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The SNG Blueprint Part 1

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    $16 Per Hour SNG Blueprint Part #1

    The SNG Planet Guide To Building Your Poker Bankroll

    Marks Course Introduction

    Welcome to the $16 per hour SNG Blueprint, within just 30 days I will teach you a straight-forward

    system of playing online poker which can be used to build up your bankroll by $16+ per hour.

    I strongly believe that anyone with average or better intelligence, a little discipline and willingness

    to move around to find the weakest games can quickly beat the $16 per hour in our headline

    What it depends on is your willingness to understand and implement the concepts and to focus

    on finding the most profitable games.

    This 4-part course will focus on single-table SNG tournaments. It starts by giving you a solid

    understanding of where your profits come from and then outlines how you can best adjust to

    benefit. We will gradually increase both the number of games you are comfortable playing

    simultaneously and the buy-ins levels that you play. At the same time we will sharpen your game

    with strategy insights that improve your returns from each stage of the game.

    Remember, poker is about more just how you play the cards you are dealt the most profitable

    players are those who take the time to find the games where their edge is greatest!

    Good Luck At The Tables, Mark

    http://www.sitandgoplanet.com

    Copyright Notice: The contents of the $16 / hour SNG Blueprint are copyright Planet Corporation Kft and may not be

    reproduced without express written permission. We proactively protect this text, and all associated websites using

    Copyscape TM, and have a no exceptions policy of always reporting infringements to ISPs, Search Engines and any 3rd

    party sites our material is used to commercially promote.

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  • 2

    $16 / Hr SNG Blueprint List Of Contents

    1) 30 Days From Now Where You Can Be After Completing This Course

    2) SNGs Introduction, Why These Games Are Great For Building A Bankroll

    3) Bankroll Management, ROI Definition And The Effects Of Variance

    4) Starting Bankroll, Get Off To A Flying Start By Finding The Most Profitable Games

    5) Multi-Tabling, Introducing Hourly Rates + Strategy Changes

    6) Strategy Introduction, Starting Hands And Position

    7) Strategy Introduction, Objectives, Stages And Stack Sizes

    8) Strategy Insights, Early Stages Strategy Tips For Multi-Tablers

    9) Strategy Insights, Mid-Stages Strategy Tips For Multi-Tablers

    10) Strategy Insights, The Bubble, Equity And Aggression!

    11) Strategy Insights, In The Money + Heads-Up Play

    12) Summing It Up Key Take Away Points And Tasks For The Next 7 Days!

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  • 3

    Chapter #1 30 Days From Now

    Where Will You Be After Completing This Course

    With the skills and knowledge to earn an average of $16 per hour (or more!) from the tables your

    bankroll could be starting to grow very fat indeed after completing this course. Let us be more

    specific, by way of introducing the main concepts.

    I expect that the average player will be logging on to their chosen poker site, firing up 6 to 8+ turbo

    SNG tournaments, following our guidelines to avoid having too many multi-tabling opponents.

    They will be making fairly automatic decisions in most cases, based on a clearly defined strategy

    specifically designed to minimize difficult decisions without leaving too much value on the table.

    Our player will be cashing and winning at a rate which sees their bankroll move up and up and up

    with more games played. Busting out will not be a problem, youll simply fire up more games

    focusing on the bubble where the skills and knowledge to take advantage of opponents mistakes

    can be used again and again.

    In 30 days time you will have the tools to grow your poker bankroll at will. Whether your objective

    is to move to the high-stakes tournaments, transition to cash games or even just to generate some

    useful extra money for non-poker uses youll always have the ability to come back for more.

    We have broken the course into 4 separate areas, each building on the last:

    Part #1 The SNG Blueprint:

    This part of the course will give you the big view, showing you how SNGs can mean big profits and

    giving you a new perspective which will quickly boost your profits, along with strategy and profit-

    making advice and insights which we will build on as the course progresses. We outline the

    principles of push / fold poker and prize pool equity which you can use immediately, and also

    introduce the reasons why a disciplined early game is key to long term profitability.

    Part #2 - Becoming A Bubble Ninja:

    This part will arrive in 1 week; it will break down the bubble of a 1-table SNG tournament like you

    have never seen before. By the end of this section you will know exactly what mistakes your

    opponents are making at the bubble, and possess an effective counter-strategy for each one. You

    will also be provided with the ability to identify your own bubble leaks between sessions and of

    course the ability to plug them!

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  • 4

    Part #3 Turn Up The Volume:

    Next we will teach you how to gradually increase the number of games you are playing while

    maintaining that profitable edge. You will be amazed how quickly playing 6, 8 or more games can

    become as simple a routine as playing just 2!

    Part #4 SNG Profit Booster:

    In many ways this is the most important part of the course, arriving a week after Part #3. While we

    would love to share the insights and advanced strategy tips with you earlier they become even

    more valuable after you have a solid grasp of the principles from the earlier sections.

    If you are prepared to put in effort to learn the key concepts and seek the most profitable sites and

    games then read on, mastering SNG tournaments is easier than many people think!

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  • 5

    Chapter #2 SNGs Introduction,

    Why These Games Are Great For Building A Bankroll

    Sit And Go Tournaments are usually defined as a poker tournament with no fixed starting time.

