Do you ever struggle with short stack decisions?

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Nesehorn156

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  • #1
When I get short stacked in tournaments, I feel like every decision becomes way more important. Sometimes I’m not sure if I should wait for a better spot or just take the first decent hand.

It feels like one mistake can end the whole run.

How do you approach playing with a short stack?
 
belizebum

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  • #2
I love short stack. To me, there are very few decisions to make. Ultimately you are waiting for position and a decent hand to push all in. That's it...everything else fold.
 
Leandro6803

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When you have few chips, the best strategy is to be patient and wait for a good moment to go all in; most of the time you will be called with hands that you are dominating.
 
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burro

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Short stack play used to feel overwhelming, but honestly it's the part of tournament poker I've become most comfortable with over time — and I think that's because the decisions actually become simpler, not harder.

When you're deep-stacked, you have to navigate complex multi-street decisions, balance ranges, think about implied odds, and consider a dozen variables at once. With a short stack, the decision tree narrows significantly. Most of your spots come down to one core question: is this a good spot to shove, or do I wait for a better one?

The key shift for me was learning to think in terms of fold equity combined with hand equity. When I'm below 15 big blinds, I'm not trying to outplay anyone post-flop — I'm looking for spots where my shove puts maximum pressure on the table and gives me a realistic chance of picking up the blinds and antes uncontested, or getting called in a situation where I'm either ahead or flipping.

Position matters a lot too. Shoving from the button or cutoff with 12BB and a decent hand is very different from shoving under the gun with the same stack. Understanding those dynamics made short stack play feel much more systematic and less stressful.

The hardest part, in my experience, isn't the math — it's the patience. Waiting for the right spot when you're short and the blinds are eating your stack takes discipline. The temptation to shove any two cards out of desperation is real, and that's where most players leak chips.
 
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  • #5
The pressure can lead to hesitation or worse, missed opportunities.

Strong short stack play comes down to discipline and understanding ranges. When your stack gets low, it’s not about playing pretty poker it’s about making the most profitable move, even if that means going all-in more often than you’d like.

Trust your ranges
Embrace the aggression
Don’t let fear dictate your decisions

Master the short stack, and you’ll turn tough spots into winning ones.
 
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  • #6
No. I like to do all-ins faster than not.
 
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fundiver199

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  • #7
Practice push-fold spots and ICM with a program like ICMizer.
 
WladiYoga

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  • #8
Nesehorn156 said:
When I get short stacked in tournaments, I feel like every decision becomes way more important. Sometimes I’m not sure if I should wait for a better spot or just take the first decent hand.

It feels like one mistake can end the whole run.

How do you approach playing with a short stack?
Play fearless. Observe the behaviour of your opponents. If you question yourself with good hands, you won't be able to put the needed aggression onto the table. Play a little bit carufully, but risk shoving suited connectors. You need to build your stack again. Otherwise you'll be out regardless. IF you build a little bit up again, play better hands from there. Don't let nobody bully you.
 
pep12343

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  • #9
I think this is the easiest time to play. Obviously I don't want to be in that situation, but when everything is already lost, there's nothing left to lose. So, decisions are easier and actually safer.
 
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tuitui

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  • #10
I kind of struggle, but it is more of a mental struggle trying to figure out how I got myself there. They play itself is rather simple, but psychologically too thrilling. Mistake I try not to make is wait too long.
 
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