Review of Tournament Poker
- Title:
- Tournament Poker
- Author:
- Tom McEvoy
- Publisher:
- Cardsmith Publishing
- Date:
- 1995
- ISBN:
- 1-884466-05-2
- Pages:
- 340
- Price:
- $39.95
February 8, 2002
The popularity of tournament poker continues to grow. As more and
more people enter poker tournaments, they get tougher to beat. A great
deal has been written about poker tournaments, but surprisingly few books
have been dedicated to the topic, and I'm still waiting to read the definitive
poker tournament book. Will this be the one?
McEvoy begins his book with some general poker tournament strategies.
The author is an experienced tournament player who won the main event
at the World Series of Poker in 1983 and plays as a professional on
the tournament circuit. Most of these strategies will be pretty
obvious to a poker player with even a fair bit of experience, but
they're important, and
anyone who hasn't considered them would be well advised to heed what
McEvoy has to say. No matter how skilled the player, they have to
get more than a little lucky in order to win a poker tournament. One of the
statements the author makes that I really like is that in a tournament
a player should strive to play well
enough to give themselves a chance to get lucky. This is about the
best expression of tournament strategy in a single sentence that I've
heard.
The next 11 chapters covering almost 2/3 of the book are about
strategies for various games played in poker tournaments. For
example, the reader is advised not to play smaller suited connectors
in the early stages of a Limit Hold'em tournament unless the pot is
multi-way. As another example, in late stages of a tournament
McEvoy suggests playing very good draws on 5th street in Razz
aggressively against a mediocre but possibly made hand, like a 9 or
rough 8. Both of these
suggestions are good, but both are also very well known to any
poker player familiar with each game.
Advice on playing each game is divided into considerations for
early, middle, late, and final table portions of the tournament.
The problem is that his advice changes only a little during different
times in the tournament, and only a little from game to game. Thus,
I find that
the book tends to become repetitive. Moreover, the information
that we do receive is really pretty bland stuff. We're told that in
the early parts of a Limit Omaha High tournament, there is very little
blind stealing. If this is a revelation to the reader, then by all
means buy and read this book. This won't be news to anyone who has
played a Limit Omaha High tournament. The information provided on each
game is usually reasonable as far as it goes, but it's necessarily short,
and better information on playing each of these games can be found in other
books. Of course, if a person doesn't have these books, then the strategies
McEvoy presents will usually be better than going into the game completely
cold.
The last chapters of the book include suggestions on how to approach
smaller buy-in tournaments, satellite strategies, and information on what
it's like to be a professional poker tournament player.
Like the rest of the book, there's some interesting information here, but
there will be few revelations to someone who has played a few tournaments
and thought about the game.
If a player is completely new to tournament poker or hasn't thought much
about what they should be doing during various stages of the event, then
much of this book
will be useful to the reader. However, anyone who is well read on poker
in general or has spent any time thinking through tournament strategy
on their own won't find any big revelations in this book. I believe it
is worthwhile for beginners only.
Capsule:
Tournament professional Tom McEvoy's book Tournament Poker
provides some generally good fundamentals on how to approach poker
tournaments that should be of benefit to an introductory level tournament
player. However, most of the information in this book will already
be familiar to most tournament veterans or widely read poker players.
I recommend this book to beginners only.
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