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The Poker Newz





The Sit N Go (SNG) is online poker's great gift to the aspiring tournament
player. Prior
to the SNG, final table experience was hard to come by. You could enter a
dozen multi-
table tournaments and never find yourself at a final table. Or you could make
one or two,
only to get knocked out in 8th or 9th place. Adapting to an ever-diminishing
number of
players at a single table is a crucial skill in tournament poker, and it's a hard
experience
to find offline without investing a lot of time and money. Online, this
experience is a
mouse-click away. The SNG's advantages are many. For starters, it's
low-cost, or even
free. It's also fun, and convenient: You don't need to schedule it -- a SNG
starts every
time the table fills up -- and it's usually over in less than an hour. It is the
flight simulator
of Final Table play, and mastering it should be considered mandatory
homework for the
serious student.

Now that you know why you should play, let's look at how:

The most obvious difference between a SNG and a multi-table tournament
is that when
someone goes broke in a SNG, there isn't someone waiting to fill their spot.
Multi-table
play consists mostly of full-table, ring game poker. But as players get
eliminated from a
SNG, the table gets shorter- and shorter-handed. This reduction in players
basically
serves to artificially raise the antes. For instance, say you are playing
five-handed and
the blinds are 100-200: You are paying 300 in blinds for every five hands, or
60 per
hand. As soon as someone gets knocked out, you're four-handed. Now
you're paying 75
per hand -- a 25% increase -- despite the fact that the blinds have remained
the same.
Accordingly, you're forced to gamble more, or risk getting blinded out.

Since the size of the blinds relative to your stack size should always play a
major role in
you hand selection, I recommend starting out with pretty conservative
starting hand
requirements. This serves two functions: First, the blinds dictate that you
play fairly tight
early; the blinds are small and you are nine-handed, so they                               
              
Second, this helps you establish a tight image, which you hope will pay off
later when
the blinds are high and you
o play tighter earlier and looser later: The payout structure rewards tight play.
Most
SNG's pay 50% to first, 30% to second, and 20% to third. This payout
structure dictates
that you play for third. Why? Looking at the payout structure another way
might help.
Basically, the payout means that 60% gets awarded once you are down to
three players,
20% gets awarded when you get down to two players, and the final 20% gets
awarded
to the winner. If you can just get to third, you get at least one-third of 60% of
the prize
pool, or 20%. You've locked up a profit, and you have a chance to win up to
30% more.
It's only now that you're in the top three that your strategy should take an
abrupt turn.
Now it pays to gamble for the win. Let's look at the numbers again: 60% of
the prize pool
is off the table, and moving up one spot is worth only another 10%. But move
up just one
more spot and it's worth a whopping 30% extra -- that's three times more for
first than it
is for second. And with the blinds going up, gambling for the win is even
more clearly
the correct play.

I see many players employ a nearly opposite strategy. They figure they have
nothing to
lose, so they go for the quick double-up early. They take chances too soon
when, in their
view, there's "nothing on the line". Then, once they're in the money, they
tighten up,
thinking about that extra payout for moving up a spot. If you start to rethink
your SNG
approach and adopt a "slow early, fast late" strategy, you will see an almost
immediate
improvement in your results.

Best of luck and see you at the tables,


Howard Lederer
Sit N Go tournaments made easy