by flafishy » Sun May 08, 2005 10:27 am
After that long-winded post, I think I can boil it down to this. Steal those blinds, and steal them frequently, around the bubble. You're not going to be challenged very often, and when you are challenged, you can back off immediately.
A strategy I do employ in the early stages of the tournament is to resist the temptation to take advantage of obvious blind-stealing situations. When the blinds are 15/30, I'm in the button and the betting is folded around to me, I'll still fold anything short of a premium hand. I'll even fold the small blind a lot of times to try to get a reputation as a wuss.
The blinds at that point really aren't worth fighting over, and by not attacking them now, I'm not putting people on the defensive -- lulling them into a false sense of security, if you will. That way, when I start attacking those 75/150 and 100/200 blinds, I catch them off guard and they'll believe that I must have a good hand because I haven't gotten a reputation.
Shifting gears: Re: the standard strategy of playing tight early, which almost every expert recommends. Just read a page in Harrington's book in which he gives a very good reason for playing a little looser sometimes in the early stages.
Suppose you're in a STT with Gus, Phil, Doyle, Howard, Layne, Larry, Moe and Curly. Standard strategy is to be ubertight early and let the idiots sort things out among themselves. So Larry, Moe and Curly are there throwing their chips around the table willy-nilly, and you're being ubertight while the others are scarfing up Larry, Moe and Curly's chips. Then it comes time to start loosening up and getting aggressive, and now you're trying to extract Larry, Moe and Curly's chips frm Gus, Phil, Doyle, Howard and Layne. What's wrong with that scenario?