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February, 2011

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Playing with a Short Stack

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Playing with a short stack can be a trying and frustrating experience. In tournaments where the blinds go up frequently and quickly, being a short stack can be the kiss of death. You are severely limited in your playing power when you have few chips making it easier for your opponents to exploit you. If you are a short stack, the first rule is to not panic. This is easy enough; you just do not play a hand incorrectly because you don’t have a lot of chips. Sticking to basic poker strategy will help you here more than it will hurt you.

The second rule of playing with a short stack at PokerStars.com is to avoid being blinded out. This is a bit more difficult since it sometimes requires a good deal of action on your part. You need to be able to read your opponents much better than they need to read you. It is much harder to bluff an opponent when they have considerably more chips than you do. Even if they have a worse hand, it is often correct for them to value bet their hands if it will knock you out of the tournament. To compensate for this you need to play only premium hands. This is much easier said than done. When blinds are looming near, you need to make a quick decision of whether a seemingly mediocre hand is the best shot you have of winning more chips. Unfortunately, this is something that you can only guess at. A mediocre hand can win big for you, but it can just as easily wipe you out of the tournament.

Late Buy Ins

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Some multi-table tournaments at FullTiltPoker.net offer late buy ins in order to accommodate more players. Buying in late is generally a poor decision, since a good player will be wasting opportunities to increase their chip stacks with the longer playing time. Essentially, buying in late is the same as buying in at the tourney’s beginning, and then never playing a hand. The longer a good player is at the table however, the more chips they will win.

The main argument for buying in late is that you will avoid busting out early on in the tournament. This is faulty logic, however. The potential for the chips that you would win far outweighs the chances of busting out early. A decent player does not let themselves become pot committed to a hand that would not win over the course of the long term. What this means for a good player is that they will gain chips during the late registration time far more often than they would lose chips—given a large enough sampling. Buying in late then, is essentially putting yourself at a disadvantage.

The disadvantage is not a large one, though. If you are lucky, buying in late will not cause you harm. Still, if at all possible it should be avoided since that small disadvantage that you are given can be enough for you to stand the chance of losing money should you repeatedly buy in late to tournaments.

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