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- Pro Tip #79: Playing Big Slick in Deep Stack Tournaments
Pro Tip #79: Playing Big Slick in Deep Stack Tournaments
- By Paul Wolfe
- Published 12/27/2007
- FullTilt Poker Tips
- Unrated
During this year's World
Series of Poker, I talked with a number of pros about the problems that so many
online qualifiers had playing Big Slick during the early blind levels. It
seemed to us that a huge percentage of the field - we estimated as much as 70
percent - was more than willing to go broke with this hand if they hit a pair
on the flop.
But many pros, myself
included, feel that Ace-King is a very difficult hand to play in the early
levels of big buy-in tournaments, when the stacks are deep compared to the
blinds. The fact of the matter is, top-pair/top-kicker is probably no good if
another player is willing to risk all of his chips. This isn't always the case
- you may find an extremely weak player willing to go broke on K-Q, but that's
the rare exception.
The real problem with A-K
early on is that it's very difficult to get an idea of where you're at in a
hand. Even on an innocuous looking flop of something like K-9-2, you may think
your hand is good. But you can't be sure.
Say that you raise pre-flop
with A-K and a late-position player calls. The two of you see a K-9-2 flop. You
bet strong on the flop and then again on the turn. He calls on both streets.
What now? Do you bet the river and pray that you're not raised? Or do you check
and hope that your opponent does the same? It's a difficult spot and there are
no great options.
Playing the same hand in
position is a little easier, but it's still tough.
While the blinds are low in
a big buy-in tournament, I'm actually looking to see flops against the players
who overplay top-pair/top-kicker. When I'm in position, I'm happy to call a
raise with something like a small pocket pair, 5-6 suited, or even 8-T suited.
I'm looking to flop a big hand or a big draw.
If I flop a set, I have a
good chance of wiping out the guy with top pair. If I flop a draw, I have a
chance to see if my opponent will give me a good price to hit my hand. The
beauty of a suited hand like 5-6 or 8-T is that there's no way I'm going to get
in serious trouble playing them. If I flop anything less than two-pair or a
quality draw, I'll fold, having lost very little.
I think there are two major
reasons many poker players over value Ace-King. First is that in online tournaments,
where the stacks start relatively low, Ace-King is usually worth playing
aggressively. Players who win online poker satellites do so by playing Ace-King fast,
so they come to big tournaments feeling good about this starting hand. The
second reason is that many people have seen TV commentators crow about Big
Slick, calling it a "huge hand." At a six-handed final table,
Ace-King is a very big hand, but as Howard Lederer pointed out in his tip Viewer
Beware, you need to realize that short-handed final-table strategy differs
greatly from early tournament play.
When you're playing in
deep-stack games, learn to play A-K cautiously. The pros don't like to go broke
with this hand and you'd do well to follow their example.
