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My comments
Excellent article Soupie. You covered everything very very well... a little too well for my taste. People need to learn this stuff from grueling hours of play I will add my couple of tidbits, though (situational and small) as requested.
Late/mid tourny on button/late position raises.
I think there is a misconception regarding preflop raises from the button or one position out of the button late in MTT tournies, ESPECIALLY ONLINE. People raise the button excessively in these tournies and big blnids come over the top of button raises, all in, even more excessively. These tournies are very different from the more expensive all day or multi-day live tournaments. Late in tournies, an average-stacked player cannot afford to be raising a standard 3x bb and then folding to a big blind all in. Don't raise crap from the button, it really isn't worth it. Too many players see button raises as a steal and go all in with weak hands. You have to play the type of player first, but if you detect the style of play of the kind of player who loosely comes all in over button raises, it is not worth it to be raising his blinds with hands that you do not intend on calling an all in with. In result you will have to still raise hands like at and 99 from that position because they are good hands; these are not ordinarily all in hands, but in this situation they become all in hands and you should call the loose player's big blind all in reraise because you probably have the best of it and may be in a dominant position. A lot of players play this overaggressive, wreckless style late in tournies and another tendency I see is the player who will never fold his sb to the bb and will almost always raise out of this position a lot of times putting the big blind all in in order to take the massive antes + blinds. Against a player like this if you are middle to heavy stacked you should go all in with the same hands or above that I mentioned in the previous situation. If you are low stacked, I recomend calling with almost any ace, kq, even kj, but not a low PP. Low PPS almost never have a chance at being dominant, but can always be dominated. In this situation, because you are low stacked and the pot starts out huge, you want to call the all-in because you need to get all in soon anyways and you are in a situation where no-one can have a huge hand behind you and you believe ou are ahead. You know this guy is going to put you all in every time this situation occurs, so he could have any two cards so an above average hand is worth calling. The reason for this is you likely will not get a situation again at this stage of tourny where you can get all your chips in knowing you cannot be dominated in the hand and in this situation you believe you are in the lead. I know it is normally better to move all in rather than call an all-in, but this is a great opportunity to go from a low stack to a heavy stack without the concern of being dominated by a real hand.
My final situation is against the same style player when the positions are reversed. You are in the SB he is in the BB and the table has folded around. Assume if you raise, he is likely to go all in over the top and you can't afford to raise and then fold. You are holding a good hand, but certainly not an all in hand, like a suited QJ. Just call the BB. Sometimes this looks scarier and gives you an advantage to bet postflop. Against a wreckless, overagressive player, though, he is still likely to assume it is weak and raise all in. If this happens, use the CHAT BOX as Soupy referred to earlier. I like to say, "Now I will have to just call every single time this istuation comes up." You don't actually have to do this, but it usually scares them the next time because they will think you are trying to trap them. Also good because they fold easily postflop when they think they are dodging a trap.
Anyways, that is about it for my input..I recommend practicing 1 table tournies and heads ups if you play MTTs so you are well-prepared for final table play. It is really a waste to battle thru a ton of tables and be weak at the final table where 95% of the money usually lies.
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