
More ReviewsHarrington on Cash Games Volume II by Dan Harrington and Bill Robertie Harrington on Cash Games Volume I by Dan Harrington and Bill Robertie Tournament Poker for Advanced Players Expanded Edition by David Sklansky Professional No Limit Hold 'Em by Matt Flynn, Sunny Mehta, and Ed Miller The Mathematics of Poker by Bill Chen and Jerrod Ankenman Pot Limit Omaha Poker: The Big Play Strategy by Jeff Hwang Elements of Poker by Tommy Angelo Read 'Em and Reap by Joe Navarro High-Low Split Poker by Ray Zee Sklansky on Poker by David Sklansky The Poker World According to Cinch by Dave Cinch Full Tilt Poker Strategy Guide: Tournament Edition edited by Michael Craig- chapters reviewed: -Play Before the Flop by Andy Bloch -Online Tournament Strategy by Richard Brodie -Pot Limit Hold 'Em by Andy Bloch and Rafe Furst -Limit Hold 'Em by Howard Lederer -Omaha Eight-or-Better by Mike Matusow -Pot Limit Omaha by Chris Ferguson -Tournament Stud by David Gray -Stud Eight-or-Better by Ted Forrest -Razz by Michael Craig, Huck Seed, and Ted Forrest
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FTP Strategy Guide: Online Tournament Strategy Richard Brodie's contribution to the Full Tilt Poker Strategy Guide: Tournament Edition is a solid introduction to playing online poker tournaments. As is appropriate for the format of a relatively short chapter on the subject, he focuses on broad strategic concepts such as when implied odds, blind stealing, continuation betting, and bet sizing.
I don't want to harp too much on what he's left out, because there are inevitably going to be omissions in so short a work, and he does do a good job of providing a strategic framework that should be very useful to beginners as they work out the details for themselves. However, given his space constraints, it is a mistake to attempt to address but Sit'n'Go and Multi-Table Tournaments in the same chapter. The result is a badly lacking SNG section that condenses bubble play, which is the crucial element of a good player's edge in these tournaments, into a single, useless sentence: "This will take all of your poker experience to decide whether to play very aggressively or very carefully depending on what the other players are doing." Even the MTT section is better on large-scale strategic thinking than on its more specific advice and examples. For example, the implied odds section correctly suggests playing hands like pairs and suited connectors when you can see a flop for about 5% of the effective stacks and emphasizes that position is more important with the connectors than with pairs. However, Richard also says that with 6-6 and 20 BB's, "I might limp under the gun and hope the pot is unraised and that I can get a set and win some money if someone makes top pair or two pair." The confluence of these fortunate circumstances will not occur often enough to make a limp UTG for 5% of your stack profitable with 66, especially since the hands that he admits he wants to be up against, such as AA and KK, are going to raise. He claims he can call one raise, but by that time, he has put too much money into the pot to play for set value alone. Still, this chapter generally provides a solid introduction to online tournament play and could probably shave several months off of a beginning player's development. |
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