Famous player X
says that he never calls all-in preflop with AA in a tournament if two
other players are already all-in and have him covered. Famous player
Y stresses the importance of avoiding marginal confrontations early
in tournaments.
Every well-known
player has given some trinket of poker advice. You need to ask yourself
whether those trinkets were properly worded when they were, most likely,
given on the spot. You also need to ask yourself if those trinkets apply
to the particular situation you’re in.
Tournament
Variables
It’s tempting to
think that tournament poker is just about the poker hands. However,
it’s about much more. Driving forces behind your tournament decisions
will also be the following:
• Blind Structure
• Stack Sizes
• Field Size
• Payout Structure
Whenever a famous
tournament player is asked for an on-the-spot tip, you need to remember
that those tips are “on-the-spot” and that they, most likely, are most
applicable to the types of tournaments that the famous player typically
plays in. If you’re playing $5+$1 turbo tournaments online, the advice
that someone gives regarding playing the first hour of the WSOP main
event might not hold water.
Forsaking
Present Edges for Bigger Edges in the Future
A lot of tournament
advice involves avoiding marginal confrontations in the present because
losing those confrontations will prevent you from realizing greater
edges in the future. Understanding this concept is important, but many
players take this advice too far because they overestimate the impact
that their skill will have in future hands.
Suppose you have
AA, and you have 10 big blinds left in a large multitable tournament
with a top-heavy payout structure. You’re on the bubble, and the average
stack in the tournament is 14BB. You’re in the big blind, and two players
that have you covered go all-in before you. Against two opponents, your
probability of winning the hand is probably around 65%. A 65% chance
of tripling up in a tournament featuring a top-heavy payout schedule
is huge. You can’t pass it up. You’ll be eliminated 35% of the time,
but how much skill can you honestly employ with a ten big blind stack?
Not much.
Generally, deep
stacks are needed to even consider forsaking marginal edges. However,
even in those cases, players overestimate how much of a favorite they
need to be in order to risk all their chips. Look at many of today’s
top players, and you may be surprised to see that they are quite aggressive
in accumulating chips; they are constantly involved.
Summary
Listening to successful
people is important towards becoming successful ourselves. However,
whenever listening, be active, and always think of context; as we all
know, poker is highly situational. Deciding between preservation and
accumulation is your call; make sure you make the right one!
Tony
Guerrera is the author of Killer
Poker By The Numbers. Visit him online at http://www.killerpokerbythenumbers.com