Sure! Here is
the full text in English, ready for you to copy and paste:
Good morning, everyone.
The most important advice I ever received — and the one I also give to anyone who wants to improve in the game — is:
study, man. You have to study a lot of Poker, seriously.
When I first started playing, I didn’t really understand this idea of “studying.” I used to think:
“Study? The game is right there. The board comes, and I decide what to do.” But that’s not how it works. If you look at really good players — the guys on Twitch, for example — you can see how they think. They break down the play, explain what they should do, make the move, and they’re right. Sometimes it’s an extremely complicated board, the guy has nothing, and even so he fires a c-bet on the river, gets checked to, and then check-raises all-in.
That comes from
a lot of study. The player knows he has range advantage on that board, knows he had advantage before the flop, understands the logic behind ranges, and because of that he can
bluff and make a really strong play. Especially near the end of a tournament, being able to bluff is essential. And to know how to bluff — and how to catch other people’s bluffs — you need to study a lot.
Poker is not just playing the hand.
Poker is studying before you even sit at the table.
It’s understanding ranges, board textures, ICM pressure, stack dynamics, c-bet frequencies, value narratives, bluff narratives — all of this before the “shuffle up and deal.”
That’s why the only real advice in Poker is:
study and practice.