Hi Andy,
What is a "kill" and how
does it work?
A good question,
This often confuses
players who have played a lot of home game poker
who are first venturing into casinos. Some
cardrooms run some games with either a full
"kill" or a "half kill." A kill means that the
stakes are doubled, a half kill means increased
50%, for the next hand, under certain
circumstances. In split pot games like Omaha
eight-or-better, the kill usually occurs if
someone scoops and entire pot that is bigger
than a certain minimum size. In one-way games,
the kill usually occurs if the same player wins
two consecutive pots.
Whenever a
situation where a kill is called for occurs, the
lucky winner of the scooped or two consecutive
pots must post a special big blind at the new
level. Because posting a blind isn't an
advantage (you're forced to place money into a
pot before you see your cards), the kill is, in
effect, a kind of "tax" on a player who has just
won a lot of money. This "tax" means that if
you're in one of those games where the kill
occurs when you win two pots in a row, you have
a slightly smaller incentive to enter a hand
right after you've won a nice pot. This doesn't
mean you shouldn't play your big hands, of
course, but if you have a marginal holding, this
creates one more reason to toss it into the
muck.
To show you how a kill might work,
suppose you are playing 10-20 Omaha
eight-or-better with a half kill. You scoop a
pot that is large enough to qualify for kill
status, and you are in middle position. The game
becomes a 15-30 game for the next hand (and that
hand only, unless you or someone else pulls in
another big scooper), and the dealer would give
you a special kill button, upon which you would
post a $15 big blind, even though two other
players in the pot also post their regularly
scheduled blinds. Normally these "regularly
scheduled" blinds are the regular size (in this
case $5 and $10), although I have heard of
casinos that also increase the regular blind
size for this hand.
What happens next is
also not universal. In the majority of casinos,
the under the gun player, if he wants to call,
puts $15 into the pot. Let's suppose he does
that, and everyone else folds until the action
comes to you. In most casinos, the action passes
by you--temporarily--until everyone else has had
their turn, and then you have the option either
to check (you're already in the pot for $15) or
to put in a raise. In some other casinos, that
option occurs when the betting action naturally
comes around to your position.
If all of
this sounds a bit confusing, it is, mostly
because the casino rules about how kill betting
works vary from casino to casino. The important
things for you to remember are:
1) If
you're in a game where winning two consecutive
pots creates the kill, you have a slightly
decreased incentive to enter the second pot,
because you'd rather not have to post the kill
blind.
2) For some reason, more players
tend to enter the pot on the higher-stakes hand,
probably because they figure this is a chance to
get even (me, if I want to play higher stakes, I
usually just sit down in a higher stakes game).
If you observe this to be the case in your game,
you should probably favor hands that play better
against multiple opponents.
3) Because
the sequence of when you get to bet or raise
isn't universal, if you sit down in a kill game,
it's a good idea to ask how the kill-poster
bets. Don't worry if this makes you "seem like a
rookie." It might cause other players to
underestimate your overall skill, and more
importantly, you won't be putting money into a
pot when you're not quite sure where a raise
might be coming from.
Again, all of this
sounds complex in the abstract, but after you've
been playing in the kill game for 15 minutes, it
will all seem very simple.
Andy
Glazer
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