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-   -   Question on Behavior in Tournament Play (http://archives2.twoplustwo.com/showthread.php?t=407156)

12-30-2005 08:06 AM

Re: Question on Behavior in Tournament Play
 
Yeah, perfect example. If you are in a tourney, and especially at the final table, you want people GONE. Why not have him try to beat five hands instead of one? Had a Nimrod signal me with a raise when we had a guy all in, and his hand is actually worse than mine! Unless you have the nuts and are greedy for the chips, check it down.

12-30-2005 09:23 AM

Re: Question on Behavior in Tournament Play
 
With regards to #2 It is not common courtesy to check it down, it is collusion (which is against the rules). However, it is a sort of unspoken rule of thumb to check it down to increase the chances of busting the all in short stack. If one of you hits a big hand, you should bet, the other player gets out of the way.

As for #1 The big stack sitting out, this happens, just play as normal but be more aggressive when he is posting a BB.

AaronBrown 12-30-2005 12:20 PM

Re: Question on Behavior in Tournament Play
 
I agree with pzhon (as usual).

I think more clearly with specific numbers. To keep it simple, assume you think you have an even chance heads up against the short stack, and another player has a four flush after the flop. If you check, all three of you have 1 chance in 3 of winning.

If you raise and tall stack calls, you clearly gain. If you raise and he folds, your chance of winning the pot goes up by 1/6, from 1/3 to 1/2. However, the short stack's chance of winning also goes up by 1/6. For you to forgo the raise, you have to say that moving a chip from the short stack to the other high stack is worth more to you than getting a chip yourself. That's crazy. So raising is good if tall stack calls, good if he folds.

You could change the numbers in two ways. In ScottieK's extreme example, you don't care about getting chips yourself at all, all that matters is taking them away from the short stack. So it would be correct to call in that case. Or you could create a situation in which the other player is much more likely to beat the short stack than to beat you; for example, if tall stack is holding an Ace King to short stack's Ace Queen, while you have a pair of Nines. If you get him to fold, your chance of winning goes from 47% to 56%, but short stack's go from 19% to 44%. It could be worth 1 chip to you to move 3 chips from short stack to large (although only near a big kink in the payoffs). But there's no way you'd recognize something like this at the table without everyone exposing their hands.

My other objection is that this has nothing to do with courtesy, common or otherwise. It's strategy. One of the great virtues of poker is it does not tolerate whining that other people's strategies are discourteous; leave that to cricket.

Vuron00 12-30-2005 01:07 PM

Re: Question on Behavior in Tournament Play
 
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
unless you have a good hand and you are betting for value, then it is of more value to you, if you lose the hand, but the small stack is eliminated, than if you push X of a hand,

[/ QUOTE ]
This is wrong. In the vast majority of situations, the value to you of eliminating the all-in player is negligible. The benefit is split among all of the players remaining in the tournament, and your share is rarely worth a sacrifice of equity.

It is silly to make a complete bluff into a dry sidepot. If you are sure you have no equity in the main pot, bluffing risks chips with no benefit. However, it is perfectly reasonable to make a protection bet into the sidepot without feeling you are a favorite over the player who is all-in, or a favorite when you are called.

[/ QUOTE ]

This post makes the point that I believe most people don't understand when betting.

If 2 players call an all-in by a 3rd, this leaves only the main pot with a 0 side pot. If you bet into an empty side pot, you risk tripling up the all-in player and winning 0 chips for your bet.

You can see a perfect example of this on the hand that The Mouth knocked out The Sheik at this year's WSOP. 2 players called his all-in and checked it down until Mike made the nuts and then bet. The other player knew that Mike had made his hand and congratulated him before he even saw his cards.

Don't bet into empty side pots!

12-30-2005 01:17 PM

Re: Question on Behavior in Tournament Play
 
Okay, first post here...

I say, if anyone tells you that something in POKER is common courtesy, tell them to get lost. If they feel that checking after calling an all-in is common courtesy, then they're stupid. You're looking to win the hand - all you have to do is do what it takes without injuring the other player. Don't worry about courtesy, especially with something so personal as betting style.

As for your other situation, I'm not quite sure I understand the circumstances.

Gabe

P.S. - Does anyone know what the deal with siggnatures is? Is it bad to type in like, your e-mail, or your website at the end of a post?

intheflatfield 12-30-2005 04:05 PM

Re: Question on Behavior in Tournament Play
 
I've always looked at it this way. If there are mulitiple callers of the short stack all-in. Why would you want to drive out the hand that may possibly knock out the short stack. When that happens, as is metioned previously the short stack doubles or triples up, and instead of moving up in the money, you've just empowered another stack that might felt you on the very next hand (a reach, I know but still entirely possible). It's not so much courtesy as common sense.

pzhon 12-31-2005 12:21 AM

Re: Question on Behavior in Tournament Play
 
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
it is perfectly reasonable to make a protection bet into the sidepot without feeling you are a favorite over the player who is all-in, or a favorite when you are called.

[/ QUOTE ]

This post makes the point that I believe most people don't understand when betting.

...
Don't bet into empty side pots!

[/ QUOTE ]
Sorry, it sounds like you missed my point after all.

Don't bluff into empty side pots.
It is often right to bet into empty sidepots.

ALawPoker 12-31-2005 02:17 AM

Re: Question on Behavior in Tournament Play
 
[ QUOTE ]
This is wrong. In the vast majority of situations, the value to you of eliminating the all-in player is negligible. The benefit is split among all of the players remaining in the tournament, and your share is rarely worth a sacrifice of equity.

[/ QUOTE ]

You're right, but to be clear, in the example here -- 4 players left in a sng -- the value of eliminating a player is not negligible.


As far as #1 goes, you're not violating any unwritten etiquette. If all 3 of your stacks are relatively equal, it would generally be to all of your best interests to agree to it (preferably alternating who steals the BB), but there is no assumed obligation to do so. But if someone has a chip advantage he'd be foolish to accept the terms. A.) because the chips the other players would get would be relatively more valuable, and B.) because his advantage to use his stack on the payout bubble would be lost.

In fact, working off an away player's stack could be viewed as collusion. Even though he is away, he still has equity in the tournament. Working together to ensure that no one busts before this stack slides into the money or the player has time to return really is not much different than collusion in its more usual form.


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