Freeroll Texas Holdem Poker Tournaments
Posted : admin On 7/31/2022Freerolls are poker tournaments that don’t cost anything to
enter but provide an opportunity to win real money for the top
finishers. Freeroll Texas holdem tournaments are set up and run
just like most multi table tournaments with a structure and
prize pool, with the only difference being players don’t pay an
entry fee.
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Each online poker room that offers freeroll tournaments has
different criteria for who qualifies to enter. Some tournaments
may be open to all players, while others may only be open to new
players, or players who’ve played a set number of hands in a set
time period.
If you’ve never played a real money hand at an online poker
room a freeroll tournament is a great way to get your feet wet.
It provides a chance to win a little bit of real money while you
learn how the software works and practice your tournament
strategy.
Should you play in every freeroll tournament you qualify to
play in?
The answer may surprise you. You can learn more in the
section about opportunity cost below.
You’ll also learn more about Texas holdem freeroll tournament
strategy and how these types of tournaments are structured.
Structure
The structure for most freerolls is similar to what you’d
find in a tournament where you paid a normal entry fee. Often
the blinds accelerate faster than normal tournaments, but not
always.
To determine the number of players who finish in the money
the software uses the same structure used for real money
tournaments. Then the total prize pool is divided up according
to the same structure with the top finisher winning the most
money.
Here’s an example:
A freeroll tournament has a total prize pool of $100 and an
entry limit of 1,000 participants. The top 100 finishers win
real money. Here’s a sample pay out structure.
- $10
- $5
- $2.50
- $2
- $1.50
- $1
- $.75
- $.70
- $.65
- $.60
- $.55
- $.50
- $.50
- $.50
- $.50
- $.50
- $.50
- $.50
- $.50
- $.50
- $.40
- $.40
- ——
- $.05
Even if you get into the money, unless you reach the final
table you’ll only win pennies. This is true in most freeroll
poker tournaments, and even the final table doesn’t provide a
great deal of money.
Another type of structure involves the size of your starting
stack, the size of the blinds, and how fast the blinds go up.
Most freeroll tournaments have blind structures that
accelerate fairly quickly. This helps you understand how quickly
the blinds will become a problem for players who don’t double up
early and helps you understand how wild the early play may be.
Poor players take extra gambles when they feel the pressure
of raising blinds.
Of course every player needs to pick a good hand and make a
play to double up if the blinds get close to wiping them out,
but most players start panicking too early.
When should you start panicking?
Different players have different recommendations, but as a
general rule if the blinds will wipe out your stack in the next
three rounds or less you need to start looking for a staring
hand you can move all in with.
Unless you have a monster hand you need to be the aggressor.
This means you need to be the player making the all in bet, not
the one calling an all in bet.
When you move all in you may win the blinds uncontested if
everyone folds. When you call an all in bet the only way you can
win the hand is by showing down the best hand.
Here’s a list of starting hands you should consider pushing
all in with in this situation. It’s roughly listed from high to
low, but when the blinds are eating your stack quickly you can’t
afford to wait so any hand on the list will do.
- A A
- K K
- Q Q
- A K suited
- A K
- A Q suited
- A Q
- J J
- 10 10
- A J suited
- 9 9
- 8 8
- 7 7
- A J
- A 10 suited
- 6 6
- 5 5
- 4 4
- 3 3
- 2 2
- Any suited ace
- A 10
- A 9
- Two suited face cards
- Any other ace
One simple way to avoid panicking is to understand how
quickly you can go from a short stack to an average one. You
usually only need to double up a couple times to reach a level
where you’re out of immediate danger and if you double up three
or four times you’re usually approaching the average chip stack.
If you’re down to your last $500 and double up twice you’re
suddenly at $2,000. Two more double ups but you at $8,000. See
how close you are to going from being knocked out by the blinds
to a level where you can tighten up again and concentrate on
finding good spots to play as a favorite?
Using Freerolls to Build Your Bankroll
A popular concept is building your bankroll at an online
poker room by playing in freeroll tournaments.
The theory is you play in freerolls until you win enough to
play at the micro limit tables and continue moving up in levels
as you win more money.
It sounds like a great way to get started with no money while
gaining experience and improving your poker game at the same
time.
While this may be true, it also takes a great deal of time
playing freerolls and micro limit games. This doesn’t mean you
shouldn’t do it, but you need to make sure you’re willing to
invest hundreds of hours to earn a bankroll instead to finding
another way to fund your account.
