From the first hand to the final table: this is how a WSOP is played according to a coach – CodigoPoker

From the first hand to the final table: this is how a WSOP is played according to a coach - CodigoPoker
From the first hand to the final table: this is how a WSOP is played according to a coach

The WSOP does not forgive mistakes. Every year in Las Vegas

United States
, thousands of players arrive dreaming of a bracelet, but very few truly understand how a tournament changes at each stage. For this reason, poker coach and author Alex Fitzgerald
United States
decided to share a complete roadmap to navigate a World Series event, from the early levels to the decisive moments.

“Most players do not adjust their strategy according to the stage of the tournament,” explained Fitzgerald, who emphasized that one of the first key factors is to define whether you are willing to make a re-entry. According to the coach, entering with a single bullet while others are prepared to shoot multiple times creates an immediate disadvantage in terms of pressure and aggressiveness.

The American also stressed the importance of building a big stack early. In tournaments with very top-heavy structures, where the biggest prizes are concentrated at the top, Fitzgerald recommends taking more risks to accumulate chips. “If you have 70 blinds and others have 20 or 30, every move you make threatens their tournament life,” he explained.

The approach changes radically when the re-entry period ends. Then, the goal becomes to attack medium stacks, especially those players looking to survive to the payouts. Fitzgerald believes many competitors with 20 or 40 blinds “do not know how to react” to big 3-bets or aggressive check-raises.

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Multiway

Alexander Fitzgerald Has Just Over Three Million Dollars In Online Poker And Nearly One Million In Live Tournaments.

One of the most interesting concepts comes at the bubble. The coach sums up that stage with a phrase: “shove light, call tight.” That is, push more hands and call much tighter. According to Fitzgerald, players overvalue getting into minimum cashes and end up folding extremely exploitable situations.

After bursting the bubble, the expert warns about another classic phenomenon: short stacks desperate to double up. “Everyone feels like they got a free ticket,” he noted, recommending great caution before opening marginal hands.

Finally, when the tournament enters deep phases, Fitzgerald believes pressure becomes the best weapon again. “Many just want to say they made the final table,” he commented. And there, precisely, is where the big stacks build titles.

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Source: Alex Fitzgerald on Poker.org

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