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- Pro Tip #127 - Taking Your Hands Off the Wheel
Pro Tip #127 - Taking Your Hands Off the Wheel
- By Barny Boatman
- Published 07/10/2008
- FullTilt Poker Tips
- Unrated
There's no question that
poker includes an element of gamble. Any time you risk something of value on an
event with an uncertain outcome, you're gambling. But there is a way in which
poker is the exact opposite of gambling, because poker is all about making
intelligent decisions. It's all about control.
Gambling, in its purest
form - buying a lottery ticket or backing a number on roulette - is to
deliberately relinquish control of your money and leave the outcome to fate. If
it's your day, if the Gods so wish it, you will get lucky. In poker, on the
other hand, you're always striving to leave as little to chance as possible.
So how do you achieve
control in tournament poker? Is it by avoiding gambles? By only playing strong
starting cards? Only betting made hands and never bluffing or drawing? Of
course not.
If you sit and wait for
good hands all the way through a tournament then, like the roulette player
keeping faith with their favorite number, you're leaving the outcome to chance.
The great paradox of poker tournaments is that in order to stay in control you
have, amongst other things, to choose the right moments to gamble.
If you're doing 75 on the
freeway and are just a few feet from the car in front of you, then even if
you're the world's best driver, you're out of control because if the car ahead
suddenly brakes, you can't avoid a crash. So it is with a stack which is too
short to make opponents pass for a re-raise. Any time an opponent applies the
brakes, your stacks will collide - at a time of their choosing - and you will
need luck to survive.
In order to stay in
control, you must strive to maintain a playable stack, which can mean pushing over
the top of a late raise with the worst hand when you have a good chance of
making your opponent fold. You don't want to have to make this play, but you
have to recognize when it's the right time to put your chips in the pot. Too
soon and it's a reckless unnecessary risk. Too late, and it's transparent and
unlikely to work. Too often and you develop a credibility problem.
Sometimes your stack has
gotten so low that you know you'll be in a showdown the next time you enter a
pot. The only control you have left is the choice of when to push, and even
there you are running out of room to maneuver. Don't just wait until you're
all-in on the big blind. Instead, look for situations where you'll be in a
showdown with the best possible ratio of chips to opponents, and where your
cards are liable to be live. A well-timed gamble will give you a shot at
regaining a playable stack.
Some very good tournament
players deliberately seek early gambles in big pots; happy to get all their
poker chips in at the first level with a flush draw against two pair, because they
feel the edge and extra control a big stack would give them is worth that early
risk. That wouldn't be my approach in a deep stack event, but I understand the
reasoning behind that style of play.
In tournament poker the
balance between gamble and control is constantly changing. Recognizing where
you and your opponents are in this shifting landscape will help you make good
decisions and give you a vital edge.