    When enough players sit down, the game begins. These can range in size from 2 players to more

    than 300. This course focuses on 1 table tournaments (sometimes referred to as STTs or Single

    Table Tournaments ) featuring 9 or 10 players, you can think of this as the standard SNG, with

    the many size, structure and betting variations coming from this base.

    Payouts for 1-table SNGs are usually for 3 places in a 50% / 30% / 20% of the prize pool format.

    This has a huge effect on the correct strategy (from a mathematical perspective), which many of

    your opponents will not understand this is a key reason that SNG tournaments are so profitable!

    There are actually several reasons why SNG tournaments are a great choice for players looking to

    build their bankroll. Firstly, these games are attractive to inexperienced players. If you think about

    when you first discovered online poker, the 1 table games looked like a great way to learn without

    spending too much in one go

    A second reason these are good bankroll builders is the speed of the games make them ideal to

    divide up into short and sharp sessions. Add to this the fact that (with the right strategy) they are

    the easiest games of all to multi-table and you have a situation where you can increase the volume

    of games to turn on that money tap any time you please!

    My final reason is that your opponents simply have more opportunities to make mistakes in SNGs

    than in cash games. The shift in strategy from one stage of the game to another is not obvious, and

    errors can get expensive (well explain these changes below!). Good players do not stay playing

    SNGs for long the lure of cash game profits or the big-prize multi-table tournaments soon sees

    them leave, making these games a consistent profit source.

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  • 6

    Chapter #3 Bankroll Management + Return On Investment

    This is a critical chapter, so make sure you understand it!

    Poker Bankroll Management is kind of dull, we know it, you know it, everyone knows it but get

    this, those who do not use it are very unlikely indeed to ever be consistent winners in poker. Yep,

    it is that simple, use it or eventually you lose.

    The reason is Variance which describes the natural swings in the game due to the chance fall of

    cards. We are not going into the chance vs. skill debate in too much depth here. It should be

    enough to say that the result of one bubble coin flip (for example a pair of Queens vs. Ace-King)

    can make the difference between being $50 down or $50 up at the end of a session of SNGs. Add

    to this runs of missing the flop and you can see that it would make little sense to have too much

    money riding on a small set of games.

    Pro SNG players often ensure that they have 100 (or more) buy-ins for the level they are playing at.

    While we are not going to be that strict, we do recommend starting with at least 20 buy-ins and

    ensuring that you could replace this should the natural variance deplete your cash. It seems

    impossible to many newer players for a proven winner to hit a 30 or 40 buy-in downswing trust

    me, it is far more common than you think.

    Return On Investment is known as ROI and is how we measure our success in SNG tournaments. If

    you are playing the $5+50c games and have a 20% ROI then your profit is $1.10 per game. When

    you play many tables you give up some ROI in exchange for a bigger hourly rate this is explained

    in chapter #5 below.

    Bankroll Management is so important for SNG players that we created a dedicated section just for

    this subject at SNG Planet you can reach it by clicking here.

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  • 7

    Chapter #4 Starting Bankroll For This Course

    + Choosing The Easiest Games

    Ideally I would like to see readers that you start with a minimum bankroll of around $100 to $150

    to achieve the results within 30 days. If you can not raise this much then do not worry, youll just

    need to start at slightly lower levels and work your way up if you have the time and inclination

    this should not be a long delay in reaching our goal!

    This will involve starting at the $5.50c SNGs and working up as you win money and clear the great

    bonuses as I suggest below and in future parts of the course. While this is taking a bankroll

    management risk from the perspective of established pro players I believe that the smaller

    games are profitable enough that you will be able to build a safety-zone into your bankroll

    reasonably fast! Remember; never play poker with money you can not afford to lose.

    I mentioned bonuses for a good reason, you need to get to the $11 to $22 levels as quickly as

    possible, and grabbing a new bonus will make this significantly easier. Players outside of the US

    have the best possible choice and we have a specific recommendation which will really open your

    eyes as to how soft (and so profitable) SNG tournaments can be.

    Titan Poker is the leading site on the iPoker Network and offer some significant advantages in

    addition to their 100% match first deposit bonus. Use the bonus code BLUEPRINT when you

    register for a free $20 cash on top (we will deposit it to your account, usually within 48 hours). In

    addition to the bonuses you will benefit from some great promotions, a generous player rewards

    system and (best of all) a huge amount of inexperienced opponents waiting to hand you profit at

    the SNG tables. I personally play at this site, really if you are serious about profiting from poker

    then you have to see the SNGs here! Click the banner below now to check out Titan for yourself

    youll be surprised!

    Choosing the easiest games is huge when it comes to maximizing your profits and getting the full

    benefit of this course. Ill confidently predict that the players who find the poker sites with the

    most inexperienced players (fewest pro grinders), and take the time to identify (then avoid) the

    winning regulars will progress to financial freedom much faster than those who decide that their

    current site will do!

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  • 8

    Chapter #5 Multi-Tabling, Affects Both Your ROI And Strategy

    This course will teach you how to multi-table SNGs, as well as to own the bubble. Before you get

    that far, here is an explanation as to why multi-tabling is key, and some of the strategy

    adjustments you will have to make. The 3rd part of the course Turn Up The Volume will go into

    more detail on this subject, and also include some killer tips and strategy ideas which will help you

    maximize your returns while feeling more and more relaxed playing multiple games.

