First off, you have missed the fact that Step 6 is a 2-table/18 seat tournament, not 9 seats!
So onto my comments... Personally I"m not a big fan of these "steps" tournaments... I don"t like the idea that if I get part way through and then find that I am just out of my depth, there is no way out other than losing everything I have worked hard for over perhaps several weeks.
What you are trying to do here is roll-up $xx into $12000 in 2 months, whilst completely disregarding any form bankroll management!!
Ask youself this question... If you tried to do this by playing regular STTs, for example every time you won at one level you step straight up to the next, if you come 2nd or 3rd you continue at the same level and if you don"t cash you go back down a level - at what point would you lose your nerve and decide to bank your profit instead of continuing?
I suspect the answer is long before you get to be in a position to win $12000.
In any Step 6 tournament there are three $12000 winners, that"s $36000. That"s the equivalent of 5143 players starting a Step 1 tournament for $7.50. If every one was the same standard (which they"re not) that equates to a 1713/1 shot... pretty long odds! Didn"t you say you had no chance beating 250"ish because "I"m not very good"?
If you just want a great poker experience, I think (no, I know) there are much more realsitic, and cheaper, ways to achieve it. If you are any good at all at STTs, why not set a target of winning $5000 by next June, this is easily achievable playing $10 - $20 STTs... Book a flight to Vegas and a week at the Gold Coast, and play in a $1500 WSOP event. You will have just as much chance of playing with a few big name pro"s, if you play all day and you"ll feel just as sick if you bust out after just an hour or two! :"(
Trust me, I have experienced both!
Well, that"s my two-penneth... if you choose to pursue the "steps" route I wish luck - send us a postcard from Atlantis!!