-vx2oo3sh6c

    @user-vx2oo3sh6c

    Жыл бұрын

    Great material. Thank you, Jonathan and James!

  • @mikezilberbrand1663

    @mikezilberbrand1663

    Жыл бұрын

    Used to teach it...

  • @richardcharleswilliams8465

    @richardcharleswilliams8465

    Жыл бұрын

    I thought I did, But Romero does such a great job of integrating them with GTO theory and practice that it feels like I might finally be able to apply them effectively. Excellent player, excellent teacher. Glad he is with the team.

  • @erronblack1

    @erronblack1

    Жыл бұрын

    This one was an eye opener, thanks for the content Jonathan!

  • @thedspenguin
    @thedspenguin Жыл бұрын

    T5s is a great pre-flop 3-bet bluff because every straight has either a T or a 5 in them - Phil Galfond. mindblown.

  • @moneymikz
    @moneymikz Жыл бұрын

    J4 are the best blockers

  • @oliverjordan695

    @oliverjordan695

    Жыл бұрын

    It has to be offsuit and you have to return the money.😆😆😆

  • @carlothechatpro
    @carlothechatpro Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video. Simplifies combinatorics and puts it to real use. Reading this in books in one thing, watching a successful MTT crusher is another.

  • @moneymikz
    @moneymikz Жыл бұрын

    I have increased my river bluffing frequency with hands like K7 suited when 78 is the nuts, I didn’t think that would work against low level players but it does

  • @pietvanvliet1781
    @pietvanvliet1781 Жыл бұрын

    The Counting combos example is from James sweeny AKA splitsuit🙊

  • @markcummings3146
    @markcummings3146 Жыл бұрын

    Love this guys! Combinatorics is such an over looked way to improve your poker game.

  • @PokerCoaching

    @PokerCoaching

    Жыл бұрын

    It really is!

  • @thomasobrien4707
    @thomasobrien4707 Жыл бұрын

    James Romero explains things so clearly; great and very helpful video thank you

  • @brij934
    @brij934 Жыл бұрын

    *combinatorics This is the only thing I know about the topic that James doesn't 😂

  • @PokerRoomThreads
    @PokerRoomThreads3 ай бұрын

    Great video. Thank you 😊

  • @PokerCoaching

    @PokerCoaching

    3 ай бұрын

    You're welcome!

  • @RealEyesRealizeFascists
    @RealEyesRealizeFascists Жыл бұрын

    Holy shit, the first five minutes and it just hit me. I get it now. Ty :)

  • @baileydwyer453
    @baileydwyer453 Жыл бұрын

    21:20 If you have A 10 in this spot it would not be a good hero call because it is less likely the opponent has a bluff because lots of their bluffs contain a 10. So for every combo that the opponent has that contains a 10, there is only 12 instead of 16 making it less likely he is buffing and making something like KQ a better call as A 10 and KQ have the same relative hand strength but KQ has better blocking effects as it unblocks his bluffs.

  • @RonHarrisMe
    @RonHarrisMe Жыл бұрын

    Teaching/Training is HARD. I know, I have been a technical teacher/trainer for 40 years. There are courses you can take to help you become a better teacher. I used to teach a course that was called "Train the Trainer" where I taught people who were very advanced in their technical knowledge but lacked the tools to convey information in a meaningful way. The subject matter is truly immaterial, its understanding how Humans learn, that's really the key. Conveying the information in more than a single way is crucial. I got something out of the video, but it was painful while it should of been enjoyable. This comment is meant to HELP, I hope it's taken that way.

  • @sdc7309
    @sdc7309 Жыл бұрын

    Quick question - if the guy in the 99s hand raised half pot on the river and not shove... are you folding anyway? whats the maximum you're calling if/when they bet

  • @capitaljay1
    @capitaljay17 ай бұрын

    how are you supposed to accurately predict what percentage of pocket pairs he raises with or flats with? Even if you watch, you have to do it with all players at the table. And then you need to see their hand most of the time. Not saying it’s impossible, but am I missing something? It seems like an ungodly amount of data to have to track at once

  • @MysticMonologues
    @MysticMonologues Жыл бұрын

    why is c-bet almost 100% when MMM pair bords are c-bet with a lower frequency than a lot of other bords?