    Key to understanding the effect of playing many tables on your returns is this:

    More tables will give you a lower profit per game played; at the same time as significantly

    increasing your hourly rate overall.

    Let us take a simple example well make the game cost $10 for simplicity with a 20% return, and

    take 10% from the ROI for each table added to account for faster decisions, less reads on

    opponents and requirement to fold some marginally profitable hands to focus on other games,

    each game will take 40 minutes (turbo SNGs) so we get the hourly rate by multiplying the profit

    per game by 1.5

    - 1 Table $2 Per Game 1.5 Games / Hour = $3 per hour

    - 2 Tables - $1.80 Per Game - 3 Games / Hour = $5.40 per hour

    - 3 Tables - $1.62 Per Game 4.5 Games / Hour = $7.29 per hour

    - 4 Tables - $1.46 Per Game 6 Games / Hour = $8.76 per hour

    - 5 Tables - $1.31 Per Game 7.5 Games / Hour = $8.85 per hour

    - 6 Tables - $1.18 Per Game 9 Games / Hour = $10.61 per hour

    - 7 Tables - $1.06 Per Game 10.5 Games / Hour = $11.13 per hour

    - 8 Tables - $0.95 Per Game 12 Game / Hour = $11.40 per hour

    Remember, this is just an illustration to explain the relationship between ROI and Multi-tabling. My

    personal belief is that the negative effect per table diminishes over time (once you have got used

    to 4 the jump to 6 and then 8 is actually comparatively small). We probably started too high with

    20% too though choose a soft site such as Titan and play during the evenings and weekends and

    this might well be achievable!

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  • 9

    You will have less decision time per hand when multi-tabling. I recommend that you treat hands

    which might have been marginally profitable when playing one table into 'folds', particularly easily

    dominated hands such as unsuited high cards where your post flop action might have depended

    on knowing something about your opponents tendencies. Getting reads on opponents will be

    somewhat trickier while you get used to multi-tabling, with only the craziest of them becoming

    visible. This requires some adjustment to your strategy too youll need to play in such a way as to

    maximize your advantages and make the most money from an average opponent. The next part

    of the course explains the best way to do this starting with the basics and going from there.

    One of the exercises I want you to practice at the end of this part of the course is to add one more

    table to your current comfortable limit. If you play one table at a time then two is just fine. You will

    be surprised how fast this becomes normal and how easy it is to watch multiple tables and best

    of all, adding another table now will help you when it comes to the 3rd part of the course.

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  • 10

    Chapter #6 Strategy Basics - Starting Hands And Position

    I grouped starting hands and position together for a good reason these two poker concepts can

    not be properly looked at separately. There are two more factors we need to consider, the blinds

    going up / player numbers going down as we run through the stages of the SNG and the fact that

    we will be multi-tabling, and so want to avoid those hands which might require tricky post-flop

    decisions or specific opponent reads in order to play profitably. For now we will cover the early and

    middle stages, the charts you see below really do depend on what happens at the table before you

    act. I am a very strong believer in the gap concept, which states that you need a stronger hand to

    call a raise from another player than you need to open the betting with a raise yourself.

    Understanding this concept is key you successful multi-tabling of 1-table SNGs. When you are the

    first to raise you take control of a hand, show strength and put yourself in the position of being

    able to win the pot either immediately or after the flop if your opponents miss. When you call a

    raise your hand no longer needs to be better than average it needs to have solid chances against

    the much smaller group of hands your opponent might be raising with. For example, if this

    opponent only raises the top 10% of hands you need to be holding something which can win a big

    pot against this range, either a top 5% hand or something that could spike a well hidden monster

    on the flop and win a big pot.

    There are only a small percentage of hands which are good enough to call a raise, but not good

    enough to re-raise with. Get into the habit of folding marginal raising hands when there is betting

    action ahead of you, or when you are one of the first to act at the table. This will save you a lot of

    chips over time!

    New players often think that these starting hand requirements are unnecessarily tight, trust me

    they are not learning to fold all but the best hands from early position at the table or when you

    see a raise ahead would make many marginal losing players profitable extremely fast, it really is

    that important.

    EP = Early Position MP = Middle Position LP = Late Position at the table

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  • 11

    Yes, I really am saying you should fold a pair of 9s when first to act, instantly muck ace-jack to any

    action ahead and re-raise with only the top few hands in the early stages. There are two linked

    reasons for this. Firstly your main profits will come from the later stages of SNGs, and secondly any

    chips you lose during the early stages are worth far more than any chips you win this will be

    covered below! I would only ever limp hands at those tables where raises are being called, while

    people are not re-raising often.

    One more thought, if you are considering whether to call a raise, whether your call closes the

    betting should be one of the factors you assess. If you are last to act, and your call will ensure you

    see a flop then you are sure of the price and can make a good decision based the odds you are

    getting and hand you hold. If a limper entered the pot, someone raises and then you call then the

    betting is still open. In this case the limper could choose to re-raise. Here you can not be sure that

    calling the initial bet will get you to the flop, so you should be more cautious with the number of

    hands which you call with.

