By
participating in a 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. Players, whether in
the hand or not, may not discuss the
hands until the action is complete.
Players are obligated to protect the
other players in the tournament at all
times. Discussing cards discarded or
hand possibilities is not allowed. A
penalty may be given for discussion of
hands during the 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. 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.
4. 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.
5. 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.
6. A
no-show or absent player is always dealt
a hand. That player’s stack will post
chips for blinds and antes.
7. In
all tournament games using a dealer
button, the starting position of the
button is determined by the players
drawing for the high card.
8.
Limits and blinds are raised at
regularly scheduled intervals.
9. 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.)
10. 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.
A player may not be eliminated from the
event by the chip-change process. If a
player has no chips after the race has
been held, he will be given a chip of
the higher denomination before anyone
else is awarded a chip. 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.
11. A
player must be present at the table to
stop the action by calling “time.”
12. A
player must be at the table by the time
all players have their complete starting
hands in order to have a live hand for
that deal. (The dealer has been
instructed to kill the hands of all
absent players immediately after dealing
each player a starting hand.)
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. A
change of seat is not allowed after play
starts, except as assigned by the
director.
15. In
button games, if a player is needed to
move from a table to balance tables, the
player due for the big blind will be
automatically selected to move, and will
be given the earliest seat due for the
big blind if more than one seat is open.
16. New
players are dealt in immediately and
take over the obligations of that
position, including the small blind or
button position.
17. 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.
18. In
all events, there is a redraw for
seating when the final table is reached.
19. 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. 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.
20. 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 is left in his stack. A
player who posts a short blind and wins
does not need to make up the blind.
21. All
players must leave their seat
immediately after being eliminated from
an event.
22.
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 in a multihanded pot may not show
any cards during a deal. Heads-up, a
player may not show any cards unless the
event has only two remaining players, or
is winner-take-all. If a player
deliberately shows a card, the player
may be penalized (but his hand will not
be ruled dead). Verbally stating one’s
hand during the play may be penalized.
23. The
limit on raises is also applied to
heads-up situations (except the last two
players in a tournament are exempted
from a limitation on raises).
24. At
pot-limit and no-limit play, the player
must either use a verbal statement
giving the amount of the raise or put
chips into the pot in a single motion.
Otherwise, it is a string bet.
25.
Non-tournament chips are not allowed on
the table.
26.
Higher-denomination chips must be placed
where they are easily visible to all
other players at the table.
27. All
tournament chips must remain visible on
the table throughout the event. Chips
taken off the table will be removed from
the event, and a player doing this may
be disqualified.
28.
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.
29. The
decks are changed only when the
tournament director instructs the
change, unless a card is damaged.
30. The
dealer button remains in position until
the appropriate blinds are taken.
Players must post all blinds every
round. Because of this, last action may
be given to the same player for two
consecutive hands by the use of a “dead
button.”
31. In
heads-up play with two blinds, the small
blind is on the button.
32. All
hands will be turned faceup whenever a
player is all-in and betting action is
complete.
33. If
multiple players go broke on the same
hand, the player starting the hand with
the larger amount of chips finishes in
the higher place for prize money and any
other award. Players eliminated on the
same deal who start their final hand
with an equal amount of chips receive
equal prize money, with the best hand on
that deal receiving any non-divisible
award.
34.
Management is not required to rule on
any private deals, side bets, or
redistribution of the prize pool among
finalists.
35.
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
does not include one or more active
competitors is improper by definition.
36. 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.
37.
Management retains the right to cancel
any event, or alter it in a manner fair
to the players.