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This a pretty difficult question to answer. I think the best answer is...it depends.
I have thought a lot more about when to raise from the BB, and am still having trouble figuring out when it is most profitable.
Back to your question, defending the blinds is a very important factor in tournament play.
I think the best answer is to look at all your information you have before you make that situation with a less than steller hand.
1. The position the raiser is in, and how he plays. If he is UTG and raised, obviously defending the blind in that situation is trouble.
2. Your table image, if you are a rock when it is bubble time, most good players will take advantage of your blinds.
3. Your stack size is always important. If you are low, defending the blinds becomes tougher, but more people take advantage of you.
4. The hand you have. If you defend the blinds, pre-flop rerasing is not a bad option. It will help gain information from the orginal better - whether his hand is solid or not.
5. How many people are in the pot before it's on you.
6. Are there blind increases soon.
7. How tight is the small blind.
8. And, your position stinks after the flop.
- Plus some others I'm sure I forgot -
All those things should be taken into consideration when defending the blinds. Defending the blinds is a key aspect in winning a tournament, but you must do it effectively, or you will be running up against a made hand when you hit a part of the flop.
So, although this didn't help much it should give you pieces of the puzzle - but figuring out how they fit in each diffent "puzzle" you encounter is the difficult part.
sorry I couldn't help you out anymore.
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