    Starting Hands And Aggressive Opponents

    It is not just the number of opponents yet to act that you need to take into account when selecting

    playable hands. If you have identified one or more light raisers who have yet to act, this can

    change your strategy considerably. Of course, at a table where many players usually limp or are all

    super-tight the opposite could be true. Aggressive re-raisers who will act after you for the

    remainder of the hand mean you have to tighten your own opening requirements. While this can

    be frustrating at times, bear in mind that you will often have the opportunity to build a big pot

    those times you do hold a premium hand against these types.

    Starting Hands Are Not Rigid

    I suggest any starting hand chart act as a guideline only. As you gain experience in SNG

    tournaments the appropriate times to play more hands or tighten up further will start to become

    clear. Once you feel comfortable that you are disciplined enough to fold that small pair if you miss

    your set then you might want to add a few more pairs to your range as one example.

    Folding easily dominated hands such as Ace-Ten or King-Jack off suit is probably the fastest win

    new players can achieve from starting hand discipline. With a tight range you will take full

    advantage of those opponents who can not fold their easily dominated hands when they do hit

    part of the flop!

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  • 12

    Finally for this chapter - position, that is acting last after the flop, is huge in all forms of poker.

    Simply by playing more hands when you act after your opponents than when you are first to act

    after the flop you will have a profitable edge against them. We will return to position again and

    again in this course for now it is important only to understand that this simple concept is far

    more important than most beginning players believe. Stay tight when first to act and open up

    when last, with the dealer button being valuable enough to be worth protecting.

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  • 13

    Chapter 7 Strategy Basics Objectives, Stages And Stack Sizes

    I need to be crystal clear in the overall objective for our strategy for the $16 per hour SNG

    Blueprint; it is to get to the bubble, preferably with enough chips to make some of our opponents

    fold. Of course, the more chips the better, however, if we play a game where we only break even

    in chips before arriving at the 4-players left stage then this can still be counted as a success, here is

    the reason why:

    You can make good profit in SNG tournaments simply by taking advantage of the mistakes your

    opponents will make at the bubble.

    Yep, you do not need to out-play, out-think or out-read your opponents, simply putting them on

    reasonable hand ranges (I will show you how) and then playing in a mathematically unexploitable

    system will bring in the money. You do not even have to learn the math, simply understanding the

    rules laid down by equity models such as ICM and how this applies to each situation is enough to

    make you a tidy profit at the lower limits.

    Of course, if you can accumulate chips on your way to the bubble that is even better, in fact there

    are few things more pleasurable in SNG poker than being the big stack with 4 to go and picking up

    all those extra chips from opponents who are scared of busting out in 4th! Let me repeat one more

    time, our primary objective is always to get to the bubble with a reasonable stack, anything else is

    a bonus. I suggest playing Turbo SNGs for two reasons, firstly that you get to play more games per

    hour but more importantly you get to reach the bubble fast!

    SNG tournaments are usually divided into 4 stages, Early, Middle, Bubble and In The Money. I go

    through each stage below complete with a list of mistakes your opponents will make for you to

    profit from. You must stay aware of where you stand and what stage your game is in, your

    opponents will make different mistakes as the game progresses.

    Stack sizes are mentioned a lot below, in SNGs these are usually measured in terms of the number

    of Big Blinds you have. Poker is a betting game based on odds, you will need to be careful to

    account for Implied Odds (again, this is explained fully later) as well as pot odds when you make

    those plays. Many of your opponents will make mistakes with these concepts; we will include stack

    size considerations and odds-errors as we go through the stages below.

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  • 14

    Chapter 8 - Strategy Insights, Early Stages Strategy Tips For Multi-Tablers

    In my last SNG course, the eBook A Comedy Of Errors we coined the phrase tight is right, but

    tighter is righter to sum up the early stages of SNG tournaments. This advice is as strong today as

    it was 3 years ago, with the added advice that we stay sharp enough to exploit those huge errors

    that our inexperienced opponents are likely to be making at these stages.

    Remember our key objective when multi-tabling, it will be to get to as many bubbles as possible

    where we can maximize our profits by taking advantage of opponent errors.

    At the same time some of the errors your opponents will be making during the early stages are just

    too big to ignore. These include:

    Playing Too Many Hands, Especially Easily Dominated Hands

    Chasing Flushes And Straights Against The Odds

    Over-Valuing Hands

    Playing Passive, Horrible, Calling Poker!

    Let me start with an example of playing easily dominated hands, we will take the example of Ace-

    Seven off suit, in middle position, with a raise from an active player in front and several players left

    behind. In this example our player calls the raise, thinking that the hand is not good enough to re-

    raise with. One more player enters the pot, also by calling note that if anyone had put in a further

    raise here then our player would have been forced to fold, a waste of chips!

    Before we get to the flop, let us think about what our player hopes to see? An Ace? Well, this is

    potentially a problem, since two more players are in the pot and either of them could have a better

    kicker with their own ace. How about a seven? This might work, but what if there are higher cards

    too, for example a king and a jack? Where will we stand, even if this is the highest card how can we

    be sure an opponent did not start with a higher pair such as Tens or Jacks?