The professional poker player Chris “Jesus” Ferguson
supposedly used this method at one time to build a bankroll and
at the time it got a great deal of press in the poker community.
Strategy
Many beginning players assume proper Texas holdem freeroll
strategy is the same as you use in regular buy in tournaments.
As you advance in levels and get closer to the money in a
freeroll this is true, but most of the time the early rounds are
different. This isn’t a good or bad thing, it’s simply something
you need to be aware of and adjust for to improve your long term
chances.
In the early rounds of most Texas holdem freeroll tournaments
you’ll find players trying to build a large chip stack as
quickly as possible or bust out. Since it didn’t cost anything
to enter most players either want to double up a couple times to
give them a chance to get to the money or get knocked out early
so they don’t waste much time playing and get knocked out before
the money.
This isn’t a bad strategy, but it’s one the best players
learn to take advantage of.
Here’s an overview of a strategy that gives you the best
chance to win a tournament while using the poor play of your
early round opponents to succeed.
The first thing you should do is determine how many chips the
average stack will have when you get to the money. This is
fairly easy to do. Multiply the number of entrants times the
beginning chip stack for each player, then divide by the number
of places that get paid.
A tournament with 500 entrants, a starting stack size of
$1,000, and 50 players getting paid has an average stack size of
$10,000 when you reach the money.
Of course you only need one chip to reach the money, but by
knowing the average stack size you can gauge your chances of
reaching the money at any time during the tournament.
If you find yourself with $15,000 or $20,000 as you’re
nearing the bubble you know you can sit back and only play your
top hands while the lower stacks fight for survival. But you
also know if you have $4,000 or $5,000 and 200 players are still
in the tournament you’ll probably need to double up in order to
have the best chance to make the money.
Many players track how many times they need to double up to
get into the money. In the example above when you double up once
you go from $1,000 to $2,000. A second double up goes to $4,000
and a third goes to $8,000.
This means if you can win enough small pots to stay
relatively even you need to double up three or four times to
have an average stack size to get into the money.
Don’t get in a hurry early in a freeroll tournament.
While you want to bust out early if you’re going to lose
anyway, you need to play to the best of your ability and give
yourself the best chance to win every time you play.
This means you need to avoid making stupid plays. It’s not
strange to see players pushing all in with small and medium
pairs, any suited ace, and suited connectors early in these
tournaments.
The good news is if you simply wait for your best hands you
can usually find at least one player with a worse hand willing
to risk their entire stack.
Even if you aren’t able to gain much ground while many of
your opponents are doubling up you should have plenty of time to
build your stack.
Remain patient and look for opportunities to double up as a
big favorite in a hand until you reach a point where the blinds
are coming close to wiping out your stack.
As you advance in the tournament your strategy should revert
back to normal. If you know much about Texas holdem tournament
strategy though you’ll notice that playing the way described
above isn’t much different than in normal buy in contests.
The main difference is weeding out the crazy plays early in
the tournament and surviving the maniacs trying to bust or
double up on many early hands.
Opportunity Cost
If you don’t have a bankroll and are trying to get one
started by playing freerolls you might not consider your
opportunity cost, but if you’re currently a winning poker player
you need to consider how much playing in a freeroll costs you.
It probably seems strange to think playing a tournament where
you can win free money without paying an entry fee could cost
you, but it can.
Of course you don’t know how well you’ll finish in a
tournament until you play, but there’s an easy way to determine
the expected value from a freeroll. Simply divide the total
prize pool by the number of entrants.
If a freeroll has a total prize pool of $250 and 1,000
entrants the expected value for each player is 25 cents. This
means that every player on average will win 25 cents.
Of course around 90% will finish out of the money and the
remaining players will split the money. But you can’t accurately
predict finishing in the money all of the time. Even if you’re a
great player you’ll get knocked out before reaching the money
many times.
Even if you count on reaching the money every time your
expected value only goes up to $2.50 in the above example if 100
players get paid.
This brings the discussion to the point of opportunity cost.
An opportunity cost is how much you miss out on somewhere
else by doing something. In this case you can’t earn your normal
win rate playing in a ring game or real money tournament because
you’re participating in the freeroll.
Even if you’re able to play more than one table / tournament
at a time, eventually you reach a limit where you can’t play
another table.
You need to know your average win rate so you can determine
your opportunity cost and whether or not it’s a good idea to
play in a freeroll.
The only way you can know your average win rate is
by tracking all of your play. If you aren’t tracking your play
now you need to start doing so immediately.
