Taking a chance early on in a MTT Hold’em tournament
If you have spent any amount of time playing in MTT Hold’em tournament, you know how frustrating it can be when you make call downs on draws and they never hit. The next thing you know your stack is down to nothing and you have little or no choice to go all in with a questionable hand. Maybe you need to think about taking some more chances and try to get a big stack early on and actually hit the final table with the big stack instead of getting blinded out.
The first thing you have to decide is if you want to play aggressively or you just want to sit back and wait for hands. While you can be successful by waiting around, you are doomed if you don’t catch cards early on and you are going end up getting bullied off of hands. While you risk getting bounced out of the tourney early by playing this way, if you get a couple of breaks, you can find yourself deep into the tourney and able to cash a big payday.
Something that you may want to consider is pushing the issue when you are on a draw, especially if you can set up a check raise situation. Ideally, you are going to set this up with an aggressive player that is bullying the table. If he raising pre-flop on the bulk of the hands and then going forward with a continuation bet, he is an ideal candidate to pull this move on. Doing this will also set you up later one when you have hit a hand. You can do the same thing and possibly get a call when you are sitting on the stone cold nuts.
The ideal situation for this move would be three handed with you playing before the aggressor and after one other player. Let’s say that the aggressor raises the pot before the flop to 4 times the blind. You are sitting on the BB with KQc. The flop comes out 10c-Jc-2d. You are now sitting an open ended straight draw along, a royal flush draw and of course the flush draw. In addition to that, you have two over cards that you can catch to improve your hand. All in all, you have a total of 23 possible outs to improve your hand.
Now assume the other player in the hand is the SB and he checks the flop to you, you in turn check the bet over to the initial raiser and he fires a pot sized bet out there. The SB folds and now it is up to you. For arguments sake, assume the pot was $120 before the flop and he is now betting $120 into that pot. It would be early in the tournament and you have $1,000 left in chips. The call in this situation is a no brainer, you are getting 2:1 odds on your money and you have about a 90% shot of hitting your hand. However, a call does not allow you to truly take advantage of this situation. This is an ideal position to push your stack in and double up.
If the aggressor makes the call and has you beat and is not holding two suited cards with the Ace that will match the board, you are still in the driver’s seat. You literally have half the deck to draw to him calling and having the lead is not a bad thing here. The other scenario is that the aggressor folds his hand and you end up taking in a pretty nice pot.
Remember though, you make a habit of this move and you are going to get called down every time. Save it for a time when you hold a significant advantage on your draw and even if you are behind, you are in a strong position to win the hand. Then the next time you make the play and have a hand, the aggressor is going to think you are bluffing and will make the call. When you turn over your set, his mouth drops and you rake the pot. Well timed aggression will lead you to the final table. Use it in the right spot against the right player and that chip stack will continue to grow.













