Brandon Adams Poker Instagram

Posted By admin On 03/04/22
  1. In the short videos we can spot Phil Ivey, Phil Hellmuth, Brandon Adams, Ben Lamb, Jason Koon and others. PokerGo announced that HSP will return on December 16 on their streaming platform. It will be interesting to see how the show will differentiate from other cash games (if at all).
  2. Brandon Adams Wins Poker Masters Event #4 Ya’ boy Doug finishes runner-up for $468,000. The Aria Resort & Casino Las Vegas was the site of another poker high roller triumph Sunday as Brandon Adams of Louisiana captured a victory in the $50,000 buy-in Poker Masters Event #4 and took home $819,000 USD.
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Brandon Adams Poker Instagram Hack

Outcome
Adams

Tom Dwan poker interview with Brandon Adams about European Poker Tour, PCA and playing on High Stakes Poker and private nosebleed cash games. Facebook Twitter YouTube Instagram RSS.

Brandon Adams Poker Instagram Leaked

Preflop, six players remain, with blinds of 15,000-30,000 and a big blind ante of 30,000. Brandon Adams raised to 75,000 from the cutoff. Daniel Negreanu called on the button. On the flop Adams checked. Negreanu bet 60,000. Adams check-raised to 205,000. Negreanu called. On the turn Adams bet 405,000. Negreanu moved all-in for 665,000 total. Adams called.

Analysis

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This situation was definitely a cooler for Daniel Negreanu. That being said, it is worth analyzing the six-time WSOP bracelet winner’s approach to the hand. Negreanu is second on poker’s all-time money list with more than $38.5 million in earnings, so his results speak for themselves. However, his preflop decisions in this hand might have been less than ideal. He picked up pocket tens on the button and found himself facing a raise from Brandon Adams in the cutoff, a player who is plenty capable of playing loose and aggressive. Negreanu started the hand with around 30 big blinds, which can be an awkward stack with powerful but vulnerable hands like Negreanu’s. The standard play in this situation would be to three-bet and, while Negreanu’s flat call disguises his hand and helps control the size of the pot, it also costs him the opportunity to learn that Adams’ holding is strong enough to merit calling a three-bet or to four-bet, if he opted for that route. Given the eight high flop that came out and the stack sizes, Negreanu might not have been much more likely to be able to get away from his pocket tens in this hand. But three-betting still would have likely been the correct thing to do, even if only to balance his three-betting range for the times that he makes the move with less powerful holdings. Adams tailored his line well for exactly the type of showdown value Negreanu had, getting in a sneaky check-raise on the flop and then getting in the large bet on the turn that essentially forced Negreanu to make a decision for his stack right there. Even Negreanu, one of the most impressive hand readers to grace televised poker, was not able to get away from the overpair in this spot. He moved all-in and was called by Adams’ superior pair. Negreanu failed to come from behind and was eliminated in sixth place, earning $75,000.