Pocket KINGS vs A BRUTAL SLOWROLL Featuring Next Gen Poker!

Poker Strategy Info And Source:

Playing poker in Texas is known to be pretty wild and this hand highlights exactly that when Rosey from Next Gen Poker finds a very sticky opponent who decides to float on the turn when he holds the mighty pocket kings!

In this poker cash game hand from the Texas Card House in Dallas, Rosey finds himself in a tough spot on the river when there is four to a straight on board and he is facing a bet from his opponent.

I see lots of poker players get very upset when they raise preflop with pocket kings or aces and they have multiple people call them. This is not that bad of a spot as long as you play well postflop!

Remember that when you are putting in 25% of the chips into a pot but have 35% equity you are printing money at the poker tables in the long run!

I also discuss the poker strategy you should be thinking about when choosing bet sizes to force your opponents into making mistakes when calling with draws.

Thank you to the Next Gen Poker guys for allowing me to use their footage from this poker vlog. Check out their brilliant poker channel here:
https://youtube.com/nextgenpoker

Source: YouTube

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Pocket KINGS vs A BRUTAL SLOWROLL Featuring Next Gen Poker!

10 thoughts on “Pocket KINGS vs A BRUTAL SLOWROLL Featuring Next Gen Poker!

  1. Whether 'im bluffing or not when I make a big bet on the river i stare at the board blankly like a zombie. Sometimes I dont notice that someone has called lolllllll

  2. Yesterday I played with a bunch of fish for the first time, and I saw a guy slowrolled his straight flush for about 3 minutes. Everybody at the table felt okay with it except me.

  3. I dont know about slowroll but i know calling down Kings on such board is suicidal unless you know your opponent well enough that he is capable to turn some pairs into a bluff but then i still prefer safe route and folding

  4. Technically that player should show first since they put the final bet out and got called but at the same time lots of people don't know that and you can't get tilted from it. I'm fine however if they call and want to see the others first.

  5. One of my weaknesses I need to work on is flushes and being certain I have the better hand only to be beaten by a higher flush, they hurt sometimes

  6. The opponent was probably afraid of the 6 7 suited but had to call.

  7. Was it a slowroll? Of course it was. Was it an intentional slowroll? Probably not.

    Generally when people slowroll, it's after their opponent has already tabled their hand, and Rosie never tabled his cards. On top of that, the opponent is in seat 1 and Rosie is in seat 7 or 8 (depending on how many they seat at a table), and it can be fairly difficult to see what's going on in that configuration when the dealer is in between those seats.

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