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Multi-Table No-Limit Tournaments
About No-Limit Tournaments
The popularity of No-Limit Hold'em tournaments is booming.
Fueled by the WSOP (World Series of Poker) and the World Poker Tour, many people
are intrigued by these competitions and enter for a chance to win a 'big score.'
In fact, most No-Limit Hold'em is played in tournament form nowadays.
While No-Limit Hold'em ring games offer the lowest
variation for a consistent winner (I probably win 80-90% of the times I enter a
No-Limit ring game), No-Limit Hold'em tournaments have crazy variance. This is
because all the money gets shoved in preflop on near coin-flip odds at the end
of the tournament. For example, AK versus a pocket pair is a very, very common
battle late in a No-Limit tournament.
I'm not saying you shouldn't play No-Limit tournaments, but
please don't think that these tournaments are all skill and no luck. The famous
quote from Rounders, "The same five guys make it to the final table every year
at the WSOP" is the opposite of the truth these days. You must be lucky to win a No-Limit
tournament because you must win more than your fair share of coin-flip battles.
Strategy
That's enough preaching about No-Limit tournaments. In
terms of strategy, No-Limit tournaments are very different from No-Limit ring
games. You simply can't bluff as much because people's stacks tend to be smaller
in relation to the size of the pot. Also, since the amount of chips you win from
a bluff is worth less than the amount you stand to lose, bluffing loses a lot of
'value.'
Now, many of you may be confused. Suppose you bluff 1000
chips at a 1000 pot and figure you have a 50-60% chance of taking it down. Many
of you would think it's worth it to take that risk. However, those 1000 chips
you win are worth less than those 1000 chips you stand to lose. If you have a
2000 stack, getting knocked down to 1000 has much more negative value than the
positive value of getting up to 3000. The 1000 chips do not represent money. The
only monetary value in the tournament is either losing all of your chips or
winning them all (and losing them all is more important because you do get a
prize if you lose them all in the late stages of the tournament). Losing those
1000 chips knocks you half the way out, but winning those 1000 doesn't do squat
for winning.
This is not to imply that you can simply fold your way into
the money. The blinds will eat you alive. You must win pots so you don't get
knocked out most of the time. Towards the end of the tournament, you can think
of winning pots to win the whole tournament. However, most of the time you must
win pots simply so you don't lose!
Thus, in the early stages of the tournament, you should
avoid gambling much. Generally, the amount you win isn't worth the gamble. If
you can see the flop for cheap with a suited connector or someone goes all-in
preflop and you have AA, by all means go for it. However, I wouldn't suggest
bluffing all-in. In the early stages, you want to win a huge pot here and there
because you hold the nuts. Target a bad player and make him pay you off.
Towards the middle of the tournament, you need to switch
gears. Since the blinds get bigger, stealing the blinds will help you stay
alive. Here, the 'gap' concept becomes more important. It takes a much weaker
hand than usual to raise to steal the blind, but a stronger hand than usual to
call a raise. The middle rounds introduce the 'survival mode' concept.
Again, most of the time you will be looking just to survive
and increase your stack bit by bit in the middle rounds. You want to avoid
confrontation without the nuts and just take down some small pots without
controversy.
However, if you are a large chip stack (or even just a
medium one), you may want to take advantage of this survival mode. Take control
of the game by raising and frequently putting other people at a decision for all
of their chips. After all, if they go all-in, they're risking it all but you
aren't because you can lose the pot and still keep on fighting. However, don't
do this too much. Steal some pots, but don't be so obvious that people will call
you all-in with top or even second pair. Also, don't do this against very bad
players. They will call everything.
Towards the end of the tournament is when the coin-flip
decisions become very important. Frequently, the blinds are so high it makes
sense for a player with a low or moderate stack to go all-in preflop. Generally,
when you go all-in you want to have an Ace (good kicker) or a pocket pair. If you
have an Ace (good kicker) you are an advantage to all non pocket pairs and may even
have someone dominated. If you have a pocket pair, you are a small advantage
against all non pocket pairs and at a huge advantage/disadvantage against other
pocket pairs (depending on their size).
Generally, if you have one of these marginal hands, it's
best to just shove all of your chips in preflop. When you are a low stack, you
cannot afford to be blinded away anymore. Once the flop comes, chances are it's
not going to be perfect. By shoving in all of your chips preflop, you have the
added chance of stealing the blinds and can avoid being bluffed out.
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