    This hand is easily Dominated, that is to say that the majority of hands which will willingly play

    against it are 70% or more favorites to win the pot. In this case this includes aces with better side

    cards (kickers) or pairs seven and above. Playing easily dominated hands without position in a

    situation where your opponents do not play predictably is a problem in poker you will not know

    whether or not you are ahead without committing many more of those valuable chips to the pot.

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  • 15

    Back to our example - unless our player flops a big hand of 2-pairs or better, things are going to

    depend on guess work after the flop. In a low level SNG your opponents are going to play

    unpredictably at best, getting the information you need, will often cost chips that could have been

    saved for the all important mid-stages and bubble. Get into the habit of folding these marginal

    hands to a raise, especially with players still to act. A key part of our strategy is to seek easy

    decisions, and avoid close things whenever possible.

    This same scenario happens again and again in poker, players call with Ace-Nine, King-Jack, Queen-

    Five suited and all sorts of hands only to find they have no idea where they stand after the flop

    comes

    Early Stages Tip: Choose hands which are unlikely to be dominated (big pairs or big aces) or hands

    which will give you instant feedback on the flop* get in the habit of folding those tempting but

    expensive in between hands.

    *Hands like this include small pairs, with which you are basically trying to hit trips or fold to post-flop action is you miss.

    Chasing Against The Odds is a common mistake, especially at the lower limits. Many of you will

    have suffered the horror of watching an opponent call half of their stack with only a flush draw,

    only to hit it on the river. Compounding this type of error is that many opponents will simply call-

    call-call with their draws, not raising until they hit their miracle card

    Learn those basic odds and outs (Click to see the article) before you play another game. Instead of

    calling you should often be making big raises if you find yourself with a strong draw giving your

    opponent the chance to fold. If someone chases then be thankful, offer them a good price to

    continue and think of it in terms of the chips you will make over time, and not the individual hand.

    Whether you opponent hits or misses if they take current odds of 2/1 from the pot on something

    that will happen only 1 in 4 times they will lose money and actually lose it very fast. Without

    these type of players poker would be a more difficult game by far so make sure you identify them

    and take their money gracefully.

    Over Valuing Hands I already covered this a little when talking about domination. However, over-

    valuing hands goes even further. Aces, Kings and Queens are seen by novice players as through-

    tickets to a double up, and are often horribly slow-played, allowing opponents with small pairs or

    drawing hands to catch up. This mistake is easy to counter, just wait until you can beat one pair

    and get those chips in.

    An even bigger mistake when over-valuing hands is to be too stubborn after the flop. Some players

    treat a flopped middle pair like a certain winner and will resist all moves to get them to fold. Over

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  • 16

    playing one-pair hands is a killer in most forms of poker, make sure you keep a close eye on your

    own reaction to these hands and are capable of folding them when the action gets heavy

    particularly if there is more than one opponent in the pot.

    Playing Passive, Calling, Horrible Poker: Calling too much is often the single biggest leak lower

    limit SNG players have in their games. The way to look at it is that you only have one way to win a

    hand when you call call call you have to show your opponent the best poker hand at showdown.

    Now, more than half of hands never get to a showdown, someone wins the pot before any hole-

    cards are revealed. Think that passive callers prosper over time? Of course not, those rare times

    they do bet rather than everyone realizes that they have a monster and quickly folds.

    Playing positive, aggressive poker not only gives you more ways to win, it saves you chips when

    you are beaten too. Raising that mid-strength hand and getting re-raised allows you to fold (or see

    a flop and then fold when you miss) for only the price of the initial bets. If you call with these

    hands you will never be sure if your opponent is bluffing, since you showed weakness which

    inspires many of your opponents to continue betting.

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  • 17

    Chapter #9 Strategy Insights, Mid-Stages Strategy Tips For Multi-Tablers

    While the exact transition between the early stages and the middle stages of SNG tournaments are

    fuzzy, I like to define this as having 6 or so opponents where the stack sizes range between 10 and

    25 times the big blind. Blind increases are going to be significant now, and you will need to fight

    just to keep ahead of them.

    Of all the mistakes your opponents will make in the middle stages, failure to adjust to the smaller

    stack sizes compared to bets is the biggest. This significantly affects your starting hand selection.

    An example of a small pair will illustrate:

    In the early stages we pointed out that small pairs were playable in SNGs, since you can potentially

    spike a big hand (a set of trips) and win a huge pot. In the middle stages you can not usually call a

    raise with those same cards. For example, we will give both you and an opponent 3000 chips with

    the blinds at 200 and 100. You have a pair of 4s and see an opponent raise ahead to 600. Here you

    do not have the odds to call. You will only hit the flop one in eight times (odds of approximately 7-

    to-1 against doing so). This is not enough to justify the cost, looking at the math, you will lose 600

    chips seven times (7 * 600 = 4200) and win 3000 chips (plus the blinds) once! A huge loss, even

    before we factor in the fact that you will sometimes hit and still lose (for example to a flush), and

    other times see your opponent fold on the flop when you bet! Whether you reraise all in or fold

    depends on your opponent and the situation, I will look at situational factors in the very last part of

    this course which details how to fine tune your profits.

