#1
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Change your strategy when you win a big hand early?
The other day I tripled up on the second hand or so with aces and had almost 2500 in chips. I ended up busting out on the bubble and found myself playing much looser rounds 1-3. With a stack that big so early should your strategy change at all or should I still play really tight.
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#2
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Re: Change your strategy when you win a big hand early?
I LOVE being in that situation!
I loosen my pre-flop standards a bit such that I play a little more like it's a regular ring game. For instance, I'll play suited connectors in LP and raise MP open-limpers with decent hands in LP. But I DO NOT let myself blow my stack on the poker tourney equivalent of booze, coke, and hookers; that is, bluffing like a monkey and paying high prices for draws with good implied odds. |
#3
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Re: Change your strategy when you win a big hand early?
Don't waste the chips you've earned. Play tight until the bubble and then be the bully and steal like crazy.
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#4
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Re: Change your strategy when you win a big hand early?
[ QUOTE ]
I LOVE being in that situation! I loosen my pre-flop standards a bit such that I play a little more like it's a regular ring game. For instance, I'll play suited connectors in LP and raise MP open-limpers with decent hands in LP. But I DO NOT let myself blow my stack on the poker tourney equivalent of booze, coke, and hookers; that is, bluffing like a monkey and paying high prices for draws with good implied odds. [/ QUOTE ] take some measured chances to double up early, tighten up when you do double up, build yourself some credibility for later when you need to steal and bully. |
#5
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Re: Change your strategy when you win a big hand early?
[ QUOTE ]
But I DO NOT let myself blow my stack on the poker tourney equivalent of booze, coke, and hookers; that is, bluffing like a monkey and paying high prices for draws with good implied odds. [/ QUOTE ] I nominate this for line of the week! I'm always amazed when I see someone double up in the first 5 hands and go out in the 2nd or 3rd round. Seems to happen a lot. I don't change my game a lot when I'm fortunate enough to get a big stack early. If you're in every other hand people figure out you don't have aces all the time, even at the 10+1. |
#6
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Re: Change your strategy when you win a big hand early?
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] But I DO NOT let myself blow my stack on the poker tourney equivalent of booze, coke, and hookers; that is, bluffing like a monkey and paying high prices for draws with good implied odds. [/ QUOTE ] I nominate this for line of the week! I'm always amazed when I see someone double up in the first 5 hands and go out in the 2nd or 3rd round. [/ QUOTE ] It never begins to amaze me. |
#7
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Re: Change your strategy when you win a big hand early?
I think you get a bit more implied odds to limp w/ suited connectors and pocket pairs, but other than that, nothing's really different.
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#8
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Re: Change your strategy when you win a big hand early?
[ QUOTE ]
I think you get a bit more implied odds to limp w/ suited connectors and pocket pairs, but other than that, nothing's really different. [/ QUOTE ] I don't disagree in the principle here, but I do think that it is incorrect to loosen up in a low stakes SNG here. You are far better off waiting until your chip equity increases at the later rounds. I used to give a lot of weight to the idea of playing differently depending on your stack size, but unless I am more than double the average I play the same game as I do when I have 10-12BB. Wait until people start to get desperate, until then just punish people with premium cards. In general, I don't see a lot of value with non-broadway suited connectors at all in SNGs. |
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