Examples of using Stack size in English and their translations into Greek
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Indicates the stack size in proportion to the big blind.
How to adjust your play according to stack size.
Concentrate on stack sizes when in the money.
Finishing order is based on comparing stack sizes.
As mentioned above, stack size is vital when there are three players left in a Sit& Go tournament.
One key factor in this hand is the stack size of the big blind.
However, if the stack size is less than the default minimum buy-in, the Obligation will be discarded.
Take note of how many players remain, and their stack size compared to the blinds.
Your chip stack size will give you control of the table, when it is substantially more than the other players have.
Next week, I will discuss the biggest mistake players tend to make in tournaments with that stack size.
The Obligation created represents a stack size that the player may be required to buy in for in the future.
At the same time that they were supported andaesthetic,you can use the small stack size for execution of design ideas.
Specifies the stack size in proportion to the big blind then say 150x means having a stack equivalent to 150 big blind.
These factors include,among others- blind structure, stack size, opponent profiles, and envisioning your worst case scenario.
If the stack size is greater than the default maximum buy-in for that table type, the default maximum buy-in(in big blinds) will be stored instead.
When you pass the limit, your minimum buy-in will be replaced by the stack size you had previously left a table with.
When an Obligation is used, the stack size assigned to that Obligation will be presented as the minimum buy-in as opposed to the default minimum buy-in for that table type.
The lobby will show the current limit level for the tournament,information about players' stack sizes, and the breakdown of the prize pool.
When an Obligation is used at future tables, this stack size(measured in big blinds) will replace the default minimum buy-in at a new table normally requiring the same big blind buy-in range.
In the coming weeks,I will tell you what I think is the biggest mistake I see small stakes tournament players making with various stack sizes and how I take advantage of those mistakes.
There are also some other factors like your stack size and the stack size of the players behind you that are important.
This is the reason why this feature is titled‘Buy-in Obligations',as leaving a table with winnings creates an Obligation to re-join future table with that same stack size.
While all eight of a player's Obligations are in use, the largest stack size(in big blinds) of the in-use Obligations will be used as the minimum buy-in for any new tables opened of that type.
The starting hands are grouped in different categories, andthere is advice for every possible situation taking into account stack sizes, position and the actions of other players.
For example bet365 offers all of its players the chance to check the current average stack size during a tournament whilst they're playing, and players should try and make sure that they at least stay within touching distance of that amount.
The starting hands are grouped in different categories(these are explained later on), andthere is advice for every possible situation taking into account stack sizes, position and the actions of other players.
You ll learn how to tailor your selection of starting hands to your stack size, how to recognize the increasing deception value of supposedly weaker hands as the stack sizes increase, and how to use the concept of pot commitment to your advantage as the size of the pot grows.
If a player sits at a table with a big blind size of less than 1/3 of the highest value,the Obligation will not update with a lower stack size value, even if a player loses money while seated at that table.
However, unlike the other volumes, which focused on tournament fundamentals and how to alter your game at each level of a tournament, Little focuses on specific hand examples he played in a $1,000 World Series of Poker event, a $2,500 WSOP event andthe $25,000 World Poker Tour Championship- each designed to show you how Little plays various stack sizes in different structured tournaments.