Another good time, cigars, beverages, and cards! 18 players battling for 1st place prize and points to the championship! Action was slow till level 2 brought tons of action! After the break players returned to 150/300 blinds and things really heated up! Action quickly progressed from 3 starting tables to 2 and now down to 1.
Final table action takes off at 350/700…and we’re off!
Another Ben Bomb as the final table begins!Sean still here 2 games after he was leaving for Cali.
Action continues fast and furious till we get to the final 4. But then Leslie loses to quad 4s to Lem who also now takes the high hand. Play now down to 3.
Final 3
After some back and forth Jeff wins a much needed hand with Pocket Aces, however a few hands later the game end in a wild hand!
Jeff flat calls with King King, Terry and Lem are in the blinds, Terry calls from the small 8 6 off and Lem checks his option with K 6 off. Flop comes out 6 3 6. Jeff jams all in with 2 pair, Terry and Lem both call with Trips… Lem is the winner when his his King kicker holds.
Congratulations to all 3 and Leslie and Sean both earn points toward the Championship.
Mastering Early-Stage MTT Play: Play Tight, Stick to Premium Hands, and Exploit Weakness Like a Pro
If you’ve ever busted out of a poker MTT in the first two hours with a speculative suited connector or a marginal ace, you know the pain. The blinds are tiny, the stacks are deep (usually 100+ big blinds), and there are still hundreds of players left. Yet so many amateurs treat the early stages like a cash game and spew chips left and right.
The truth? Playing tight early is one of the highest-EV adjustments you can make in modern MTTs. It’s not “nitty” — it’s disciplined. You’re not there to gamble; you’re there to survive, accumulate, and exploit the recreational players who are dying to give you their chips.
Here’s exactly how to do it — from hand selection to exploitation tactics that print money when everyone else is playing loose.
Why Tight Is Right in the First 2–4 Levels
Stack preservation is king. With 100–200bb effective stacks and tiny blinds (0.5–1bb per orbit), you don’t need to steal blinds to stay alive. One bad flip or cooler can cripple you for the entire tournament.
ICM hasn’t kicked in yet. You’re not fighting for pay jumps — you’re fighting for chip EV. Premium hands realize their equity best against multiple callers and deep stacks.
The field is at its weakest. Recreational players are still in “fun mode.” They limp, call 3-bets with KJo, and pay off top pair with second pair. Your job is to be the shark in the tank.
Tight play early isn’t passive — it’s selective aggression. You play fewer hands, but you play them for maximum value.
The Early-Stage Opening Range: Only the Top ~8–10% of Hands
Forget the 25% “standard” cash-game range. In an MTT with 100+bb stacks and 9-handed tables, your default opening range should look something like this (adjust slightly by position):
Early Position (UTG, UTG+1) AA–TT, AKs–AQs, AKo–AQo, KQs
Middle Position Add: 99–88, AJo, KJs, QJs, JTs
Late Position (Cutoff, Button) Add: 77–66, ATo–A9s, KQo, suited connectors down to 98s (only if you have a solid postflop edge)
Big Blind Defense Call or 3-bet only with the above plus occasional suited broadways and pocket pairs when the price is right.
Pro Tip: If the table is super soft (multiple limpers every orbit), you can widen your late-position range slightly — but never open 22 or 76s from early position just because “it’s cheap.”
How to Play Your Premium Hands for Maximum Value
AA–KK: Raise big, always. 3–4x in early position, 2.5–3x late. If there are limpers, iso-raise huge (5–7x + 1x per limper). You want to isolate the weak players and build the pot immediately.
QQ–JJ & AK: Your bread-and-butter. Raise standard sizing. 3-bet AK every time vs opens (especially from loose openers). With QQ–JJ, mix in flat-calls vs tight opens but 3-bet aggressively vs loose players.
Premium suited aces (AQs–AJs) and KQs: These are your money-makers against weak ranges. Raise, call 3-bets in position, and be ready to stack off on ace-high flops when villain shows weakness.
Pocket pairs 88–TT: Set-mine only if you’re closing the action or getting great implied odds (multiple callers behind). Otherwise, raise and take it down preflop.
