Trying to make sense of poker
guides can give you a headache. But reading other people analysis
always drops something into your mind that you may not have
previously thought of. This is a reasonably complex analysis
that I picked up from a magazine written by a player after playing
in the wsop main event 2008.

My experience playing the 2008 Main Event at the wsop made me think about a general sit-n-go players best strategy for playing multi table tournaments. I am going to assume that while you are a very good poker player, you may not have the same level of deep stack post-flop experience as cash and multi-table tournament specialists.
A multi-table
tournament has two distinct parts:
(a) Before the antes begin and
(b) after the antes begin.
Before the ante, stacks are deep and picking up the blinds is a relatively small gain. The main reason to play a lot of pots at the stage, then, is if you have a strong advantage over your opponents at post-flop play with deep stacks. You will see many winning, loose-aggressive players smooth-call raises before the flop with suited connectors and small pocket pairs. This loose strategy relies heavily on knowing when marginal hands are good and reading situations when you may win pots because your opponents have missed.
These loose-aggressive players (LAGs) also have another idea in mind. When a tight player raises, he will often start with or make at the flop a high pair. If the LAG connects very strongly with a speculative hand, he will often get paid handsomely post flop because his tighter opponents have made string second-best hands such as top pair hands and overpairs. These second best hands may seem like they are best, however, and tight players often take them much further than they should after the flop.
When you play a tight-aggressive style early, you must be very careful not to go broke against a LAG willing to play unusual starting hands. For instance, suppose you raise preflop from first position with aces. The button - who has been playing many hands - makes the call. You bet the flop and he calls. You bet the turn and he raises. Regardless of the board, you will often be behind now with an unimproved overpair. This is because good players will realise that you are tight, and if they cannot beat a good one-pair hand themselves, then it is unlikely that chips in the center at the turn.
The tight-aggressive style is a strong and winning style so long as you understand how your opponents perceive you and how they are trying to exploit you.
Understand these ideas and you will do fine playing tight-aggresively, as I did at the WSOP.
Here is a sample hand from my main event:
With blinds of $150-$300 (no ante), I raised to $750 from middle position with AQ of hearts. Bracelet winner John Esposito called on the button, as did a talented young hyper aggressive player in the small blind. The flop came 8-9-Q.
I had around 10,000 in chips, and I bet 2000 after the small blind checked. Should I now check or bet?
Here was my analysis. Since I had been playing tight, the other players clearly wanted to connect hard with the board and bust me. What does it mean when both call my flop bet? Clearly it would not surprise either one that my hand is AQ or an overpair since I had rasied pre flop from middle position and was now making a string bet on the flop. So they must either have a made hand or a strong draw to call my flop bet. But if one of them had a made hand on the flop, they would have probably raised me immediately, figuring that a club, ten or jack on the turn might prevent me from commiting the rest of my chips.
Based on that, I assumed both were on draws after the flop. Therfore I shoved my remaining 8000 when the blank hit on the turn, and both players folded.
This is the type of anlysis that you should do when deciding whether to fold or continue with your strong hands on the later streets. As long as you stay vigalent in this regard, the tight aggressive style is an excellent one for early MTT play.
However, there is still a very good way to add unpredictably to your game while still sticking mainly to strong starting hands. This is to add some suited connectors to your early position opening range of A-K, A-QS, 10-10+, 4-5s and 5-6s (s= suited) consists mostly of very strong hands, but contains a valuable randomising component.
Post Ante Play
Now to the basics
of post-ante play. After the ante, you must play many more hands
- it's as simple as that. The reason for this is that starting
pots now much larger. For example, the pot at the 400-800 level
starts at 1200 without the ante. But in a nine-handed table
with a 100 ante, the starting pot is 2100 - as if someone were
giving more than one extra big blind to the winner of the hand.
So add more opening hands when everyone has folded to you in
middle and late position to take advantage of the increased
gain of winning preflop.
Your default strategy will be to raise preflop, make a continuation
bet on the flop, and then continue with the hand those times
when you have connected well with the flop. You should vary
this approach by checking behind occasionally on the flop, semi-bluffing
abd other plays that make you less predictable. But this basic
strategy is a good one when you are otherwise unsure.
There is also now less danger with strong one pair hands, since
the stacks tend to be significantly shallower due to the introduction
of the ante.
Here is an example
of the change in starting hand requirements. Suppose you are
the hijack (two seats to the right of the button), and everyone
has folded to you. Before the ante, you could certainly fold
hands such as 2-2 of 7-6 suited. After the ante, these are clear
raising hands.
While you would obviously never want to become a short stack,
when this does occur, you can play very similarly to how you
would in a normal sit-n-go tournament. Just be sure that you
account for the ante in your all-in decisions. The way to do
this is to treat the big blind as two -thirds of the starting
pot. For instance, with big blinds and antes of 400-800-100,
the big blind is effectively 1400 (2/3 of 2100). So with a stack
of 7000, you would shove with simaler hands to when you have
a stack of five BBs in a sit-n-go, rather than nine BB's or
so.
Lets recap. Continue to play tight aggressive eary, but be careful not to go broke with one-pair hands when a winning loose-aggressive is willing to put a lot of chips in the pot. Also try to add a randomising element, such as a couple of low suited connectors, to your raising hands. Switch to a more loose aggressive style after the ante, winning a lot of pots by raising preflop and making continuation bets after the flop.
These guidelines are only the beginnings of a complete MTT strategy but they should serve as a solid introduction as approaching multi table tournaments as a sit-n-go player.
Poker
Articles
Q+A With Phil Hellmuth
Matt
Perrins Wins WSOP Bracelet 2011
Elky
picks up bracelet in 7 card stud
Chris Moneymaker
refects since he won wsop
All
in decisions in MTT poker
The changing
nature of starting hands
The biggest
mistake made in poker
Guide
to MTT Poker
WSOP 2011
news
Zero
Roulette
Recommended Gaming Sites
Bodog Sportsbook Sports
Betting - (Visit Website) - Free
Bets Available!
Bodog
Casino (Direct Download)
Planet
7 Free $25 - No deposit - Exclusive Offer! (Direct Download)
code PLAYERSEDGE
888
Casino 100%match+$15extra - Exclusive Offer! (Direct
Download)
888
Casino UK £5 FREE offer No Deposit - (Visit Website)
Supercasino
UK - Play live on channel 5 (Visit Website)
Partypoker
- No deposit required (Direct download) code TPE500
100% match

Partypoker
most regions (no USA
players)
√ 100% match use code TPE500
My pick of sites
Planet 7 for USA players
√ FREE $25 use code PLAYERSEDGE
√ Great interface
√ Live Customer Service
√ $10,000 match for high rollers
888 Casino for UK players
√ 365 Free Spins
√ 24 hr support
SuperCasino for UK players
√ up to £1000 bonus on signup
√ play live on channel 5
Europa Casino European Players
√ Live Dealers!
√ up to 100 euro match
Partypoker most regions (no USA players)
√ 100% match use code TPE500
3 Card Poker
A
typical 3 card poker table Order of Hands in 3 card poker
How to play 3 card poker
Ante bets
Pair Plus bets
Ante Bonus
Pair Plus Paytable
Dealer doesnt qualify
Summary
Strategy and Odds
Roulette
Basic roulette betsPicture bets
The outsides
The dozens
The coloums
Straight ups/splits/corners
Street
Six line
Call bets
Blackjack
Using the end boxPlaying statistically correct
Using the double
Counting cards
Texas Hold em Poker
The ranking hands of pokerPoker tournament play guide