While being the table boss can be an uncomfortable feeling in a cash game, in a tournament it's a wonderful feeling. In a cash game, you don't want to give back your gains, and have to decide when to quit. In a tournament, quitting is not an option, and you want the leverage that having a big stack provides. Another reason you don't feel the same about a big stack in a tournament as you do about one in a cash game is that the chips don't represent what you actually have on the line. What you have on the line in a tournament, at any time, is a constant - your buy in plus your entry fee. What you have on the line in a cash game changes from hand to hand, and actually from moment to moment within a hand. I started out loving cash games, but now I sort of hate them. Luckily for me, it turns out I love tournaments :-)
Last night I was the last one to join a sit and go 8-game, and was also the last one standing at the end. I was the table boss for 48 of the 80 hands, which isn't too shabby.
style flavor buy_in entry players hands place winnings
SNG 8-Game 9000 1000 6 80 1 35100
delta: $25,100
Sit and go 8-game balance: $464,410
balance: $10,069,564
Wednesday, November 25, 2015
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