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Dealer, Leave the Bets in Front of the Players |
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Written by Greg Mascio
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It's
a familiar refrain at the Omaha/8 table, when the betting is capped on
the turn in a multi-way pot. In theory, this request is about saving
time -- it's easier to divide the chips at the end of the hand when
they're not in one monster pile at the center of the table. But the
subtext is clear. "Give us the damn river already!"
It's often just one pot like this one that makes the difference at the
end of the day between winner and loser, genius and live one. And
playing these hands correctly goes a long way toward determining one's
success in this sometimes volatile game.
Other than catching gin on the river, however, how does one go about
getting out as cheaply as possible when beat, and maximizing profit
when holding the nuts?
The first and most important thing, especially in Omaha/8, is knowing
where you're at on every street. Many players will simply not throw a
hand away even when they're sure they're beat in a big pot. They call
it down just to find out what they were right about four bets ago.
A typical hand where you can get into trouble is flopping two pair with
a hand like A-3-6-K. The flop comes A-3-J, with a flush draw you don't
hold. You're first to act and fire a bet into the pot. It then gets
raised, called, called and three-bet by the time it gets back to you.
You very well could be drawing extremely thin at this point. If an Ace
comes, it's likely you hold the second-best full house. If you catch a
King on the turn, your two pair might be beat by the 10-Q-K wrap who
called all those bets on the flop. If a 6 comes, you're still likely
beat by Aces and Jacks, and all the made lows and flush draws are
Freerolling on you.
Still, most unseasoned players call in this spot nearly 100 percent of
the time. Why? One reason is because average-to-below-average players
rarely ever make a bet and subsequently fold on the same street. I
almost never see this. To be a winning player, especially in O/8, you
have to be able to lay down your losers.
On the other hand, say that same A-3-J flop comes down and you hold
A-2-4-5 with the nut flush draw. Yes, you have a monster. You're first
to act and bet, and again it gets raised and three bet. This time you
cap it. The turn comes a deuce. Now it's time to make extra bets.
With all the action that came behind you on the flop, you can be almost
certain someone will bet if you check. You check, which puts the
thought into the other player's mind that you may have been
counterfeited, or at best are holding a set. After a bet and a few
calls, now you are in position to make that check raise -- and you
might not even lose some of the people drawing dead! Excuse No. 1 why a
losing player calls when drawing dead? "The pot is too big."
If you had bet out on the turn when the deuce hit after capping it on
the flop, any above-average player would most likely put you on your
hand and you won't get any action. That same player may still call your
check-raise, perhaps hoping to fill up on the end, but at least he will
have to pay to get there.
There are a lot of large multi-way pots in O/8. It's easy to be tempted
by the amount of money in the center of the table. But, like in most
forms of poker, a hand that is usually strong heads-up or three handed
simply doesn't carry the same weight in a multi-way pot against
multiple draws. And in O/8, you might have to fend off five or six
players, each holding four cards in their hand. It's just flat tough to
make two pair on the flop hold up in that case.
Omaha-Eight-or-Better is all about holding the nuts or at least drawing
to them. Its one reason why A-2 with two blanks -- like say 8-10 -- is
such a dangerous hand. It gets played pre-flop almost every time, yet
it rarely gets more than half the pot, and costs too much when the low
that doesn't get there.
Hands that work together for both high and low, like A-2-Q-K or A-2-4-K
(I'll take mine double suited, thanks) are key. "Nut-Nut" is a
beautiful thing, especially at the end of a monster pot where the
dealer has to do nothing with all those chips in front of everybody but
push them to you.
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