Title: omaha help Post by: dan on November 10, 2005, 05:05:56 PM i'm not that good at omaha but ive been making small profits on the smaller tables and i feel im getting better. i play pot limit, normally 0.15/0.25, 0.25/0.50 and 0.50/1 tables. last night i decided that i would give the 1/2 table a go as i had some success at the lower limits. i sat down with $200 and after a few hands got upto about $215. id been at the table about 10 mins when i was dealt this hand in the bb Ac Ah Kh Qc. there were 5 of us at the table i cant remember excatly how the betting went but i bet pot when it was my turn which was a $24 bet and i got heads up with the small blind. the flop was Js 5d 2s the sb bets at this i think about $14 cant remember the exact amount but reraised him all in. he had about $165 at the start of the hand. he shows Ks 8s 7h 6d and the turn was Qs giving him the flush.
what i want to know is did i play this badly? was his call preflop bad? was is all in call bad? was it all my own fault? be harsh i can take it thanks in advance Title: Re: omaha help Post by: ACE2M on November 10, 2005, 05:10:27 PM Don't raise pre flop in omaha cash games is my advice, it's a bit weak but it works for me. The guy is poor to call for all his chips but pushing all in with a bare pair of aces and no draws is bit risky to.
Title: Re: omaha help Post by: thetank on November 10, 2005, 06:14:56 PM Oh no no no, you need to raise pre-flop with your good hands at omaha. Else win a heap of small/medium pots with your monster hands instead of hugey wugey ones.
A smaller raise to build the pot when you hold a premium starting hand is preferabble. The problem with raising the max pre-flop is it can be counter productive. First and foremost it gives your hand away when you have aces, none but the most fishy will pay you off when you hit top set. Plus it can get you pot commited before the flop. Gamblers play pre-flop omaha, if you want to make money in this game, it's there on the later streets. I would have raised to about 10 pre-flop. A pretty starting hand doesn't mean squat after the flop. You know that already though. When you don't connect and he bets into you lay it down. Yeah he might have squat coz you're heads up but so do you really. Quit risking your stak on an overpair. His play was bad sure calling all-in with a K high flush draw, but yours wasn't great either. Sure this time it looks like the right play as he was on a non-nut draw and you set him in, most times someone bet into obvious aces, however, they hold at least 2 pair, perhaps a set. You certainly don't want it all in the middle with 2 outs. Raising 10 instead of the max you'd probably get more callers, but that's fine, lay it down on the 3 out of 4 flops that don't hit you but on the one where you flop the monster, someone will pay off nicely. Many may disagree with the above, but this is how thetank plays the game. Title: Re: omaha help Post by: Ironside on November 10, 2005, 06:18:38 PM my tip for cash game move to PLO8 and keep pots small untill you are locked for a profit on river and rerereraise those holdem players or those that drew for 1/2 the pot when you are locked to win 3/4 atleast
eitehr that or when you have a low lock and a huge draw for a high build the pot up and take home the jelly babies Title: Re: omaha help Post by: snoopy1239 on November 10, 2005, 06:25:07 PM The problem is that some players only raise preflop in omaha when they have pcoket aces. Therefore opponents can flatcall and then trapcheck if they hit two pair or somehting. It makes you very easy to read and can cost you some big pots. Avoid this by raising with some marginal hands and running cards like 5s 6d 7s 8d. You need to mix it up a bit.
His call is very dubious. He holds a pretty weak starting hand. What was even worse was the way he played the flop. All he really had was a flush draw, and even then it was only king high. He shouldn't be drawing to a potentially losing hand. I don't think there was much wrong with your play. Personally, I never raise with aces preflop. I only reraise in an effort to get heads up in a big pot. Title: Re: omaha help Post by: snoopy1239 on November 10, 2005, 06:28:24 PM A smaller raise to build the pot when you hold a premium starting hand is preferabble. I'm not too keen on this unless you have running cards. If you make a small bet with aces then you're pretty much relying on spiking an ace on the flop and then hoping it doesn't get outdrawn. You might as well flatcall. Maybe this would be feasibile if your hand was double suited. Title: Re: omaha help Post by: thetank on November 10, 2005, 06:31:33 PM His hand was AAKQ double suited.
