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Poker
Tips
Tournament
Poker for Advanced Players
The
poker playing public's appetite for bigger and higher-stakes poker
tournaments seems almost insatiable. As these events have become more
popular, several authors have taken a crack at writing the definitive
book about tournament poker, and to date, none have excelled in this
task. Now David Sklansky, a supremely talented poker writer, makes his
attempt to tackle this topic.
As
this is part of Two Plus Two's "for Advanced Players" series, the reader
is assumed to be familiar with basic poker tournament protocol and
understand how to play ring game (non-tournament) poker well. While some
introductory information is still included, it is kept brief. Less
experienced players would be well advised to read books such as Texas
Hold'em for Advanced Players and a more introductory tournament book,
such as Poker Tournament Strategies.
After
the introduction, Sklansky starts with new material, including an
explanation of an important principle he calls "The Gap Concept". Simply
stated, in a tight game it is often correct to fold hands to a raise
that a player would have raised with if nobody had already raised before
it was the player's turn to act. While this principle has been written
about before and will certainly be familiar to any winning mid-limit
poker player, this is the best explanation of this phenomenon, why it
occurs, and how to use it to advantage. It is especially important here,
because poker tournaments tend to feature tighter play than ring games.
Sklansky then moves on to discuss some general tournament ideas,
including how to adjust one's play at various levels of a tournament,
how players might adjust their play depending on when or whether their
table will be broken up, and playing (and playing against) short stacks
versus large stacks. Some of this advice has been discussed in other
books or articles before, but much of it hasn't, and Sklansky always
provides strong arguments to support the positions he takes.
Next,
Sklansky addresses other tournament issues including deal making, last
longer bets, and special circumstances surrounding no-limit events. This
last topic includes an explanation of a no-limit Hold'em strategy he
calls "The System". This is an intriguing simple strategy for playing in
these events. All of these topics in the book thus far cover 134 pages
in the book.
Next,
the author provides a set of hand quizzes. This is less of a review than
an extension of some of Sklansky's key principles found in the book, so
it should be thought of as more information, just in an unorthodox
format. However, these quizzes are followed by more than 35 pages of
questions and answers (assembled by Mason Malmuth) which are designed as
a review tool for the rest of the book.
Sklansky's ideas are always well thought out and usually thoroughly
explained. However, there is more that could be said about many of the
topics he discusses. For example, he explains how to evaluate whether a
two-person deal at the end of a tournament is fair or not, and why there
can be no single fair deal when three players remain. However, there is
a great deal more that could be said about this. This is an area where
simulations could provide some additional suggestions, and formulae for
coming up with ranges for appropriate deals for multiple players could
be worked out. I would have appreciated it if this topic, as well as
others, had been dealt with in more depth. Depending on how one wants to
count it, there is about 130 to 190 pages of original material in this
book. I think even more information would have made this book better.
Nonetheless, the information that is contained in this book is very
good. This is simply the best single source of information on poker
tournaments written to date. Tournament Poker for Advanced Players
manages to be the first book on this topic of which any gambling
publisher can be truly proud. More could have been said about many
topics, and this is by no means the last word on the topic, but
Sklansky's effort is a very valuable one for tournament players, well
worth its price.
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