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Old 11-27-2007, 11:11 PM
TobyG TobyG is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Louisiana
Posts: 64
Default Re: Heads up agreement?

[ QUOTE ]
Poker is an individual game, not a team sport. The scoring system for poker is money, and oddly enough one of the precepts from macroeconomics can be applied.

Every person will act in his/her own best interests.

When players start a hand with this understanding, and then suddenly two players depart from this understanding, something fundamentally wrong has happened. The original playing conditions have changed. This applies even stronger in a tournament, where not only is the all-in player affected, but every other player in the tournamnent is affected as well.

Lets say Player A flops the nut straight and the players enter an agreement to check it down. Player B, who makes runner runner flush agrees, and player A, who should have been busted, survives. because he does, the next guy busted gets one lower place on the payout. This agreement not only cost the all in player, it also cost a guy at another table, because player A didnt get busted.

There's my .02

[/ QUOTE ]
How is such an offer to check it down any different than any other table talk? Let's say player B when he hits his runner runner suddenly bets out. Can Player A call the floor? What should the penalty be for reneging on the agreement? How is such an agreement much different from chopping agreements when it gets down to a certain number of players in the tournament? Are those not just as fundamentally wrong?
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