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Poker Tournaments:
How to win at Single Table Satellites
Single table satellites are a form of poker unlike any other. The genesis of the
satellite concept originated over twenty years ago during the run-up to the
World Series of Poker. Instead of just plopping down $10,000 (or whatever) to
enter an event, ten players put up 1/10th of that amount (plus a little for the
casino), with the winner winning entry into the larger event. Satellites led to
the first great growth spurt in tournament poker.
These days one table satellites have been joined by two relatives. The first
relatives are super satellites where many tables of players play and multiple
seats are awarded to a main event. The second relatives are online "sit-and-go"
one and two table tournaments where normally either three or four people win
money.
These are related, but require significantly different strategic approaches.
Some concepts are similar, but this article doesn't address strategy for
super-satellites because they have one drastic difference: it does not matter if
you "win". If six seats to the main tournament are awarded, it makes no
difference if you come in first or sixth -- you get the same prize. Also, one
table satellites for tournaments are winner-take-all, while online sit-and-go
tournaments have "normal" prize structures where the winner gets a larger prize
than second, and second gets more than third, so these also have significantly
different strategic approaches that we'll deal with another time.
In one table casino satellites there is a whole class of player, the
satellite specialist, who can make a nice income during every major tournament
simply by playing satellites and exploiting the backward play of the bulk of the
players. While one table satellites only pay one player, very often, probably
most of the time, a deal is made between the final two or three players. Given
this fact, what is one thing you should have as a goal when playing a satellite?
Simply this: being there at the end, whenever the end might be. Merely getting
down to the final four or three players puts you in a position to negotiate for
some of the prize money. Is this "poker"? It certainly is! Poker is playing a
multidimensional game involving cards for money. Lots of aspects of poker (like
table selection) have nothing to do with the actual card playing. Satellite dealmaking is one of these.
So, since being there at four players is a goal in itself, what does that
suggest strategically? What it doesn't suggest if what many people do: play
loose, wild poker, trying to "get lucky". Except for No Limit Hold'em, where
playing speculative hands for the minimum bet at the beginning almost always
makes sense, in the other games survival is rewarded much more highly than
doubling up early. Winning one hand a round is a lot better than 1/3 as good as
winning three hands a round. Satellites are not like ring games where every pot
brings equal valued chips, and they aren't like regular tournaments with their
multiple player prize pools. In satellites, getting all or a part of first prize
is everything, and you can't get any of the gravy if you aren't at the table.
Fighting battles at the mostly irrelevant point of the beginning of a satellite
gains you very little (again, with No Limit being an exception). Playing solid,
strong starting hands that offer big edges offers you the opportunity to
incrementally raise your stack with relatively little risk, while offering you a
good opportunity to be one of the final four contenders. At this point
shorthanded poker and tournament dealmaking skills become the dominant factor in
the game.
Suppose all you had to do to get head-up in a satellite was double your chips.
You would be a 4-1 underdog, but wouldn't that be just fine by you ... getting
about 10-1 on your money while being a 4-1 underdog? And since blinds will be
through the roof, all you have to do is win two hands in a row to be a 4-1
favorite, and all you have to do is win one hand to be a 3-2 underdog
when a deal can often easily be made.
The high limits at the end of satellites often lead to a pure crapshoot, a
series of coin flips. No skill in that. The skill is to get to coin flip
time, and either take the flips while getting excellent odds, or make a deal to
take luck out of it and cut up the prize money.
Don't try to get lucky at the beginning of a satellite. Use your skill. At the
end of a satellite, use your dealmaking skills, or just face the coin flip hands
and accept that luck determines your fate. You can't use skill in a coin flip,
but you can use skill at the start of a satellite. In other words, make it your
strategy to use your skill when you can use your skill!
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