Large poker tournaments can take hours to complete and even
smaller ones can often take a couple hours or more. This means
even when you finish in the money on a consistent basis your
hourly return will be small.
If it takes five hours to win an average of $2.50, your
return is 50 cents per hour.
This means that if you’re currently a winning poker player it
won’t be profitable from an opportunity cost standpoint to play
in freerolls unless they offer a large possible return. This is
rarely the case.
Even if you don’t have a bankroll how is the freeroll playing
in comparison to how much you could earn in the same time doing
a regular job or picking up a side project for a few hours?
Freeroll Poker Tournaments Online
Most people make at least $8 an hour before taxes at a
regular job, offering $6 or more after taxes. Continuing with
the example above, you make more than twice your expected value
working a single hour at a minimum wage job than finishing in
the money every time you play.
But what if you’re so good that you’re convinced you’ll win
the tournament? First place will probably pay $20 or $25 and
take at least five hours to play. So the best case scenario is
somewhere around $5 an hour.
You’d still be better of working a minimum wage job for five
hours.
Does all of this mean you shouldn’t play in freeroll
tournaments?
How big does the prize pool need to be to make it worthwhile
to play?
Only you can answer these questions, but if you use the tools
provided in this section you should be able to find the best
answers for your level of play and profitability.
The bottom line for successful poker players is how much
money they can make. Winning poker players are always striving
to find an extra edge and improve their bottom line. This means
that if they can make more money per hour in game A than in game
B they’ll only play in game A. Use this same mentality when
deciding if playing a freeroll is the best use of your playing
time.
One reason many players start building their bankroll using
freerolls is because it can be difficult to make deposits in
some parts of the world. If you don’t have a credit card or
other easy way to make a deposit a freeroll might be the best
answer.
Summary
Texas holdem freeroll tournaments seem great on the surface,
but they aren’t always the best use of your time. If you want to
see if you have the time, patience, and skill to start with
nothing and build a bankroll at an online poker room then
freeroll tournaments are the place you have to start. Just make
sure you don’t give up more than you stand to gain.
Poker in Texas
Special Events in Texas
Live Poker Rooms in Texas
- 101 Poker Club (Katy, TX)
- 52 Social (Houston, TX)
- Abby J Card House (San Antonio, TX)
- Champions Social (Houston, TX)
- Club Montmartre (Paris, Paris)
- Empire Poker Club (Houston, TX)
- Freerolls Poker Club - Katy (Katy, TX)
- Hung Cuong Card House (San Antonio, TX)
- Imperial Club Paris (Paris, Paris)
- Kickapoo Lucky Eagle Casino (Eagle Pass, TX)
- KoJack's Poker Club (Midland, TX)
- Lions Poker Palace (Houston, TX)
- Mint Poker (Houston, TX)
- Paris Club Elysées (Paris, Paris)
- Prime Social Poker Club (Houston, TX)
- Prime Time Social (Corpus Christi, TX)
- Rounders Card Club (San Antonio, TX)
- Rounders Poker Room (Spring, TX)
- SA Card House (San Antonio, TX)
- San Antonio Poker Palace (San Antonio, TX)
- Shuffle 512 (Austin, TX)
- SoHo Poker Club (Houston, TX)
- Spades Poker House (Webster, TX)
- Stacks Social Club (Lubbock, TX)
- Texas Card House Dallas (Dallas, TX)
- Texas Card House North Houston (Spring, TX)
- Texas Card House Rio Grande Valley (Edinburg, TX)
- The House Club Poker Room & Lounge (Edinburg, TX)
- The Lodge Poker Club (Round Rock, TX)
- The Royal Card House of San Antonio (San Antonio, TX)
Texas Poker Information
Home of the iconic “Godfather of Poker,” Doyle Brunson, Texas has been a pivotal state in the evolution of poker. In the mid-twentieth century, the state had a huge network of underground poker games played by fearless gamblers such as “Texas Dolly” himself (Brunson has had many nicknames through the years). Thankfully, the poker action is much safer and properly regulated nowadays. That is not to say that the games are any less thrilling, with the Texas poker scene now revolving around the Kickapoo Lucky Eagle Casino in Eagle Pass. Operated on a Native American Indian Reservation, this sizable poker room offers bi-weekly tournaments, plus a good spread of no-limit hold’em, limit hold’em and seven-card stud cash games. Currently, residents of Texas do not have access to the online poker and have to keep their skills sharp on the non-virtual felts.