Poker Strategy - Poker Tournaments Overview
Poker Strategy - Poker Tournaments Overview Tournament poker is
one of the world's hottest fads. While poker has been
consistently played for over 100 years, the tournament circuit
is still a relatively new thing. In 1972, the grand prize at the
World Series of Poker (a $10k buyin) was only $80,000. In 2003,
Chris Moneymaker took home a cool $2.5 million. The reason for
this drastic increase in prize money is the number of players
that have entered tournaments. In 1972, only 8 players entered
the world series of poker, while 839 entered in 2003.
I am not a fan of tournament poker. Television has made
tournament poker look glamorous- a competition where skill
prevails. However, the truth of the matter is that luck plays a
much larger factor in tournaments than ring games. Think about
it this way: if you started with $2,000, what is the chance that
you would end up with $2 million dollars before the night was
over at a regular no-limit game? Zero. However, to win a
tournament where each player has 2k starting chips and 1,000
people enter, you would need to win two million in chips to win
the tournament. Not an easy feat to do unless lady luck truly
smiled upon you that day!
In short, the reasons I prefer to make money at ring games
rather than tournaments are:
I can consistently win at a ring game, whereas a tournament is
feast or famine. Luck plays a much smaller role in having a
winning session at a ring game than at a tournament. It is much
easier to tell if you are a good ring game player than a good
tournament player. Since the best tournament player can easily
go ten sessions winning nothing, it is very difficult to tell if
you are 'doing the right thing.' Nevertheless, I play
tournaments because they are fun, and because I hope to make
some money at them. Winning at tournaments still requires sound
poker strategy, but emphasizes several factors more so than ring
games:
Your chips have a different relative value. In a standard poker
game, you should view each dollar as having equal value. This is
not the case in a tournament. When you start off with an initial
thousand in chips, that thousand is worth a lot more than the
next thousand you make. Since you cannot buy back in, you always
need to have chips in order to survive. At the beginning of the
tournament, you should be more reluctant to go all-in because
even if you win you are not in much better of a position.
However, later in the tournament you must gamble, or else you
risk just losing by being blinded away. Domination plays a much
bigger factor. Later in the tournament, the blinds will be so
high that most players in contested hands will be all-in
preflop. Thus, you want hands that dominate other hands. High
pocket pairs are good because they dominate lower pocket pairs,
and ace with a good kicker is a good hand because it dominates
many other hands. Many players make the mistake of betting very
hard with a low pocket pair such as 55. In truth, these low
pockets are only good for stealing blinds. If someone calls you,
you are at best a 50-50, while you are a 4.5:1 underdog if they
have a higher pocket pair.