Golden Rule: Never limp. Never flat-call raises with these hands unless you’re trapping a maniac (and even then, 3-bet most of the time).
Exploiting Weakness: The Real Money-Maker
This is where tight players separate themselves from the pack. While you’re waiting for premium hands, you’re laser-focused on the table dynamics.
Target these player types early:
The “Fun Guy” — Limps 40% of hands, calls 3-bets with any two broadways, and never folds top pair.
The Sticky Fish — Calls every raise with suited connectors and small pairs, then pays off when he hits second pair.
The Over-Limper — Limps every orbit from every position. These players are printing money for you.
Exploitation Tactics:
Iso-raise relentlessly. Limpers + one raise = your premium hand gets called by junk. A 5–7x iso-raise with AK or QQ often wins the pot preflop or gets heads-up against a dominated hand.
3-bet light vs weak openers. If a loose early-position player opens 25%+, 3-bet AK, AQ, and even some bluffs (but mostly value). They fold too much and call too wide when they do continue.
Barrel weakness. On A-high or K-high boards, these players will check-fold second pair or gutshots way too often. One or two continuation bets usually take it down.
Value bet thin. They call down with Kx on an A-high board. Bet your top pair for three streets.
Example Hand (real-life spot I’ve seen 100 times):
Hero (Button, 150bb): AKo Villain (MP, recreational, limped 6 of last 8 orbits): Limps
Hero raises 5x. Villain calls. Flop: A♠7♥3♦ Villain checks. Hero bets 60% pot. Villain calls. Turn: 9♣ Villain checks. Hero bets 70% pot. Villain calls. River: 2♠ Villain checks. Hero bets 80% pot and gets called by K7o.
That’s +150bb because you played tight early and waited for the right spot to isolate weakness.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Opening too wide early just because “the blinds are small” — variance will destroy you.
Getting married to suited connectors preflop — save them for middle/late stages when stacks are shallower.
Failing to adjust when the table tightens up — if everyone is suddenly playing solid, widen slightly in position.
Slow-playing monsters — build the pot early against weak players who over-call.
Final Thoughts: Tight Early = Stack Monster Later
Playing tight early in an MTT isn’t boring — it’s strategic patience. You’re not folding to win; you’re folding to set up the biggest stack at your table when the blinds start to matter and the weak players start making massive mistakes.
Stick to the top hands, iso-raise the limpers, 3-bet the weak openers, and value bet relentlessly. Do this for the first 2–4 levels and you’ll find yourself at the final table with a massive stack far more often than the gamblers who “just wanted to see a flop.”
Now go crush those early stages.
What’s your biggest leak early in MTTs? Drop it in the comments — I read every one.
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February 17th was the 3rd annual Championship Tournament at our local home game! The top 10 scoring players throughout the year are invited to play in the event! So even making it to the Championship should be considered a victory in itself. The pot is accumulated throughout out the year from the monthly tournaments so this year’s prize was Awesome and there’s also the coveted Championship Bracelet. The tournament host Mel and the club owners Scott and Leslie do an incredible job managing this throughout the year! Thank you to all of them for hosting such a great series of tournaments!
The tournament brings out the best gamesmanship, the best bluffs and steals, the best play and of course the best banter! This year was no exception as there was definitely so wild moves, and wilder calls!
This year on top of the prize pool each player added an additional buy in and every player put up a 5 buck bounty on themselves, making the action even more aggressive!
The final 5 Lem, Scotty “doesn’t know “ Greg ( by all accounts is one of the most improved) myself, and the chip bully ( sorry chip leader) “5 buck Chuck” ( new nickname cuz he was collecting bounties)
Final 2 heads up myself and Chick decided to chop, could’ve played a bit longer but honestly Chuck’s play deserved to win, consistent, aggressive play I enjoyed being a part of it! Great Job Chuck now everyone can go after you for the rest of the year!!!
I’ve managed to be selected for all 3 Championships so far however have only been able to get to 2nd in 2 of the 3. For me I enjoy the game, I enjoy the people, but hopefully next year I can win the freaking bracelet!
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