Free content for your website, newsletters or ezines. Free articles for reprint | Lbry.com
corner Set as Homepage   |   Add to Favourites corner
 
Search for
Need more search features? Go to Advanced Search
 
 
Article Categories
Advertising
Direct Mail, PPC, Word of Mouth
Advice
Affiliate Programs
MLM
Arts
Auto & Trucks
Auto Leasing, Diesel vs. Gasoline Vehicles
Awards
Beauty, Personal Care & Grooming
Business & Finance
Finance, Management, Marketing, Sales
Careers
Communications
Computers & Internet
CD Duplication, Computers FAQs
Copywriting
EBooks
ECommerce
Education
Email
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Child Care
Food & Drink
Cooking & Recipes
Free
Furniture
Office Chairs
Gadgets & Gizmos
Games
Gardening
Gifts
Government
Health
Hair Loss, Headaches, Healthy Eating, Natural Cures
History
Hobbies
Boat Acquisition
Home Business
Home Improvement
Humour
Internet
Blogs, CGI, CSS, DHTML, HTML, Javascript, RSS
Kids and Teens
Law
Marriage
Men's Issues
Metaphysical
Motivational
Music & Movies
Newsletters
Online Business
Organization & Time Management
Parenting
Personal Security & Wellness
Credit Repair, Life Insurance
Pets & Animals
Cats, Dogs
Politics & Government
Press Releases
Psychology
Publishing
Real Estate
Home Mortgage
Recreation & Sports
Fitness, Mountain Biking, Tennis
Reference
Relationships
Religion & Faith
Scams
Science
Weather
Search Engines
Link Popularity, SE Optimization, SE Positioning, SE Tactics, Sitemaps
Self Help
Sexuality
Shopping
Signs & Astrology
Society
Work Life
Technology
Bluetooth, Podcasting
Travel & Adventure
Beach Vacations, Ski Vacations
True Life Stories
Websites
Domain Names, Site Promotion, Web Development, Web Hosting
Weight Loss
Women's Issues
Writing
 
 »  Home  »  Recreation & Sports  »  Poker Tournaments Are For Everyone - Pros And Newbies Alike!
Poker Tournaments Are For Everyone - Pros And Newbies Alike!
By Eric Madsen | Published  11/28/2005 | Recreation & Sports | Unrated
Poker Tournaments Are For Everyone - Pros And Newbies Alike!
Eric Madsen
Eric is an avid blackjack player and is the webmaster for http://www.whynotvegas.com 

View all articles by Eric Madsen


Well, you are not alone! Tournaments are growing bigger all the time.

Before we really get started, let's define "poker tournament." Tournaments are poker competitions where all of the players play at the same time and continue to play until only one player is left. The player that is left is the one to take home all the loot!

Tournaments Are Hot!

Why are tournaments such big events? They

- Are fun to play in
- Have low entry fees
- Offer a large prize pool to be won
- Are an inexpensive way for novice poker players to learn how to play the game
- Provide a place for more experienced players gain experience

Types of Tournaments

While there are many different types of poker games played at casinos and online rooms, tournament play is usually reserved for Texas Hold'em, Omaha, and 7-card Stud because these games have a large following.

Poker tournaments can have as few as 6 players (single table tournaments) to thousands of players for larger events. Large tournaments consist of many tables, each table having 8 to 10 players. The tables are slowly removed from the tourney as players are eliminated, and players are balanced from table to table as needed. (These are known as multi-table tournaments). Finally all but the last table will be removed and these last 8 to 10 players play until only one of them remains.

Tournament Basics
To play in a tournament players have to pay two fees.

1. They have to pay an entry fee to the poker room hosting the tournament to cover the expenses involved. This gives the player an assigned seat and a set quantity of tournament chips with which to play (these chips have no cash value).

2. Players also pay a buy-in fee. The buy-in fee is held and paid out as prizes. The prize payout differs from tournament to tournament but typically it all goes to the few players fortunate enough to make the final table.

The object of a tournament is to win all of the chips. All tournament players start out with the same quantity of chips to play with and all start playing at the same time. Players play until they lose all of their chips and are then removed from the tournament. A tournament continues non-stop, often for several hours, until only one person remains.

As playing progresses the stakes rise, making it more and more difficult for players with short stacks to remain in the game.

