No-Limit Holdem Tourney Self-Destructionby Jim WoodsIf you're playing correctly in a NL Hold'em tournament you're not seeing most flops, which means you have time on your hands. Sure, you could order drinks, talk to a waitress, or peruse the fascinating array of daytime TV shows on the casino's multiple screens. But, if you use your free time to observe your opponents, you can learn a lot about them. And much of it isn't pretty... The last tourney I played had a $60 buy-in, no re-buys, and a single $50 add-on. That affordability guaranteed that many of the 136 entrants were, shall we say, unlike Phil Ivey. Here are two examples of flagrant self-destruction that I saw. Before the first break, a good player at my table made several good bets and at least one Grade-A lay down, and thus was one of the tournament chip leaders with 70,000 chips. Strangely, however, in the first hand after the break she went all-in under the gun with 99. The ONLY player at our table who had a bigger stack than hers also happened to have better cards...sharp tops, to be exact! The AA held (yes, Virginia, that does occasionally happen), and all of the lady's fine play before the break was for nothing! Why would someone do that? Her explanation was, "I wanted to grab the blinds [3,000 chips] and set the tone for the second session." Well, a certain tone WAS set: Those of us left at the table had to contend with a 160,000-chip behemoth when our stacks averaged about 30,000! That gave a whole new meaning to "Wham, bam, thank you, ma'am." I doubt the woman's explanation. I think a more likely cause was loss of focus, which I have observed in many players as a result of breaks (unfortunately including myself more often than I want to admit). We check our voice mail, calculate how much longer the tourney may last, contemplate moving back an appointment or dinner reservation, grab a quick snack, etc., and in a very short time we can forget what got us to our current position. Instead, we should resolve to be extra-conservative immediately following the break to take advantage of others who have gotten out of sync. Another road to ruin in NL tourneys is wasting chips with questionable calls because "I can afford it." Another of my opponents in this particular tournament (let's call him "Randy") had a well-above-average stack of 50,000 chips after two hours of play, the second-biggest stack at the table. Randy and the chip leader had wisely avoided getting tangled heads up for a while. However, there were 35 players left and only the top 18 would get paid. Randy had KJo in the 2,000-chip big blind. A player with 11,000 chips (I think his name was "Desperado") went all in, and everyone else folded. Without hesitating, Randy called, and he lost to A5o when neither hand improved. (Two sloppy calls and a bit of bad luck later, Randy was heading for the cash games.) But before he called simply because he had face cards, and could afford to lose 9,000 more, he should have asked himself these questions: 1. "What does Desperado probably have?" 2. "What table image have I projected to this point, and how (if at all)
do I want that to change now?" 3. "If I'm going to play KJo, do I want to be the aggressor or the caller?"
The answer to that one is obvious. 4. "Why now?" 5. "If I fold, am I making myself more vulnerable to Desperado later?" But let's change the scenario slightly, and suppose that Randy had ace-rag. Would that have made his call smarter? I think not, unless Randy could read Desperado well enough to put him on an ace with a smaller rag or an outright bluff. I don't know about you, but only in the rarest circumstances can I read an opponent that precisely. Remember that the 8 is the middle rank. If you have an ace and a card lower than an 8, any other ace has you dominated. In conclusion, NL Hold'em tournaments are tough enough with your opponents trying to beat you. Don't help them by shooting yourself in the foot.
This article was published at an earlier date on PokerPages.com and is being rerun due to popular demand.
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