    Now, this means there are very few hands which it is profitable to call with at all! In the middle

    stages it really is a raise or fold game. Anyone re-raising is showing a lot of strength, unless you

    have been raising every hand, in which case they may be making a stand. If you follow this logic

    you should be opening a lot of pots with a raise, especially when there are comparatively few

    players left to act behind you. People will call you occasionally, and the pot will be big compared to

    your stack sizes I advise keeping up the pressure unless you have a known slow-player on your

    hands. Most people will not be able to take the heat!

    Mid Game Tip: You Should Not Generally Be Calling Raises, Get Into The Habit Of Re-Raising Or

    Folding When Someone Else Bets!

    Limpers are another big source of revenue during the middle stages of SNG tournaments; I wrote

    an article in SNG Planet especially dedicated to a move called the Push Over Limpers, (click to

    open it up!)

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    In the middle game the tendencies of your opponents are key, you must get aggressive when

    folded to and steal your share of blinds and antes. By noting who are the players more likely to call

    you (or raise back) and targeting the tighter and more cautious players you can add to your chip

    stack without taking on too much risk. Part #4 of this course contains many mid-game tips for

    now playing positively when folded to and tight when there is action ahead will get you safely to

    the bubble more often than not! Click below to check out Titan now!

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    Chapter #10 Strategy Insights, The Bubble, Equity And Aggression!

    Ah the bubble, we now come to the part of any SNG tournament which will make you the majority

    of your profit. In fact the bubble is so important that the next part of the course is totally dedicated

    to helping you become a bubble ninja. This next section brings strategy based on prize pool equity

    into play for now we will gently introduce the key concepts and give you some (extremely)

    important pieces of strategy advice you can start profiting from right away.

    Play To Cash? Play To Win?

    Before we start Id like to address a debate which appears in forums and so called strategy

    articles again and again whether you play to win or play to cash in SNGs? While both

    strategies seem plausible, both are actually incorrect and understanding why will help you to

    profit!

    At the bubble of a SNG decisions are not based on whether you are going for first or 3rd and then

    first they are based on the best way to maximize your equity or average return if the same

    game were played 1000s of times.

    If you take mathematically correct decisions which increase your equity again and again it will not

    actually matter whether your intention is to play for 1st or not, you will simply take home more

    money. Unless there are extreme situations in terms of stack sizes or huge blinds the best decision

    is the one which will increase your average win the most, get into the habit of thinking in there

    terms instead of justifying expensive mistakes with I was going for 1st and your profits will

    improve fast! We explain this fully in the next part of the course along with several examples so

    do not worry if it is not yet completely clear.

    All-in Or Fold Why The Poker Appears To Disappear At The Bubble

    Many people unfamiliar with SNG tournaments think that the skilled poker disappears at the

    bubble, and to an extent they are right! What they fail to notice is that there are good reasons why

    players push all-in instead of standard raising. These reasons are nothing to do with complex

    equity formulas or equilibrium models; they concern the simple concept of poker Pot-Odds.

    Let me use an example of an ordinary enough bubble, blinds are 300 / 150 ante 25 and all 4 players

    happen to have a stack of 3300 chips, 11 times the big blind. Now if player A chooses to play a

    hand he pushes all-in every time and here is why:

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    If Player A were to raise 3 times the blind to 900 and player B were to re-raise all-in then the Pot-

    Odds Player A sees are huge. The total pot = 900 (the raise) + 550 (the blinds + antes) + 3300

    (Player Bs call + re-raise all in) a total of 4750 and it costs A his remaining 2400 chips to call. This is

    just under 2-to-1 odds, meaning A only has to win the hand 35% of the time to show a profit. Let us

    be honest, how many hand combinations which legitimately raised here are less will win less than

    1/3rd of the time against the entire range B could have re-raised with?? Not many! This example is

    with 11 blinds, as we get to 10, 8 or even less the logic for pushing all-in gets even stronger were

    we considering raising 2.5 times the blind, continuation betting and then folding to resistance with

    1500 chips left!!

    Of course, with many of the hands A is legitimately raising he would be happy to pick up the blinds,

    so pushing all-in has the effect of getting many of the hands which might have re-raised to fold.

    The key is this:

    If The Pot-Odds You Receive After Raising Mean That You Will Be Forced To Call Any Re-Raise,

    Then You Should Usually Push All-In To Start With.

    I wrote a dedicated article explaining Why All In? in SNG Planet explaining this concept with more

    examples, we will keep the number of links back to the site to a minimum you can find it fast via

    our site search function on the top right hand side.

    Bubble Mistakes, Where Your Cash Will Come From!

    Now you understand the premise behind all-in poker I can start to cover at some of the major

    mistakes your opponents will make at the bubble of SNG tournaments. Again, these errors are

    covered in detail in Part #2 of the course, which will turn you into what is commonly known as a

    Bubble Ninja!

    For the time being the concept I would like you to understand is that doubling your chips at the

    bubble will usually only increase your average win in dollars over 1000s of tries by 50%... that is to

    say the relationship between your chip stack and your winnings is not linear.

    Here is a simplified example it is important that you understand the dynamic here.

