Professional Poker Player and coach Matt Hunt found himself heads-up for a World Series of Poker bracelet in 2017, in one of the earliest “big blind” ante events in the WSOP. He enters the Poker GRID with a dramatic hand with ten-six offsuit, featuring critical decisions on all streets.
Matt limps the button with Tc6s with just over 20 big blinds. The big blind, Spanish professional Mario Prats Garcia, checked his option. The flop was 7d 5s 4c, giving Matt an opened ended straight draw. The turn brings the 9d for a possible backdoor diamond flush draw—and is checked through to an eight of diamonds river, where the action becomes particularly explosive.
Matt and Jen uncover both the strategic and psychological implications of Matt’s decisions in the hand and dive into strategic takeaways for anyone trying to improve.
Matt also explains how language and math intersect, or fail to intersect, and how this plays into the “Poker out Loud” format, a televised cash game in which players listen to noise-cancelling music, while describing decisions on all streets. Jen and Matt both bemoan the punishing nature of poker language, pondering why there are so few words to describe strategic brilliance. Matt also opens up about his struggles with depression, and his wake-up call that he needed professional help.
You can find Matt at https://twitter.com/MGHpoker, and his Solve For Why videos here. He is also a coach for Poker Detox and Tournament Poker Edge.
Now that Matt Hunt has covered ten-six offsuit, 135 combos remain on thepokergrid.com