By
participating in any tournament, you agree to
abide by the rules and behave in a courteous manner.
A violator may be verbally warned, suspended from
play for a specified length of time, or disqualified
from the tournament. Chips from a disqualified
participant will be removed from play.
1.
Whenever possible, all rules are the same as those
that apply to live games.
2.
Initial seating is determined by random draw or
assignment. (For a one-table satellite event,
cards to determine seating may be left faceup
so the earlier entrants can pick their seat, since
the button is assigned randomly.)
3.
A change of seat is not allowed after play starts,
except as assigned by the director.
4.
The appropriate starting amount of chips will
be placed on the table for each paid entrant at
the beginning of the event, whether the person
is present or not. Absent players will be dealt
in, and all chips necessary for antes and blinds
will be put into the pot.
5.
If a paid entrant is absent at the start
of an event, at some point an effort will be made
to locate and contact the player. If the player
requests the chips be left in place until arrival,
the request will be honored. If the player is
unable to be contacted, the chips may be removed
from play at the discretion of the director anytime
after a new betting level is begun or a half-hour
has elapsed, whichever occurs first.
6.
A starting stack of chips may be placed in a seat
to accommodate late entrants (so all antes and
blinds have been appropriately paid). An unsold
seat will have such a stack removed at a time
left to the discretion of the director.
7. Limits and blinds
are raised at regularly scheduled intervals.
8.
If there is a signal designating the end of a
betting level, the new limits apply on the next
deal. (A deal begins with the first riffle of
the shuffle.)
9.
The lowest denomination of chip in play will be
removed from the table when it is no longer needed
in the blind or ante structure. All lower-denomination
chips that are of sufficient quantity for a new
chip will be changed up directly. The method for
removal of odd chips is to deal one card to a
player for each odd chip possessed. Cards are
dealt clockwise starting with the 1-seat, with
each player receiving all cards before any cards
are dealt to the next player. The player with
the highest card by suit gets enough odd chips
to exchange for one new chip, the second-highest
card gets to exchange for the next chip, and so
forth, until all the lower-denomination chips
are exchanged. If an odd number of lower-denomination
chips are left after this process, the player
with the highest card remaining will receive a
new chip if he has half or more of the quantity
of lower-denomination chips needed, otherwise
nothing.
10.
An absent player is always dealt a hand, and will
be put up for blinds, antes, and the forced bet
if low.
11.
A player must be present at the table to stop
the action by calling �time.�
12.
If you are not present when it becomes your turn
to act, your hand is dead. This includes situations
in which a live blind is not present to act, since
an absent player cannot exercise the option to
raise.
13.
As players are eliminated, tables are broken in
a pre-set order, with players from the broken
tables assigned to empty seats at other tables.
14.
The number of players at each table will be kept
reasonably balanced by the transfer of a player
as needed. With more than six tables, table size
will be kept within two players. With six tables
or less, table size will be kept within one player.
15.
In all events, there is a redraw for seating when
the field is reduced to three tables, two tables,
and one table. (Redrawing at three tables is not
mandatory in small tournaments with only four
or five starting tables.)
16.
A player who declares all in and loses the pot,
then discovers that one or more chips were hidden,
is not entitled to benefit from this. That player
is eliminated from the tournament if the opponent
had sufficient chips to cover the hidden ones
(A rebuy is okay if allowable by the rules of
that event). If another deal has not yet started,
the director may rule the chips belong to the
opponent who won that pot, if that obviously would
have happened with the chips out in plain view.
If the next deal has started, the discovered chips
are removed from the tournament.
17.
If a player lacks sufficient chips for a blind
or a forced bet, the player is entitled to get
action on whatever amount of money remains. A
player who posts a short blind and wins does not
need to make up the blind.
18.
All players must leave their seat immediately
after being eliminated from an event.
19.
Showing cards from a live hand during the action
injures the rights of other players still competing
in an event, who wish to see contestants eliminated.
A player may not show any cards during a deal
(unless the event has only two remaining players).
If a player deliberately shows a card, that hand
may be ruled dead and the player penalized.
20.
Inappropriate behavior like throwing cards that
go off the table may be punished with a penalty
such as being dealt out for a length of time.
A severe infraction such as abusive or disruptive
behavior may be punished by eviction from the
tournament.
21.
The deck is not changed on request. Decks change
when the dealers change, unless there is a damaged
card.
22.
In all tournament games using a dealer button,
the starting position of the button is determined
by dealing for the high card.
23.
The dealer button remains in position until the
appropriate blinds are taken. Players must post
all blinds every round. Because of this, the button
may stay in front of the same player for two consecutive
hands.
24.
New players are dealt in immediately unless they
sit down in the small blind or button position.
In these two cases, they must wait until the button
passes.
25.
In heads-up play with two blinds, the small blind
is on the button.
26.
At stud, if a downcard on the initial hand is
dealt faceup, a misdeal is called.
27.
If a player announces the intent to rebuy before
cards are dealt, that player is playing behind
and is obligated to make the rebuy.
28.
All hands will be turned faceup whenever a player
is all-in and betting action is complete.
29.
If two (or more) players go broke during the same
hand, the player starting the hand with the larger
amount of money finishes in the higher tournament
place for point and cash awards.
30.
Management is not required to rule on any private
deals, side bets, or redistribution of the prize
pool among finalists.
31.
Private agreements by remaining players in an
event regarding distribution of the prize pool
are not condoned. (However, if such an agreement
is made, the director has the option of ensuring
that it is carried out by paying those amounts.)
Any private agreement that excludes one or more
active competitors is improper by definition.
32.
A tournament event is expected to be played until
completion. A private agreement that removes all
prize money from being at stake in the competition
is unethical.
33.
Management retains the right to cancel any event,
or alter it in a manner fair to the players.
Rules
provided by Bob Ciaffone via ROBERT'S RULES OF
POKER
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