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Old 09-22-2005, 07:27 PM
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Default Re: When You Have Less Than 20BBs in Your Stack...

[ QUOTE ]
The lesson I have taken away from this is...

...when you have 10BB-20BB in your stack, you should be looking to play ABC poker (for the most part; obviously you should never revert to strictly ABC poker). With more than 20 or 25BBs in your stack, well, then you have some room for fancy-plays-gone-wrong. But with 18BBs, it's simply too risky to put 1/3 of your stack at risk to try to get someone off their hand. Especially when this leaves you with slightly more than 10BBs and in a much more desperate situation.

[/ QUOTE ]

I'm no expert, but I can't entirely agree with this line of thinking because it generalizes too much.

Poker in these wild online MTTs is a game of situational dynamics that often has more to do with position, personalities, playing styles and stack size, than on the quality of cards.

Let's use two comparative examples, from a typical UB online MTT with 200 players. Typically in this situation, with about 300K t-chips in play and 40 players left, the blinds will be around 75/150 or 100/200.

So using your example, let's say you have 20BB at 200, or about 4K t-chips. This probably puts you somewhere in the 20th-30th place range out of 40 players left, quite far from being comfortably in the money (with 20 paying places), not to mention at least 1 or 2 increases in blinds/antes yet to come before the bubble.

So how could the same scenario be quite different depending on the situation dynamics??

Case1: Your table breaks and you get moved to a new table. You find yourself with almost the smallest stack on the table, with the 1st and 3rd largest stacks to your right and the 2nd and 4th largest stacks to your left. And to make matters worse, you have never sat with any of these players before, including this tournament or any other.

Case2: Again your table breaks and you get moved to a new one. But this time, you get lucky and find that not only are you the 3rd largest stack on the table, but the other two bigger stacks are side by side on the opposite side of the table AND you outstack the four players to your immediate right and left. Better still, is that you know both the big stacks well, and you've been playing most of the tournament with the 4 smaller stacks on your right and left.

I'm not making this up. Something very similar to both of these cases have actually occurred to me.

I think it is simple poker common sense that these two situations would require completely different strategies, to move from being questionable for getting a piece of the cheese, to being firmly into the money when the bubble bursts.

The point of the reply being this:
IMHO, it is very difficult to be successful in these online MTTs by thinking statically, with a fixed mindset of strategic dcecisions, regardless of scenario and situation. You have to build up a wide arsenal of tools in your strategic toolbox, and then build up the expertise to use the right tool for the right situation.

It is the reason why in poker discussions, I don't like reading words like ALWAYS, NEVER, MOSTLY, RARELY, USUALLY.
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