pass4all

Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
pass4all

Poker

DAILY TOURNAMENTS!!! CHECK THE PASSWORDS SECTION!!! A LOT OF FREE PASSWORDS DAILY!!!GOOD LUCK AT THE TABLES!!!

    Texas Hold'em Tournament Rules

    edutzu
    edutzu
    Admin


    Posts : 197
    Join date : 2010-03-17
    Age : 36
    Location : Targoviste

    Texas Hold'em Tournament Rules Empty Texas Hold'em Tournament Rules

    Post by edutzu Wed Mar 31, 2010 1:10 pm

    Every single day thousands and thousands of poker players try their luck against their friends, family and strangers in both online and live tournaments.

    The idea behind tournament poker is that every player puts up a buy-in and gets tournament chips. Play goes on as normal with the blinds going up in regular pre-determined intervals and until one player is left with all the chips. Where you are eliminated is where you finish in the tournament.

    In a tournament 10% to 20% of the field is paid out with most of the money reserved for the top spots. Because you can win so much more than your initial buy in big tournaments attract both pros and amateurs trying to make a big score.

    Each room's rules vary slightly so it's always a good idea to brush up before the tournament starts. Here are some of the most standard rules for playing a poker tournament.

    1.Entrance Fees - All entrance fees most be paid before play begins. Generally the house takes a 5%-10% fee for providing the tables and dealers and administering the game. This is true both live and online. For example in a $200+$20 tournament, $200 goes to the prize pool and $20 would go to the house.
    2.Seat Assignment - Your seat will randomly be assigned to you. You will usually be given a card with your table and seat number on it. That is your seat until a tournament director tells you otherwise. Unlike in cash games there are no seat changes.
    3.Starting Stacks - When you arrive at the table your starting stack will be at your spot.
    • Tournament chips
    have no cash value, and you cannot cash out at any point during the tournament.
    • It's always a good idea
    to double check your chips against the posted starting stack to make sure you have the correct amount of chips.
    • The total amount of your st
    arting stack varies from tournament to tournament.
    4.Blind Levels - The way tournaments differ from cash games is that the blinds increase at regular intervals.
    • This is to force play
    and get the action going. You can usually get a sheet from a floor person that tells you the schedule of blind increases and what the blinds will be.
    • Online you can find
    this information in the tournament lobby.
    • It's a good idea to
    get familiar with the blind structure before playing. If the blinds increase and your dealer has already cut the cards, the blinds will increase on the next hand.
    5.The Deal - The deal proceeds exactly as it does in a cash game. The two players to the left of the button are the small blind and the big blind. After each hand the button moves one seat to the left. The button is determined in the first hand completely randomly.
    6.Absent Players - All players must be dealt into the hand and their blinds/antes forced into the pot whether they are at the table or not. If the player is not present by the time his second card is dealt, his hand will be ruled dead.
    7.Breaking Tables - As players are eliminated the tournament director will start breaking tables in a pre-determined order. If your table breaks, you will be assigned randomly to an empty seat at one of the remaining tables.
    8.All-in Bets - A player who declares himself all in plays for all of the chips in front of him. If the other player has more he is only entitled to an amount equal to his own stack. The same goes for an all-in player that has less than his required blind. He is only entitled to what he put in.
    9.All-in confrontations - When two players are all in and the action is completed, both hands must be exposed face up before the rest of the board is run.
    10.Calling the Clock - A player can request the pit boss to force a player to choose an action in a set amount of time (typically 90 seconds). If the player fails to act in that time, his or her hand is folded. Only a player seated at the table at the time the current hand was dealt can call the clock.
    11.Multiple Busts - If two players go broke on the same hand the player with the greater amount of chips at the start of the hand finishes in the higher position.
    12.Showing Cards - Intentionally exposing a card is illegal in tournament play and a hand can be ruled dead as well as a time penalty issued.
    13.Inappropriate play - Inappropriate play such as swearing and or throwing cards is punishable by a penalty.
    14.Coloring up - The lowest chip denomination in play will be removed from the table when it is no longer needed in the blind or ante structure.

    All lower-denomination chips that are of sufficient quantity for a new chip will be changed up directly. I.E if you have five $25 chips you would get one $100 chip and have one odd chip. The method for removal of odd chips is as follows:
    • Starting at seat 1, (if there is a professional dealer, this will be the player directly to the dealer's left) deal this player one card face up for every odd chip they hold. Continue clockwise around the table until all players have one card for each of their odd chips.

    • Add the $ amount of all odd chips together. You want to replace the odd chips with chips of the next lowest denomination. For example: If there are eight $25 chips, you want to replace them with two $100 chips.

    • If there are an odd number of odd chips on the table: If the amount of the final chips is equal to half, or more, of the value of the next lowest chip, these chips are replaced by the higher value chip. If the total value is less than half, the odd chips are simply removed from the table.

    • Give the first replaced chip to the player with the highest value card by rank. With every player only eligible to receive one chip, continue giving a chip to the player with the highest value card until all chips are gone. This is known as a chip race.

    15.Hand-for-hand play - As play approaches the bubble (when the money starts)play may go hand for hand. This means that all tables will deal a hand and the next hand will not be dealt until all tables have completed their hand.
    16.Heads up - When two players are left you have reached heads up play. In this scenario the small blind is the button and acts first before the flop but last on all ensuing streets.

    It is up to you to know the basic poker rules when playing in a tournament. Not properly educating yourself can cause you to unknowingly commit an infraction and get penalized or even disqualified.

      Current date/time is Fri Mar 29, 2024 12:53 pm