  • @deviongants3724
    @deviongants3724 Жыл бұрын

    Yep that's what I said

  • @jorgecasasola9325
    @jorgecasasola9325 Жыл бұрын

    💯💯💯

  • @ML-sj3gi
    @ML-sj3gi Жыл бұрын

    So....are the calculations are only valid when they play A6s and not K6s. AA with A clubs is worth infinitely more because Kx has been taken out of their range, or the solver has. Is that realistic? I am sure that in the games I play, they have many flushes apart from Ax clubs, therefore, the EV calculation is not correct in those games, and if they are this wrong on this calculation, then how about the others? What am I supposed to lean from such data? I am not sure.

  • @Vox24

    @Vox24

    Жыл бұрын

    This is Game Theory Optimal (GTO) data, which assumes all players at the table play by the same GTO standards. Of course in reality nobody plays perfect GTO, not even the top pros, it's so hard to make such accurate plays constantly, within the time limitations of an actual game. More so, recreational players tend to be total deviations from GTO, in many various ways. So here comes the exploitative part of poker, in which you try to identify whatever it is that your opponents do wrong and adapt your plays accordingly. GTO is a strong fundamental guideline from which you should deviate depending on your opponents.

  • @LifeisA_Dream
    @LifeisA_Dream Жыл бұрын

    😀

  • @jerrygarcia4390
    @jerrygarcia4390 Жыл бұрын

    I watched Jason get taken to value town in a tournament at The Venetian. The villain turned broadway with Queen 10 off and donk bet $50,000 on the river. After tanking, Jason put in the call 😫 Brutal spot

  • @mikezilberbrand1663
    @mikezilberbrand1663 Жыл бұрын

    Why do you assume that a tight player is likely to play 45s, but not 33?

  • @jaredcarrick3468

    @jaredcarrick3468

    Жыл бұрын

    Tiny pocket pairs have practically zero value outside of set mining and jamming pre with a sub 10BB stack depth in tournaments (and even when jamming shallow in tournaments, all you can hope for is to be a tiny favorite in a flip and to win the flip rather than being crushed against a bigger pocket pair when the chips go in). There may be the occasional rare board/runout when heads up where any pair is likely good given what your opponent’s range is going to look like, but outside of those rare occasions, if you don’t flop a set, even if you feel like your opponent may just be drawing, it’s still a -EV play to proceed beyond the flop without the set. Even smaller suited connectors play much better postflop and give a tighter player more board coverage to use their tight image to get semi bluffs through when flopping front door draws.

  • @mikezilberbrand1663

    @mikezilberbrand1663

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jaredcarrick3468 set mining has 12% probability of success on the flop, 45s does not.

  • @jaredcarrick3468

    @jaredcarrick3468

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mikezilberbrand1663 you’re talking about the odds of flopping a hand as big of a set. Yes, the odds are only 1 in 8. Do you know what board coverage means? It means even smaller suited connectors are going to interact much better with a much higher percent of all the possible flops than tiny pocket pairs, even if it’s just flopping a front door draw. This means that a much higher percent than 12% of the time, smaller suited connectors will at least give a tighter player a decent draw, and tight players may then exploit their image to get semi bluffs through in a lot of those spots, as to where if you miss your set on the flop with a tiny pocket pair, you are pretty much never supposed to proceed against a bet, even if you feel like it’s likely just a draw for your opponent, as it would a negative EV play.

  • @mikezilberbrand1663

    @mikezilberbrand1663

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jaredcarrick3468 12.75% is the probability, odds 14.6% = 1/7.

  • @Vox24
    @Vox24 Жыл бұрын

    A spades can be matched with A diamonds A clubs A hearts twice?! Really?!

  • @lennybattaglia1864
    @lennybattaglia1864 Жыл бұрын

    Watching the whole thing but 12 minutes in this is basic AF

  • @jasonemanuel8169
    @jasonemanuel8169 Жыл бұрын

    How can you say that 999 is worth nothing when it's a better hand as a set than AA. 3 of a kind beats a pair. Who gives a f*** about blockers if your hand is a loser.

  • @brianspringman1237

    @brianspringman1237

    Жыл бұрын

    This is why GTO is overrated garbage

  • @krisamagus1

    @krisamagus1

    10 ай бұрын

    exactly...what thw f is this: lol

  • @GokuTheSuperSaiyan1
    @GokuTheSuperSaiyan1 Жыл бұрын

    Here's the logic to understand: 6 combos of pocket Aces because, 3*4=12, but half of those combinations are redundant and identical to each other, because for e.g. Ace spades (left card) + Ace of diamonds (right card) = Ace of diamonds (left card) + Ace of spades (right card). Therefore we divide 12 by 2