Players are awarded prize money based on their finishing position in the tournament. The top finishers earn the most money with the 1st place winner usually receiving about 30% of the total prize money, the 2nd place winner about 20% and so on.

The number of winners and the size of the payouts depend upon the rules for the tournament being played and the number of people playing.

Re-buys and Add-ons

Some poker tournaments allow players a re-buy option. This re-buy option allows players to purchase more chips if they run out of them at the start of the tournament. A player can purchase the same number of chips that he/she started the tournament with. Some poker tournaments allow unlimited re-buys during the first hour of play, while other tournaments allow only a single re-buy.

An add-on option is similar to the re-buy option. Add-ons differ in that they are usually only offered once at the end of the re-buy period and can be purchased regardless of how many chips you have. As the name implies, these chips are added on to your stack of chips.

All proceeds from re-buys and add-ons are added to the prize pool less house fees (if applicable).

Betting

Tournament betting is structured with the betting limit increasing regularly. The changes in betting limits occur differently depending on the tournament; some are timed while some increase the limit after a set number of rounds are played.

Balancing and Collapsing Tables

Larger tournaments start out with more than one table, each having 8 to 10 players. As the tournament progresses players will be eliminated and the number of players at each table will not remain the same. For the tournament to be fair, the number of players at each table should be the same, so the organizers move players from table to table in an attempt to keep all the tables equally populated.

Balancing is the practice of moving players from full tables to less full tables when the difference is 3 or more players.

Collapsing tables is the practice of removing tables once there are enough empty spaces among the rest of the tables to do so. Thus with 10 player tables when there are 10 empty spaces the players from one table are moved to empty spaces and that table is taken out of play.

And there you have it - the basics of tourney poker. New to the game or an old pro, getting into a tournament can be a great experience. Why not give it a try!
Note: Republishing this article is permitted in the following conditions:
 
author by-lines are kept intact and unchanged. Hyperlinks and/or URLs provided by authors must remain active.
 
 
a link to the Lbry.com site is required in the use of articles either as print or an active url on the articles web page as below:
[ Article from Lbry.com ]
How would you rate the quality of this article?
1 2 3 4 5
Poor Excellent
Tell us why you rated this way (optional):

Send to Author Post on Site

 
Comments


Article Options
Most popular articles

»

Dementia: Will I Get It?

By N/A | Published 12/31/1969 | Health | Rating:
In the article Dementia: Just What Is It, we have learned about a frightening term, Dementia, and just what it is or, rather, how it manifests itself in the human condition. I gave 5 examples from my personal knowledge, including myself.
 
  Read the full article   Print this article  
Report An Error    

»

Triumphing Over Tantrums

By N/A | Published 12/31/1969 | Family | Rating:
Patty Hone
 
  Read the full article   Print this article  
Report An Error    

»

Checked Into Nirvana. Where Is Joy?

By N/A | Published 12/31/1969 | Metaphysical | Rating:
Eckhart Tolle lived upto his twenty ninth year in a state of almost continual anxiety interspersed with periods of suicidal depression. Then he woke up one night with a feeling of absolute dread. The silence of the night, the vague outlines of the furniture in the dark room, the distant noise of a passing train - everything felt so alien, so hostile, and so utterly meaningless that it created in him a deep loathing of the world. "I cannot live with myself any longer." This was the thought that kept repeating itself in his mind. Suddenly he became aware that if he could not live with himself, there had to be two - he and the "self" he could not live with. He was stunned by the realization. He became enveloped by powerful feelings.
 
  Read the full article   Print this article  
Report An Error    

»

Celebrex Law Suits Looking Like a Strong Case

By N/A | Published 12/31/1969 | Law | Rating:
There is no data as yet that indicates how many former patients of Pfizer's anti-inflammatory and painkilling drug are filing Celebrex law suits, but given the magnitude of the company's perceived crime it is likely that there will be very many. And even a quick perusal of the alleged behaviour of the company regarding this drug seems to point to Celebrex law suits being something of a fait accompli.
 
  Read the full article   Print this article  
Report An Error    
No popular articles found.
 
Become an Author
 
Are you a writer and you want your work published?
 
 
Do you have a website and need free publicity?
 
 
Sign up for free as a Lbry.com author and have your articles published in no time!
Click here to become an author
 
Advertising
 
 
 
 
Lbry.com Sponsors