by Telemachus » Tue Feb 01, 2005 5:07 am
I will have a go at the queries you raise over my response.
Your marginal hands question- early, as in the first three levels, don't enter a pot with an ace worse than AK in early position. In later position, you can loosen up a little, but I wouldn't be raising here, even with AQs- better to just limp and see the flop. The blinds are still very small, and you still don't want to be getting involed without a hand you know, i.e. don't just think, is the best. So- fold everything early up to AQ, and, with that, I'd be tempted to try limping, rather than raising. In later position you can loosen up a little, but worse than Aj is risky, IMO.
At the later stages, but when we are down to 6 or so, and blinds up to 50 and 100, you have to loosen up. Hands like Ax become playable, especially late pos, and especially in an unraised pot. I find that at the cheap SnGs you can get sometimes away with much smaller steals than the conventional pot sized steals- have a pop with A2 for a raise of 1.5 BB will often make everyone fold. When the blinds are getting this high, you get considerable equity with the chips you save here.
When the blinds go up to 75 and 150 and you have say 800, and there are still 6 people left, you have to start getting aggressive, and looser, clearly. This is a situation where you have to start acquiring chips to survive, and so conventional SnG theory of playing survival poker doesn't apply.
As a general rule of thumb, the fewer people at the table, the looser you can afford to be, and the fewer chips you have in proportion to the blinds, the looser you have to be. Most important in an SnG is the size of the other players stacks. If 3 people are less than 2 BBs, you can still fold to the money.This ain't going to happen very often though.
At this level, when your money finish is at threat, this is where feel comes in- you have to use a combination of big raises, looser starting requirements, and re-raises, based on the notes that you as a scrupulous note taker on your opponents have made from the start. If someone has been over aggressive, re raise him all in when you get A Js. If someone is being very tight, put a raise on the button with garbage to steal their by now significant blinds. etc etc.
4 handed and first to act, remember that this is the bubble for most SnGs, so chip stacks are all important. I am more inclined not to play the Ax and Kx hands that would often be profitable in cash games here, because your primary objective is to wait for someone to get knocked out. This means that, in fact, it can often be right to fold big hands, like AK, if you are not much ahead of the shortest stack. On the other hand, if you are the shortest stack, you should be more inclined to take a marginal gamble, as you may be in imminent danger of getting blinded out.
In the example that I quote with four people and one very short stack you must be very careful esp with the big connector hands Aq and AK. If the other 2 big stacks show any aggression, you have to fold, as the worst thing in this spot is to go out in 4th. Go passive. Limp, even w AKs which is usually massive 4 way. If raised all in by the short stack, fine to call. If re raised by the others, get out. And remember these hands are still an underdog to a measly pair of 2s, if they go to the river, which they will all in.
In the other example, where you are the short stack, forget about suitedness, and prepare to push. However, keep in mind what you may get called with. Your point about A x is right- it is poor. Your average opponent is more likely to call you w A8 than Q 10. So beware moving in with small aces- you could easily be dominated, and, if so, much better to have two live cards. But, with 5 BB or less left and the short stack, you are desperate and do need to move with pretty much anything.
Hope this helps. Am sure I have improved my own play thinking these concepts through again!