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#1
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NL holdem tournament sponsored by my wife's company. 30 entrants. My wife has never played, so I gave her the beginners'strategy from his Tournament Poker book. (The all-in or fold), She played 2 hands, and took down 4th place, and asked me why I didn't place. Thanks David.
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#2
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Some moronic donk named Tiffany Williamson used a similar strategy to "the system" as laid out in Sklansky's book (Sklansky's is better than what she was using...)
and she managed to place I think like 17th or something absurd. It's a strategy that let's someone with little to no skill to level the playing field as much as possible with people who are better. Phil Ivey can outplay me, but his cards cannot outplay my cards. When I'm all in preflop the only opportunity he has to beat me is by his cards beating me. |
#3
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Some moronic donk named Tiffany Williamson used a similar strategy to "the system" as laid out in Sklansky's book [/ QUOTE ] Yeah I remember hearing about her. I'm just glad that my wife didn't take 5 mintues before making every decision. |
#4
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what is sklanksy's tourny beginners method
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#5
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what is sklanksy's tourny beginners method [/ QUOTE ] Basically it is: if somebody raises in front of you, go all in with aces, kings, or AK suited. If nobody raises in front of you, go all in with aces, kings, ak suited (I think), any pair, and any suited connector except for 2/3 and 3/4. Everything else: you fold. I had forgotten to tell my wife about the blinds. One time, I think she folded her big blind when there hadn't been a raise. The very beginner method doesn't address the blinds, but DS covers it somewhere else, with a little more complicated strategy. |
#6
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Dear lord that explains a ton of crap ive seen in free-rolls.
[img]/images/graemlins/blush.gif[/img] |
#7
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[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] what is sklanksy's tourny beginners method [/ QUOTE ] Basically it is: if somebody raises in front of you, go all in with aces, kings, or AK suited. If nobody raises in front of you, go all in with aces, kings, ak suited (I think), any pair, and any suited connector except for 2/3 and 3/4. Everything else: you fold. I had forgotten to tell my wife about the blinds. One time, I think she folded her big blind when there hadn't been a raise. The very beginner method doesn't address the blinds, but DS covers it somewhere else, with a little more complicated strategy. [/ QUOTE ] As I recall, you also move all-in with any suited ace. All told, you move in somewhere around 13% of the time; enough to make money by picking up the blinds, but not often enough for people to just indiscriminantly call you with crap. |
#8
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[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] [ QUOTE ] what is sklanksy's tourny beginners method [/ QUOTE ] As I recall, you also move all-in with any suited ace. [/ QUOTE ] Yes, Orange, you are correct. I had forgotten to tell her that. Looking back on it, I'm not a big fan of the ace/suited all in move. I don't have the math to back it up, but with say an ace/7 hearts, you are likely to get called by A/Q and AK. At least with a small pair, you are only really out of it if called by a higher pair. |
#9
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[ QUOTE ]
Some moronic donk named Tiffany Williamson used a similar strategy to "the system" as laid out in Sklansky's book (Sklansky's is better than what she was using...) and she managed to place I think like 17th or something absurd. [/ QUOTE ] This just isnt true. She made two plays that made her appear as a donkey when she moved in preflop with a huge stack against another huge stack to a single raise with AQ and sucked out on the other guys KK and one with AJ against Raymer I think. These were on the 2nd and 3rd to last days of tournament though. She didnt play anything close to the system otherwise though and was from my perspective a pretty good player. |
#10
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Would this system be a winning strategy in NL ring games as well? I'm thinking as a hit & run, once you double up you leave the table to protect your winnings. Obviously sometimes you'd lose, but if it has a 65%-70% winrate (besides stealing the blinds) it's good.
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