A Sample Poker Hand Of Omaha Part4
Andy isn’t thrilled with his hand, but there is now $780 in the pot, and he doesn’t have the problem Chuck had?needing to worry that he might have to invest still more money to find out if his hand is the winner. So Andy calls (he calls $60 to try to win $780).
Bob’s ace-high flush wins the pot, a surprise ending to most Omaha players who hold a flush on the turn and then see the board pair on the river. Bob rakes in the $840 pot and breathes a sigh of relief. Chuck silently curses his “bad luck” in having failed to make his straight flush but simultaneously congratulates himself for saving $60 on the end with his losing hand. Andy reminds himself for the thirty-seventh time this month about the danger of drawing to non-nut flushes in limit Omaha, and the dealer slides the button over to Andy, who will get to act last on the next hand.
You’ve now had a brief introduction to how and when cards get dealt in Omaha, and you have a sense of how a hand proceeds. The much more difficult part?why you should check, bet, call, raise, or fold at each juncture?will be addressed in Chapter 9. Poker Play.
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