Proposal: let's discuss portions of a poker book in depth together. Maybe several books.
What book? For the first one, I suggest SS2, since it just came out and we're all going to be digesting it together for the first time. Plus, I just bought it, read parts of it, and have something to say about it.
I'll start out with just a very general introduction to how Brunson says that he wins at NLHE. He bets and bets and bets. When he has a hand, he bets. When he doesn't, he bets. If he flops a set, he bets. If the flop misses him completely, he bets. And he bets pretty big. He goes all-in on a regular basis. He wants his opponents to know that he is willing to get all-in with them. Knowing this, they are not willing to call him down with anything but premium hands. Since premium hands are rare, he takes down a lot of small pots. Eventually someone will call him all-in, and as he candidly admits, most of the time when that happens he has the worse hand. But he has won so many small pots that they've already paid for the big ones. And he generally has a few outs, so that he will suck out and win against better hands a certain percentage of the time.
I have a couple of points I want to make about what I've read so far.
(1) This is a very dangerous book for a new player (like myself) to read. Especially for online poker. Especially at Gaming Club!! None of this is Brunson's fault, though. He tries to be very clear that he is writing only for people playing against other skilled opponents. Your opponents need to be able to lay down a good hand when the flop makes it look like they might be beat. Also, to play this way successfully your opponents also need to believe that YOU are a good player.
If your opponents are idiots, they will call your big bets too often and you will lose. If your opponents think you are an idiot, they will have no respect for your big raises and will, again, call you down too often.
My thesis is that there are so many idiots on Gaming Club, and online generally, that Brunson's style of play is generally going to lose you money. So if you generally play online, especially at lower limits, be really careful about reading this book!!
(2) Brunson says he would rather be dealt AK than AA or KK. Not because it's a better hand, but because it's easier to get away from it. Interesting thought.
(3) Brunson says that one of his favorite plays is to call down a big preflop raiser with hands like [5d] or even [5h]. If the flop comes big, it's easy to fold and take a small loss. But on a ragged flop, the guy betting his AA or KK is going to think he's still ahead, so he'll bet out, and then Brunson will come over the top for all his chips if he caught even a decent part of the flop. The poor preflop raiser has no clue whether Brunson flopped two pair, a straight, or just bottom pair or a straight draw. Most of the time he'll muck and Brunson takes down another pot.
Crazy stuff. Exhilirating to think about. But probably a loser if you try it at the $20 tables at Gaming Club.
Hoping for comments, follow-ups, and other thoughts from people who are reading SS2 (and SS1 too, of course, which I have never seen).