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- Pro Tip # 154: Sealing the Win
Pro Tip # 154: Sealing the Win
- By Nenad Medic
- Published 09/1/2008
- FullTilt Poker Tips
- Unrated
If you don't think poker is
a competitive sport, chances are you've never made it to the late stages of a
major tournament where the only thing higher than the blinds is the pressure of
playing for thousands - or even millions - of dollars in prize money.
As a former basketball
player, I can compare the pressure of a World Series of Poker final table to the final minutes
of a playoff game where every play is crucial and any mistake can mean the
difference between walking away a champion or a runner-up. From the crowds on
the rails to the lights, TV cameras and reporters running around the floor,
everything around you is amplified. Let the pressure and the circus atmosphere
distract you, and you can easily watch your tournament slip away.
Pros who have been in these
situations before - whether they're athletes on the court or players on the
felt - understand the key to wining in this atmosphere is to maintain focus on
the task at hand and to block out everything else that doesn't matter. TV
cameras? Forget 'em. Railbirds? Block them out. Bear down and play, and let the
rest take care of itself.
Unlike other sports, poker
has one more X factor that you have to learn to deal with - the money ladder
where finishing just one spot higher can mean thousands or even hundreds of thousands
of additional dollars in prize money. For players who haven't gone deep in
major poker tournaments, thinking about the short-term money jumps can be just as
distracting as any TV camera. Succeeding at this stage takes focus on a single
goal. For me, that goal is winning.
In my experience,
tournaments can be divided into two distinct parts; in the money and out of the
money. Before the bubble, my goal is to make the money. I want to cash and,
hopefully, put myself in a position to win. After the bubble breaks, I aim to
win. For me, and many other pros, the real tournament doesn't start until after
we've reached the money and its here where I really try to concentrate on
making the smartest long-term strategic decisions I can in order to secure a
win.
A hand from Event #1 of
this year's WSOP illustrates my point. We had reached four-handed play where
the difference in finishing first and fourth was more than $500,000 when I got
involved in a pot with Andy Bloch. I was holding pocket 7s and led out at a
flop of Q-Q-3 only to have Andy make a pot-sized raise behind me. Though I
don't know what Andy was holding, I'm guessing that he may have had over-cards
and, possibly, a flush draw. While my two pair of 7s and
Why, you may ask. Well,
there are a couple of reasons. First, I had a big enough stack at this point
that I wasn't committed to continuing with the hand and, while folding to Andy
cost me some poker chips, I could still fold and sit comfortably in second chip
position at the table. Secondly, and even more importantly, even if I was ahead
of Andy on the flop, my read gave him 13 outs (approximately, a 40% chance) to
make his hand. With my tournament life on the line if I called, I just wasn't
getting the odds to gamble.
While making the tough hero
call in front of friends, family and the ESPN cameras may have been a great
poker moment that earned me a few minutes of glory, I did my best to block all
of that out of my mind and concentrate on the task at hand - winning the
tournament. By focusing on the game plan I devised earlier, I was able to walk
away from a marginal situation with only a small loss and move onto the next
hand.
In the end, my decision to
pass on the possible short-term gain I could have realized in this hand paid
off, as I went on to defeat Andy after we reached heads-up play. I'll take a
WSOP bracelet over a few minutes of television glory any day.
