Playing Style
Today we are going to talk about playing style. On todays comparison it will be Daniel Negreanu's tournament play crossing over to cash game play, do you all think it would work?
Here is the thing. If you have ever watched Negreanu play, he likes to play premium hands plus ALOT of suited cards. It seems like he will see the flop with almost any 2 cards as long as they are suited and play tight after the flop and cautiously from there on thru the hand. This might work good in a NL tournament environment. But do you all think that this would be a good idea for cash games? Where the limits are set, where you cannot over bet a flush draw to get someone to fold? Or do you all think that Negreanu's style would work well for cash/limit games?
I would really like to get some opinions here... so feel free to respond.
PS: I FINALLY HAVE SENIOR MEMBER STATUS! WOOHOO!
Here is the thing. If you have ever watched Negreanu play, he likes to play premium hands plus ALOT of suited cards. It seems like he will see the flop with almost any 2 cards as long as they are suited and play tight after the flop and cautiously from there on thru the hand. This might work good in a NL tournament environment. But do you all think that this would be a good idea for cash games? Where the limits are set, where you cannot over bet a flush draw to get someone to fold? Or do you all think that Negreanu's style would work well for cash/limit games?
I would really like to get some opinions here... so feel free to respond.
PS: I FINALLY HAVE SENIOR MEMBER STATUS! WOOHOO!
Comments
Congrats on senior member status!
Reading his articles, I get the sense Daniel's style is to get his opponents gambling and then taking advantage of that. His biggest problem is not knowing when he's over his head and is unable to fold at the turn. He always thinks he can pull the rabbit out of the hat. He's got great player reading skills and that's what saves him allot. He uses the player reading skills to the fullest and manipulates opponents. And the circle concludes -- his greatest asset is that he manipulates opponents into gambling against him.
Cheers
Magi