Do you play a lot of poker tournaments If so, how well do you actually understand the game You may think you play pretty well, and you may be right. However, it is notoriously difficult to be objective about our own competence and ability to perform at the table when a lot of money is on the line. We are all susceptible to blind spots where we think we understand concepts much better than we actually do. This is a massive hindrance to many players improving their poker skills.The Complete Poker Workout will help solve this insidious problem. In this book, Jonathan Little will quiz you on every aspect of tournament play: preflop ranges, postflop strategy, adjustments based on your opponents tendencies, bubble play, final table play, and much more.With 100 carefully thought-out hands to work through, The Complete Poker Workout will clarify areas of the game where your understanding is strong and - more importantly - what you need to work on to improve your poker skills.
Jonathan Little will quiz you on every aspect of tournament play: preflop ranges, postflop strategy, adjustments based on your opponents tendencies, bubble play, final table play, and much more.
You probably play a lot of poker tournaments but how well do you really understand the game?
Most players think theyre doing fine. And maybe they are. But its incredibly hard to be objective about your own performance especially under pressure, with money on the line. We all have blind spots: concepts we think weve mastered, but havent. These gaps can quietly sabotage your progress.
The Complete Poker Workout is designed to expose and fix those blind spots. In this hands-on guide, acclaimed player, coach, and author Jonathan Little puts your tournament skills to the test covering preflop ranges, postflop decisions, opponent profiling, stack depth dynamics, and much more.
The Complete Poker Workout presents 100 carefully constructed hands, incorporating 392 targeted questions, all grouped by stack size. This structured approach helps you identify where your understanding is strong and, more importantly, where it needs improvement.