Most poker tournaments are played along the same lines — players begins with a uniform amount of chips, the blinds gradually increase as the tourney moves on and players are eliminated along the way until only one person ends up with all of the tournament chips. A large part of the cash prize pool in these tournaments goes to the top finishers but, typically, the top 10% of entrants finish in the money. Hence, if the tournament you are joining has 500 participants, you are likely to place in the money if you finish among the top 50. As a rule, most tournaments are “freezeouts,” which means that any player who loses all his chips cannot return to the tournament.
There are many tournament variants as well and the type of variant will alter the basic strategy of the tournament. Some tournaments junk the freezeout structure, escalate the blinds more quickly, introduce re-buys or have a winner-take-all structure.
The larger tournaments that have 500 or more players are usually turbo tournaments, steps tournaments or shootouts. The following are the strategies for each.
Turbo Tournaments
The turbo tournament is very fast and the blinds escalate quickly, usually after every five minutes. There have even been some turbo tourneys where the blinds rise every two minutes. Luck tends to play a larger role in this tournament than in others. There will be minimal post-flop play since players tend to be forced to go all-in pre-flop or fold. It is important to be aggressive in this type of tournament. If you are passive, the blinds will quickly use up your stack. The best strategy is to try to steal a lot of blinds and hope that Lady Luck is on your side.
Steps Tournaments
The steps tournament usually involves five steps. Winners of the early steps advance to the later rounds while losers move back a step or have to pay a new entry fee. Prizes are only awarded at the final step.
For these tournaments, it’s important to note the prize structure because some online poker rooms try to extract a lot of entry fees from participants in these steps tournaments. Look for a steps tournament that rewards players by advancing them to the next step or penalizes players by eliminating them altogether without further buy-ins. Otherwise, assume the strategy of a single-table tourney.
When about 30% of players advance to the next level, you should play a selectively aggressive game. Try to steal blinds and keep your stack above average. Remember, it’s not the guy with the most chips that advances. But you do have to retain a large chip stack to discourage others from trying to knock you out. If you succeed in stealing blinds, you will have an above-average stack and, as a result, fewer confrontations. When you reach the final step, revert back to you normal single-table tournament strategy.
Shootouts
In shootouts, which are similar to steps tournaments except that shootouts are a single event unlike steps tourneys where players that advance can decide to play the next step at a later date. The strategy in shootouts depends on the tournament structure. If only a single player advances to the next round, you must be very aggressive in your play and take plenty of risks. If several players advance, adopt a selective aggressive approach. Try to maintain a decent-size stack to discourage attacks from opponents and try to steal as many blinds as possible.
Jay Scott
http://www.articlesbase.com/online-gambling-articles/different-online-poker-tournaments-87331.html
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Live poker tournament, is it much different from online poker?
Hi all,
I’m going to a poker tournament at a casino tonight, and will be playing in my first live tournament, I regularly play online but never at casinos. Will it be a lot different? What will I have to look out for? And I suppose the most important thing is…..will I have to wear any sunglasses!?!?! lol.
One last thing, I don’t really gamble much, so what casino game can I play that will give me best odds of winning some sort of profit?
Cheers
Live poker is massively different to on-line play. Not least is the fact that you have to take account of tells and giveaways much more. If you sweat a bit every time you push all in, it makes no difference in an on-line game. At a live table, it’s a mortal weakness. Another factor is the table talk – it’s very easy to be an internet tough guy, but handling smack talk at a live table is a real test of character, and there are thousands of players out there who make it their business to get under your skin and get you on tilt.
You’ve got to consider table etiquette (such as avoiding string bets, whether straddles are permitted etc), and you can’t sit around and play in your underwear (unless you’re an extremely high roller), and you’ll probably find live poker far less relaxing than on-line games, but a lot more challenging and exciting.
As for wearing sunglasses, I personally have always regarded them as a ridiculous affectation, the vast majority of tells aren’t in the eyes anyway, reading a player is about considering their whole body language, not just staring into their eyes and guessing.
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Personal experience.
Like the previous guy said, it’s a lot different. I like casino poker much better. I get bored with online poker.
As for the other part of your question…ALL casino games are statistically in favor of the casino. Some are worse than others. Best bet would probably be Baccarat, but most casinos don’t have that anymore. I usually stick with Black Jack (or variations, like Spanish 21) or PaiGow.
References :
I prefer the live poker tournaments. It is different than the online tournaments because you can see people’s faces and you can also look for tells. You also need to have table etiquette. I think the play is different as well. People seem to play tighter in the live tournaments.
References :