Endgame Tournament Strategy summary…
Endgame Strategy Summary
These articles are meant to be read in succession of one another. Click to review the articles on Endgame Strategy pt. I… Endgame Strategy pt II… Endgame Tournament Strategy III… Endgame Strategy part four and finally yesterday’s Endgame Strategy part five.
Endgame poker tournament strategy summary
Over the course of the past few weeks, we covered a lot of ground. For those of you who are new to poker, relatively inexperienced, or haven’t read much on poker strategy, the tactics covered probably made you a bit “uncomfortable,” thinking to yourself “this doesn’t sound right/feel right,” or “I can’t do that, what if I get called while having an M of five and am holding J10s pushing all in?”
step back from your comfort zone
The endgame series of discussions are meant to remove you from your “comfort zone.” These plays, by their very nature are not all supposed to “feel” normal. They are aggressive plays, made at the appropriate moments, under the appropriate set of circumstances and designed to propel you to the final table with aspirations to win, not merely to survive. If your goal is to WIN poker tournaments, not just bubble or crack into the money, then this indeed is your strategy. I’ve presented the “playbook,” no its up to you as the offensive and defensive coordinator to adapt such a playbook to your game. That being said, be mindful of other player’s M’s and how their game is changing based on the dynamics of that statistic.
Experiment, familiarize yourself with in-game adjustments based on M
Try this new playbook out in smaller tourneys, such as the $1 donkfest tonight. I experimented with it (when first reading on this) in sharky’s freerolls and buyin tourneys, even going so far as to “donk down” to a certain M so that I could experiment earlier in the tourney as opposed to later.
Use tools to test and check tournament theories
Download pokerstove. Open it up and play around with how different hands hold up against random hands (i.e. – 10-8 off suit vs. a random hand or two or j-10s vs AA). Get comfortable with trying to win tourneys, making the appropriate moves when you should be, and refusing to “accept” a coin toss when its not appropriate. Know your M calculation at all times, and those of your opposition at the table with you. Commit to memory when its appropriate to open up the red zone offense, or orange zone play. Know which hands are “playable” and which are “junk.” Determine when pushing, raising, calling, or folding with 3-3 or 8-6s is appropriate and when it just doesn’t line up with your “scripted plays.” Make peeps play YOUR GAME as opposed to playing theirs. And finally, I encourage each and every person reading this to purchase Harrington on Hold’em vol. 1 & 2. These books can be found on the Two Plus Two website.
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