    There are 4 players left each with 3000 chips, we will ignore the effects of the blinds for now (they

    are 300 / 150 for the record!) and imagine that every player is equally skilled and experienced in

    the game. While in the short-term, chance will affect any individuals results, over 1000s of games

    each player would end up winning an equal share of the pots. Again keeping things simple we can

    assume $25 of a $100 total prize goes to each player, on average and over the long run.

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    Now we take an all-in confrontation between players A and B. Player A wins and her chips go to

    6000 with player B getting nothing at all for busting in 4th place. Now, with a 20% / 30% / 50% prize

    pool payout each player is guaranteed at least $20 (the 3rd place prize money), and all have a

    chance of coming in 1st or 2nd too.

    Having more chips always helps! Though to have doubled the $25 in average winnings to $50

    player A would have to win every single time and with the other players still having 3000 chips

    each that is simply not going to happen.

    Incidentally, players C and D were not involved in the All-In hand, yet their average win in this

    particular game just shot up, they are now guaranteed $20, one of them will definitely win $30 and

    both have a chance of $50!

    If we look at the average winnings, we will see that if the situation with one 6000 chip stack and 2

    * 3000 chip stacks were replayed 1000s of times A would win an average of $38, while C and D will

    average $31 each (to choose approximate examples).

    Key Point: Player A risked $25 in average winnings to win $13 more in average winnings by

    calling Player Bs All-In At The Bubble.

    This has a bigger effect on bubble strategy than many players realize. Here is why:

    When you call an all-in on the bubble your risk (in average winnings) is almost twice as big as your

    potential gain from winning the hand. This means you do not just need a better hand than your

    opponent, you need to balance the risk / reward by having a hand which is better than a 2-to-1

    favorite against the range of hands your opponent could be playing.

    If your opponent has a reasonably tight range there are actually very few hands which make it

    worth risking $25 worth of equity to win an additional $13 we are often talking in terms of

    premiums such as aces, kings and queens only. Even against a loose raising range your King-Jack

    or Ace-Ten is not going to be a 2-to-1 favorite, if you take a 60% edge when you need 67% to show

    profit you will go broke over time the fact that many of your opponents do not understand this is

    exactly where your profits will come from!

    Instead of thinking about the bubble in terms of chips, start to think of how much average

    winnings you are risking compared to how much more average winnings you might gain and

    then choose hands where you increase that average profit only.

    Good players understand this and know the ranges of hands they can profitably push and call with

    at the bubble, bad players do not and will make horrible errors such as the following:

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    Calling too much, for example calling with Ace-Eight is a horror at the bubble in most

    circumstances using the logic explained above. While the caller feels smug when his opponent

    shows King-Ten, all he is doing is spewing average profits over to the players not in the hand at his

    own and the pushers expense!

    Not Pushing All-In Enough. You see, any opponent who understands prize pool equity will be

    reluctant to call all-ins. This creates situations in most games where your opponents will fold so

    often that you will win money just from the folds. Since those times you are called any hand has

    some winning chances there are often situations where it is correct to push any 2. We will teach

    you to spot them in part #2 of this course.

    Not Accounting For Stack Sizes: A simple example is people who fail to use a big stack to their

    advantage, especially when the other players have medium sized stacks. Since they are all trying

    to avoid busting 4th you can literally own the bubble in these circumstances. A great trick is to keep

    the bubble alive when a mini-stack is at the table while you steal from mid-sized stacks. We explain

    this one in the SNG Planet Article: Keep That Bubble Alive and will cover the concept later in this

    course.

    Calling less and pushing all-in more will instantly improve your bubble results. Once you get a

    handle on the type of players who will call you and those who raise light you can use the math to

    your advantage. Again, part 2 of the $16 / Hour SNG Blueprint is dedicated to helping you become

    a master of the bubble. For now getting the chips are not equal to average winnings concept

    straight, think of prize pool equity risked against prize pool equity gained - and start using this to

    your advantage.

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    Chapter #11 Strategy Insights, In The Money + Heads-Up Play

    All the focus on bubble play can often lead to players not appreciating the significance of a solid

    strategy once you are in the money. Again we are playing to maximize equity, only this time the

    buffer of 3rd or 2nd places mean that the risk is lower, meaning we can play hands closer to the

    ranges of our opponents (though still ahead of them!).

    You will often see players turn into Maniacs once the bubble bursts, pushing all-in with almost

    every hand in a wild bid to regain some of the chips they gave away desperately trying to get to the

    last 3! This creates profitable situations for those who are able to judge a profitable calling range

    against the crazies. While the exact math depends very much on stack sizes (not just your own,

    those of all the players in relation to the blinds), you can often profitably call with a range of top

    33% of the cards your opponent is playing. For example if they are pushing all-in with the top 20% of

    hands you can call with top 6.7%, if they push the top 60% then you can call as wide as the top 20%.

    Unexploitable Play And SAGE

    Did you know that when you get heads-up it is possible to play in a style which is Mathematically

    Unexploitable, this means whatever your opponents do they will not be able to take advantage of

    you, if you hold 60% of the chips heads-up and play an unexploitable style then you will win 60%

    of the time, period. Once thing we should note is that the best players actually deviate a lot from

    an unexploitable style in order to exploit the tendencies of their opponents and win more than

    their fair share.

