| Posted by: JONTHEMUTE at March 22, 2005, 5:27 pm | | Topic: advice needed on tourneys last hours Forum: Card Chat |
Quote: Originally Posted by respira
at the start of a tourney i play tight passive and this almost always gets me to the second hour. the next couple of hours I play tight aggressive...After that is when I loose it. when I am like 20-40 people out of the money. My game goes down the tubes. I've tried loose aggressive, tight aggressive, loose passive and tight passive...nothing works. like last night I was in a tourney that paid 30 seats..and of course I went out 38th. Any advice would be appreciated
Hey, I find the same problem, but only when playing online. The problem lies in the level times. when u reach the final table, the average stack size is anywhere from 6k to 13k, depending on the size of the tourny. The blinds are anywhere from 400-800 to 1k-2k. Lots of times i see the same situation which is " ONE WRONG PLAY, AND YOUR F**KED!" I like live tourny's ranging from 500 buy in to 1000 buy in. you start with 5k or 10 k even. and the blinds start at 25-50. the lev... | | Read Entire Entry |
| Posted by: JonSherwood at March 22, 2005, 5:22 pm | | Topic: advice needed on tourneys last hours Forum: Card Chat |
Quote: Originally Posted by andysam05
i am always a fighter coming out in the beginning, but i dont understand why i usually fall in 2nd or third place, I dont understand this because i keep the same style, but when i have a huge chip lead i tend to lose focus, do u have any advice of how to fix this problem, like would u sit out a few hands in between?
Sometimes when people have a huge chip lead they will play more hands that they usually wouldn't play. This way you'll lose your stack faster. Try to stay consistently inconsistent to your usual play (true enough to how you usually play but change it up enough so people can't get a good read on you). You should be able to hold on to your stack longer that way.
Also, bully the people that have small stacks. If you've got a stack ten times the size of theirs and they raise on a pot (assuming you and him are the only ones in the pot, maybe with one other) put him all-in. He'll either fold (most likely) or call. If he calls... | | Read Entire Entry |
| Posted by: andysam05 at March 22, 2005, 5:07 pm | | Topic: advice needed on tourneys last hours Forum: Card Chat |
i am always a fighter coming out in the beginning, but i dont understand why i usually fall in 2nd or third place, I dont understand this because i keep the same style, but when i have a huge chip lead i tend to lose focus, do u have any advice of how to fix this problem, like would u sit out a few hands in between?
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| Posted by: chicubs1616 at March 22, 2005, 2:46 am | | Topic: advice needed on tourneys last hours Forum: Card Chat |
In late stages of tournies, go all in with hands like KK AA and AKs preflop when no one has raised the pot if you are in danger of not finishing in the money (i.e. short and middle sized stacks). If you get called, you more than likely double up and are sitting pretty to rise up the payout schedule. I was the short stack at a 7 Card Stud Tourney with about 30 players left. First place got $140 (1 dollar entry). I suriveved my way into the final table and went from short stack to winner in less than an hour, I had 35,000 when the final table started, chip leader had around 375,000).
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| Posted by: sports at March 21, 2005, 3:39 am | | Topic: advice needed on tourneys last hours Forum: Card Chat |
i agree i ahve been in the same position numerous times and the style that i play is the tight player who picks up the blinds you have to take advantage of sensing weakness int he other players. Theres usually the guy that limps in the small blind and ur sitting at the big blind and u just raise him back like triple the big blind which usually gets him and any other person to fold and wins u the blinds. Also wen your on the button i usually liek to throw a small bet in there with a decent hand that the small and big will usually fold to and if they call you still have a chance at making a good hand and your in good position.
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| Posted by: Grumbledook at March 20, 2005, 6:00 pm | | Topic: advice needed on tourneys last hours Forum: Card Chat |
Around that stage ignore your cards and play position and the players.
Pick on people with short stacks that you can raise them off their blinds, they are either going to have to let you have it or go all in. You will find players in this situation will tighten up even more if its close to the money. Also watch out for large stacks who are staying out of the way and go for their blinds as well.
If there is someone you have a read on and can outplay after the flop, if you can get in cheap against them make a move and go for steals.
You need to watch out for things like this and watch out for others doing the same and go over the top of them. Got to be careful though and it takes some practice. If you keep getting in that situation though you will become better at it.
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| Posted by: long_bong at March 20, 2005, 5:55 pm | | Topic: advice needed on tourneys last hours Forum: Card Chat |
Late tourney play is all about building your stack, and the slowest way to do it,
Let every play there hands and get low stacked and they get on tilt, and eventually youll get delt a good hand and play it, hopefully your oponents are on tilt from previous hands and hopefully you bust there asss.
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| Posted by: respira at March 20, 2005, 3:06 pm | | Topic: advice needed on tourneys last hours Forum: Card Chat |
at the start of a tourney i play tight passive and this almost always gets me to the second hour. the next couple of hours I play tight aggressive...After that is when I loose it. when I am like 20-40 people out of the money. My game goes down the tubes. I've tried loose aggressive, tight aggressive, loose passive and tight passive...nothing works. like last night I was in a tourney that paid 30 seats..and of course I went out 38th. Any advice would be appreciated
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