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Old 05-24-2007, 05:50 PM
Poker Clif Poker Clif is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Three Rivers, Michigan, USA
Posts: 286
Default Re: MTT/STT starting hands

[ QUOTE ]
Hellmuth's advice (from "Play Poker Like the Pros") is very useful to an absolute beginning poker player, but is not a winning strategy. He's basically teaching a weak/tight style of poker, meaning that you play very few hands & wait for a real monster before getting a lot of chips into the pot. As I said, that's a good strategy for a rank beginner, as it avoids getting him into as many trouble spots & will usually result in him going deeper in a tournament than he would otherwise. The problems are two-fold--first of all, that you so rarely get those great starting hands & even more rarely connect hard with the flop, and second of all, that this is perhaps the easiest playing style for a good opponent to exploit.

You'd do very well to forget most of what Hellmuth said in that book, and instead take a read through the Harrington on Hold'em series (probably the best books available on NLHE tournament play).

[/ QUOTE ]

Thnaks for the advice. I have read a lot of poker books, including some by Harringon and Sklansky. I am a naturally tight player, but as I get more experience and get more comfortable, I am playing a wider range or hands, so much so that I sometimes get a little too loose.

I guess a lot depends on bankroll. I didn't have a lot of money, and started with a $50 deposit on PokerStars. I couldn't afford to make a lot of mistakes, and I wanted to cash regularly, whether I ever won a tournament or not.

I am sytematically working on different parts of my game, such as changing starting hands when a table is short, when/how to play suited connectors, game theory bluffing, etc.

I was just giving the poster information on of the different poker schools of thought out there, which is what he was asking.

You always have to change and adapt. An MTT is different than a sit-n-go, and online turbo is different than regular speed/blind structure online. A balanced table is different than one with 6 good players and two fish.

I wouldn't recoommend that anyone play weak tight all the time, but in some situations, as with my small starting bankroll, I think it has its place.
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