    What we are talking about is known as Nash equilibrium, I believe that the best way for a new

    player to take advantage of this is to learn a simple point-counting system called SAGE. This takes

    into account the size of the blinds, stacks and your cards and gives you clear push all-in / call / fold

    advice it is simple enough to be memorized too.

    Here is an adaptation of an article I originally posted over at SNG Planet on how to use SAGE. I

    strongly advise that you learn it!! When you are heads-up at the end of a SNG Tournament with

    just one prize on offer the SAGE poker system can be used to ensure that your play is

    mathematically un-exploitable. The system itself is very simple it involves assigning power

    rankings to hands and comparing them with a table showing your optimal push / fold ranges.

    SAGE works best with less than 15 Big Blind stacks; with more than this you have some room to

    play a little poker.

    Before we get into the math and discuss whether using SAGE would be a good option a quick note

    on copyright. This is 2005 Lee Jones and James Kittock. Lee Jones is former Pokerstars card-

    room manager and author of the best selling book Winning Low Limit Holdem.

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    While this article is part of a course on SNGs, it can also be used for high blind play in normal

    Satellite tournaments or larger multi-table tournaments. SAGE works with a single prize, when you

    are heads up at the end of a SNG you are guaranteed 2nd prize as a minimum. You can thus think

    of SAGE as being for the difference between 2nd and 1st (usually an additional 20% of the prize

    pool). Adding a 3rd player would add complexity to this simple system we point readers to our

    ICM articles for more information on this.

    Introducing The 'Power Index' Score

    The SAGE systems benefit is simplicity. There are 2 key factors, both of which are very easy to

    work out then a simple chart for deciding on your action. The keys factors are PI which stands

    for the Power Index of your current cards and R which is the ratio of the smallest stack to the big

    blind. For each R there are then numbers given for the SB to push all in and the BB to call based on PI.

    Working out PI is done like this: Each card is given a power number based on its rank. Ace= 15 /

    King = 13 / Queen = 12 / Jack = 11 and the others at face value. To get the PI of your hand take the

    highest cards power number, double it then add the number of the smaller card. For example

    Queen-Eight would be (12*2)+8 = 30.

    For suited cards you add 2 points to the total and for pairs you add 22 points. So the highest PI is for Ace-Ace (15*2) + (15+22) = 67 and the lowest PI is for 3-2 off-suit (3*2) +2 = 8.

    So, based on the value of R here is a list of what PI you can push and call with.

    R Push from SB Call From BB

    7 PI 26 PI 30

    6 PI 25 PI 29

    5 PI 24 PI 28

    4 PI 23 PI 26

    3 PI 22 PI 24

    2 PI 21 PI 17

    1 PI 17 ANY*

    * One of you is all-in at this point in the chart.

    Those who want an even more simple strategy to get them started with heads-up play with less

    than 10 times the big blind can simply call with the top 50% of the range of hands their opponents

    are pushing all-in with, and push all-in with just under double the range they believe their

    opponent will call with. Though you will need to be capable of adapting to very tight or crazy loose

    opponents! In Part #4 of this course I will show you how to move from an unexploitable heads-up

    game to one that can actively exploit the tendencies of your opponents.

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    Chapter #12 Summing It Up

    Key Take Away Points And Tasks For The Next 7 Days!

    You can be earning $16 per hour with SNG tournaments in 30 days, with the right approach, right

    attitude and the information in this course.

    Here is a quick summary of what we have gone through so far. I have tried to summarize the key

    points into single short-statements. My advice is to go though your own games and see how these

    points can relate to you, with these as your foundation we can move on to the more advanced

    parts of the course soon!

    In addition to the strategy adjustments I hope you have added 1 more table, switched to turbo-

    speed tournaments and found some easily beatable games (along with a new bonus!).

    Key Points:

    - Chips you lose are worth more than chips you win in a SNG tournament. This is due to the payout structure, and has an effect on your strategy at every stage of the game.

    - We do not play to win or play to cash, instead we play to have a greater average stake in the prize pool each time we make a decision.

    - Your opponents will make huge errors at the bubble. Simply by playing to get to the bubble, then playing a solid mathematically correct strategy, you can make a nice profit in SNG Poker.

    - One of the biggest mistakes you will see is opponents who over-value hands such as ace-jack and unpaired picture cards during the early stages. Take advantage of these players with a tight

    and aggressive early stage strategy.

    - Position at the table is extremely important, as is your position in relation to particularly active or aggressive opponents. Learn to fold reasonably good hands when out of position and loosen

    your raising requirements when you are in position after the flop.

    - During the middle stages you should very rarely call raises, instead you re-raise or fold. If you have a chance to open a pot by raising yourself this is even better.

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    - At the bubble chips you win will often only be worth half as much in terms of average winnings as chips you lose. Instead of asking whether your hand is better than that of your opponent as

    whether your prize pool equity risked is adequately compensated by your potential gain.

    - When heads-up at the end of the tournament, employing a simple system such as SAGE will make your play unexploitable, ensuring you get your fair share (or more!) of 1st places!

    One of the most significant aspects of profitable poker is finding the soft games. If you did not

    check out Titan Poker then make sure you do so now. You will find the SNG tournaments far more

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