Is It Better to Play Only Premium Hands in Tournaments With Shallow Stacks?

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lucafalp

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  • #1
I’d like to get some opinions on tournament strategy, especially in the early stages when stacks feel very limited.

Do you think it’s better to enter pots only with premium hands in tournaments because chips are so valuable, or is that approach too tight in the long run?

Sometimes I feel that waiting only for premium hands makes me blind down too much and miss good spots to accumulate chips. On the other hand, getting involved with marginal hands early can put your tournament life at risk very quickly.

How do you usually balance patience and aggression in tournaments? Do you tighten up a lot early on, or do you look for spots to play a wider range?

I’d really appreciate hearing different perspectives. Thanks in advance!
 
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Goggelheimer

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  • #2
lucafalp said:
I’d like to get some opinions on tournament strategy, especially in the early stages when stacks feel very limited.
This is nonsense! In early stages stacks are big.
lucafalp said:
Do you think it’s better to enter pots only with premium hands in tournaments because chips are so valuable, or is that approach too tight in the long run?

Sometimes I feel that waiting only for premium hands makes me blind down too much and miss good spots to accumulate chips. On the other hand, getting involved with marginal hands early can put your tournament life at risk very quickly.
This is also not real you should not only wait. but watch what is going on at your table, then you may find spots where non premium hands work.
lucafalp said:
How do you usually balance patience and aggression in tournaments? Do you tighten up a lot early on, or do you look for spots to play a wider range?

I’d really appreciate hearing different perspectives. Thanks in advance!
All is relative in poker, sometimes balancing is fine, sometimes aggression is fine, sometimes patience is fine.
 
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fundiver199

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  • #3
There are free preflop charts available for different positions and stack sizes on several poker sites. Studying those is a good starting point, if you feel lost. Best of luck :)
 
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BillyR23

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  • #4
Don't wait just for premium hands as nowadays LAG style(loose aggressive) is the best choice - usually between 28-35% VPIP and also a 10-14% 3-bet for optimal aggression... there are other factors to consider, but you should have/create a style that works for you and adjust it as you play paying attention to the stack sizes, the number/style of opponents etc... studying preflop charts and other things helps a lot, but practice is still the best way to get comfortable in different spots and improve your game!
 
flabilim

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  • #5
OI believe that's not a good choice because by the time a premium hand comes up, the big blinds might have already squandered their chips, and even then, the best hand might not. It doesn't mean you'll win the pot.
 
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burba

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It’s true that you start a tournament with fewer chips, and your stack usually grows when you win pots or double up.

However, you also have to take into account that the blinds keep increasing. What really matters is not your absolute chip count, but how your stack compares to the current blind level.

For example, you might start with 100 big blinds, but unless you’re consistently winning pots, your stack in big blinds will shrink as the tournament progresses—even if your total chip count goes up.
 
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Kpaprince

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  • #7
I don’t think playing only premium hands with a shallow stack is the best approach in the long run. It keeps you alive for a bit, but like you said, the blinds start eating you up fast and suddenly you’re forced into bad shove spots.

For me it’s more about position, stack sizes, and fold equity than hand strength alone. With shallow stacks, I’m happy to open or shove a wider range in good spots, especially from late position or when opponents are clearly playing too tight.

Early on I try to avoid marginal spots without fold equity, but I don’t wait forever for monsters either. Controlled aggression usually works better than pure patience.

In short: tighten up early if needed, but don’t become predictable — chips are valuable, but opportunities are too.
 
nelomec

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  • #8
lucafalp said:
I’d like to get some opinions on tournament strategy, especially in the early stages when stacks feel very limited.

Do you think it’s better to enter pots only with premium hands in tournaments because chips are so valuable, or is that approach too tight in the long run?

Sometimes I feel that waiting only for premium hands makes me blind down too much and miss good spots to accumulate chips. On the other hand, getting involved with marginal hands early can put your tournament life at risk very quickly.

How do you usually balance patience and aggression in tournaments? Do you tighten up a lot early on, or do you look for spots to play a wider range?

I’d really appreciate hearing different perspectives. Thanks in advance!

The entire strategy depends on the tournament structure, but generally, medium and high-level tournaments have many hours of play, so a tighter strategy at the beginning will always be more beneficial in the long run. You don't need to play only premium hands; the important thing is knowing the right time to play, against which players, your position at the table, the hand you hold, and how to act on each street, play fewer hands .
 
Mario7

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  • #9
Obviosuly, with shallow stack you will bleed out with antes + blinds while waiting for premium hands.
Start from finding some free preflop charts for shallow stacks and study them.
 
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SOLO22

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  • #10
Hello, the truth is that you have to adapt to the table to observe your rivals, each hand will tell you how. They play, it's not just applying a strategy because if you don't be predictable mix your moves, it's best to reason each hand. Because it is inevitable to make mistakes, the goal is to make as few as possible.
 
kunkgreen

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  • #11
I believe you're referring to tournaments with a low-blind structure, right? Like starting with 10-20 big blinds?

...With such short chips, we'll practically have a push/fold situation, so we generally want premium hands and hands with high cards...

Positions and blind steals are very important, of course!

But basically, yes!

It's better to wait for good hands to shove and steal blinds whenever possible! (if I understood the question correctly)
 
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BrunoFabri01

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  • #12
In short-stack tournaments, I try to play only high-value hands, because any mistake there makes it difficult to recover.
 
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gloria_marga

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  • #13
In my opinion, any hand I connect is good and playable. Playing less premium hands is what sets you apart from their plays and makes it difficult for them to interpret your strategy.
 
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