First, here's the definition of immediate
service (from my blog post of September 20, 2015):
One of my favorite poker commentators is Nick Wealthall. He provides
commentary for online tournaments on PokerStars. One phrase I really
like which he uses quite often is "immediate service"; it refers to
hitting a straight or flush draw as soon as possible, in other words on
the turn.
With that in mind, preemptive immediate service is immediate service which comes on an even earlier street, i.e. on the flop.
This is an excerpt from my April 25, 2019 post. In the last tournament I played yesterday, I hit the rail very early on. On my final hand, I was dealt pocket queens, and called a preflop bet which put me all in. My opponent turned over A7o (ace seven offsuit), and I was a sizeable favorite to win the pot, with a 71% chance. Unfortunately for me, my opponent received preemptive immediate service on the flop, pairing both his ace and his seven. I was now an underdog, and had only an 8% chance to win. My opponent's two pair held up, and I was gone in a New York minute.
style flavor buy_in entry entries paid place winnings
MTT NLHE 44000 6000 239 63 106 0
MTT NLHE 44000 6000 332 81 41 131000
MTT NLHE 44000 6000 209 54 157 0
delta: $-19,000
2025 balance: $-936,000
2025 blue distance: $936,000
balance: $15,361,303
MTT NLHE ITM pct: 41.26 (1333 of 3231)
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