Different Types of Tournaments

Different Types of Tournaments

Texas Holdem tournaments, along with most all other poker tournaments, follow a typical path.  All players start with the same amount of poker chips.  At the poker tables, the blinds gradually increase.  And the players are gradually eliminated until a winner is decided. The winner is awarded a prize amount and so are the other top finishers.  Most of these poker tournaments are freezeouts – once a player loses all his poker chips, he’s gone.

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While that’s the way it usually goes, there are a number of variations on this theme.  One of the most common is Re-buy and Add-on Tournaments.  A re-buy lets a player buy back into the poker tournament.  There’s usually a time limit on when you can re-buy.  After it passes, players can still add-on.  They can buy a set number of poker chips for a set price to “add on” to their stack.  With these options, you can take more chances betting, especially in the early rounds where you can re-buy.

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If you’re in a hurry to make your money or get chased from the poker tables, you might try a Turbo tournament.  That’s one where the blinds rise very quickly, sometimes every 5 minutes.  Sometimes as quick as every two minutes.  With blinds getting that high, there’s not too much post-flop play because players are often forced to go all-in pre-flop or fold.  In a Turbo tournament, it’s smart to play aggressively.  Steal the blinds as often as you can and hope the poker cards come your way.

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A satellite tournament doesn’t offer a cash prize.  It rewards the winners with entry into a higher buy-in tournament.  The World Series of Poker uses satellite tournaments.

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We have Party Poker to thank for the steps tournament.  It is usually a series of single poker table satellite tournaments with increasingly larger buy-ins, with big cash prizes at the final step.  Most steps poker tournaments have five steps.  Winners of the first step are awarded an entry into the second step and so on.

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These are just a few of the many poker tournament variations you’ll run into in casinos, live poker rooms and online poker rooms and casinos.

Strategies for Texas Holdem No Limit Tournaments

Strategies for Texas Holdem No Limit Tournaments

Turn on the television and it’s not to difficult to find a No Limit Holdem Tournament going on.  They are wildly popular because they have lots of drama and suspense that gets paid off every hand.  The World Series of Poker and the World Poker Tour have intrigued viewers and fans who are intrigued by the chance to win big.

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However, no limit Texas holdem tournaments are very different than sitting at a poker table to play a no limit ring game.  In these poker tournaments, when you get down to the end, all the poker chips get shoved in pre-flop on poker hands that are no better than 50-50 odds.  If you have a pair in the hole or holding AK, you’re ready for a late tournament battle.

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A major strategic difference between no limit tournaments and a no limit ring game is that you can’t bluff as much.  Players’ stacks of poker chips are usually smaller in relation to the pot.  And the amount of chips you might win from a bluff are worth a whole lot less than the amount you might lose.  So bluffing loses its value.

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But don’t think you can keep folding and stay in the game.  You have to win pots to keep your seat at the poker table; if you don’t, you’ll watch your chips steadily disappear to the blinds.  In the early going, though, don’t gamble too much.  You just need to win enough to keep you in the tournament.

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As you get to the middle of the tournament, you need to change your poker strategy.  As the poker tournament moves on, the blinds get bigger.  Stealing the blinds will keep you sitting pretty.  You are still in survival mode and hoping to build your pile of poker chips with a few wins here and there.  And unless you really have the nuts, avoid getting into any costly battles.

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The end game of the tournament is all about a toss of a coin, 50-50 gamble.  The blinds are so big that it makes sense to go all in on the pre-flop, especially if you’re holding an Ace and a good kicker or a pocket pair.

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Winning Tips for Texas Holdem Tournaments

Winning Tips for Texas Holdem Tournaments

Do you like tournament poker?  There are thousands, maybe millions of people who will tell you how much they love Texas Holdem tournaments, and none of them have ever played in one.  I’m talking about television of course.  The drama and mano a mano confrontations make for very entertaining programs.  Plus, if you’re watching a program on TV you can tell everyone what they SHOULD have done and how they SHOULD have played it.  Tournaments are fun, no doubt about it, but it is a different story sitting at a poker table and pushing your poker chips to the middle of the table than sitting at home, knowing everyone’s hole cards and what your odds are for winning the hand.

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Whether you’re a poker superstar or still reading a book titied “Instructions on How to Play Texas Holdem,” the first thing any poker player should realize is a Texas Holdem tournament or any poker tournament requires different strategies than a ring game.  If you are still learning poker language, a ring game is a regular poker game where you can leave any time and the poker chips represent real money.  In fact, the value of poker chips is one of the differences in a tournament.  Since everyone starts with the same amount and you can’t buy back in, you have to guard your initial chips.  Don’t go all in on early rounds.  You need to have chips or you go home.  You really need to build up your amount of chips so, in later rounds, you CAN go all in.  Late in the tournament is the time to gamble or else your chips will just get siphoned off by blinds until you can’t play effectively.

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Late a tournament, the blinds will be so high that most players at the poker table will be all in pre-flop.  So another strategic difference is you want poker cards that will allow you to bet hard at the get-go, like a high pair or an Ace with a high kicker.  Don’t try betting hard with a low pocket pair.  They might be good for stealing blinds, but will cost you poker chips if you get too cocky.

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