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Poker Tips: Tournament Play

 

InsideEdge: Tournament Play
Three Classic Poker Mistakes

What are the three classic mistakes made by players who are nervous, inexperienced or just bad?

Thanks in no small part to television, poker are now more popular ever. Even many players – who used to shun tournaments, fearing that profitable anonymity might can no longer ignore them. The massive amounts of prize money on offer, as well as the potential benefits from resultant sponsorship are simply too alluring.

If you’re an experienced player, what are some of the most errors you can expect the huge influx of new players to make, and what you do about them?

 

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1. Not Understanding When Someone Else Is Pot-Committed

Ever since a friend mentioned this poker faux pas to me a few months ago, I have been watching carefully for it. Here’s a good example, taken from an online tournament I was playing recently.

I held A-J suited on the button, an above-average hand to be sure, but nothing overwhelming either; against good players it’s a trouble hand because you’re almost sure to be outkicked if another Ace is in play, you’re a small underdog to most pairs, and you’re not that big a favourite when you are up against two other nonpaired cards. For example, A-J suited isn’t even 2/1 against 8-7 off suit, even though it looks so much better.

Because the button so often tries to steal, however, A-J suited looks pretty good – people will play with you with inferior hands. I had $1,900 in front of me, and raised the big blind’s $400 up to $1,200. The big blind moved in, I suppose thinking that there was a chance I could let the hand go, but with $2,600 already in the pot, it’s far from easy to get me to throw almost any hand away, I can tell you. The big blind had 2-4 suited.

If I had moved in, would the big blind have played? Calling with small pairs is one of the worst plays in poker, but because there was almost no chance I would fold, this was in essence what he was doing. Nonetheless, because he was a player I didn’t know, I shouldn’t have assumed he knew the meaning of ‘pot-committed’ and just moved my whole stack in.

If you have a hand where your raise does commit you to the pot, you might as well go ahead and move all-in with it. If you’re winning, you’ll win more, and if you’re losing, there’s a bigger chance that your opponent will fold.

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