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Ivey Vs Tlk On Ftp Right Now


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yeah I did.. problem? There are plenty of threads on it.. They may not be "extremely" recent but trust me they are around.. Good insult there, Sally.
lol.my reply was obviously tongue-in-cheek, oh vigilante of message boards. I could care less if you have a problem with anything in life.I don't think I've heard anyone say "Sally" since my little league coach said it to a kid who couldn't throw.
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Come on I like you both guys, (Wsox/Czech), stop this silly $hit and let's talk poker guys!
Holy shit. You're a post machine!
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lol.my reply was obviously tongue-in-cheek, oh vigilante of message boards. I could care less if you have a problem with anything in life.I don't think I've heard anyone say "Sally" since my little league coach said it to a kid who couldn't throw.
nice nickname. :)and you could care less or couldn't care less? :club:
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Yes sir. He was getting whipped this morning pretty badly. I think Ivey was up six figures in a half hour.
I have to think Ivey's spent some time studying HH's from TLK. Even a limit donk like I am could see that TLK plays incredibly aggressive on the turn without anything, and then is passive on the river. Ivey seemed to pick up on that, try to get through the storm on the turn, and then make TLK fold on the river.He also seems to play much weaker when he doesn't have much money on the table. He goes from a fearless aggressive guy raising every street and calling down everything to super tight postflop. I'm not saying I could beat this guy even if I was properly rolled, because I couldn't. But if I could notice these patterns there's no reason to think that someone along the level of Phil Ivey who would study HH's couldn't pick up on far more and learn to play him.
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I have to think Ivey's spent some time studying HH's from TLK. Even a limit donk like I am could see that TLK plays incredibly aggressive on the turn without anything, and then is passive on the river. Ivey seemed to pick up on that, try to get through the storm on the turn, and then make TLK fold on the river.He also seems to play much weaker when he doesn't have much money on the table. He goes from a fearless aggressive guy raising every street and calling down everything to super tight postflop. I'm not saying I could beat this guy even if I was properly rolled, because I couldn't. But if I could notice these patterns there's no reason to think that someone along the level of Phil Ivey who would study HH's couldn't pick up on far more and learn to play him.
I think the problem with a lot of these players is that they tend to just run over players. Until they get to world class players whom you can't run over, the best poker players adapt.
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I think the problem with a lot of these players is that they tend to just run over players. Until they get to world class players whom you can't run over, the best poker players adapt.
And that's the thing: he was able to run over Ivey and all of them for quite a while. But make him show down enough hands and they can start to see patterns. I'm sure pros can get hand histories for him, and for that kind of money study them for several hours. I just wonder how much of that 3 million he had he'll have to lose before he realizes he's just not running badly?
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