If that's not worth a pot sweetning raise pre-flop what is? Title: Re: omaha help Post by: dan on November 10, 2005, 06:34:26 PM thanks for your points guys. i realise that all i had post flop was a bare pair of aces but i still felt they were good as i didnt really put him on 2 pair on that flop and there wasnt a straight or flush on the flop. yes he could have a ready made set but i didnt think he would call such a raise with jj 22 or 55 in his hand so i felt the only hands he could have were drawing ones. i thought that i might be able to take the pot down there and then thats why i put in such a raise.
the guy had already reloaded in the 10 mins i was at the table, this made me think he might not want to call to lose all his money again. thanks for your replies so far they are very helpful, as i said im still trying to learn and improve. Title: Re: omaha help Post by: Tractor on November 10, 2005, 06:41:08 PM I pretty much agree with Tank here, I quite often take on the players i know raise pot only with aces.
And Sloopy is also right in saying raise with other running/double suited connectors. The only time i may re-raise with Aces if its been raised and there is a lot of callers then i may re-raise in the hope of getting heads up. In Omaha Pocket Aces are a dog to two or more players (afaik).. I actually think you were a biy unlucky and he was very lucky drawing to non nut flushes and runs only cause a lot of pain n the long term. Title: Re: omaha help Post by: redsimon on November 10, 2005, 07:06:15 PM pokenum -o ac ah kh qc - - ks 8 s 7 h 6 d -- j s 5 d 2 s
Omaha Hi: 820 enumerated boards containing J s 2 s 5 d cards win %win lose %lose tie %tie EV A c Q c A h K h 423 51.59 397 48.41 0 0.00 0.516 K s 8 s 6 d 7 h 397 48.41 423 51.59 0 0.00 0.484 Unlucky as if he put you on AAxx you could easily had Ace Spades suit which would crush him: Omaha Hi: 820 enumerated boards containing J s 2 s 5 d cards win %win lose %lose tie %tie EV A s Q s A h K h 734 89.51 86 10.49 0 0.00 0.895 K s 8 s 6 d 7 h 86 10.49 734 89.51 0 0.00 0.105 Title: Re: omaha help Post by: dik9 on November 10, 2005, 08:25:54 PM In my opinion, your starting hand is well worth a pot raise or build, and it was a bad call by the other player, however, once the flop had come over, you had no part of it. A pot call and a bet post flop would indicate a set had been made therefore a pass would be the wisest play regardless of whether you think you are in front.
Yes his preflop call was bad Yes his post flop raise was bad Yes his all in call was bad He got Lucky But as you do not know his hand You have to take it that he had some interest in the flop and a pair is very weak at PLO Title: Re: omaha help Post by: Sunday8pm on November 11, 2005, 06:32:09 AM very unlucky Dan,
and after reading peoples points about the hand i think i have to agree with snoopy.....i like to raise pot in omaha with a wide vareity of hands. It disguises your hand very naturally i think and in the long term people will pay you off with crap when you have the nuts. AAKQ = monster 5678 = money cards you will generally only win big pots with weaker hands i think. you raise pot pre flop with AAKQ and it comes A83....not many people are gona pay you off......whereas you raise with 5678 flop comes 345..........ive seen people pay whole stacks off with garbage like 54 and A2. your weaker cards are your money cards in my opinion. hope this helps mate....see you in the carribean ;) Title: Re: omaha help Post by: dan on November 11, 2005, 04:30:13 PM Quote from: Sunday8pm link=topic=3571.msg83492#msg83492 date=1131690729 hope this helps mate....see you in the carribean ![]() [/quote are you going mate Title: Re: omaha help Post by: snoopy1239 on November 11, 2005, 06:53:37 PM very unlucky Dan, and after reading peoples points about the hand i think i have to agree with snoopy.....i like to raise pot in omaha with a wide vareity of hands. It disguises your hand very naturally i think and in the long term people will pay you off with crap when you have the nuts. AAKQ = monster 5678 = money cards you will generally only win big pots with weaker hands i think. you raise pot pre flop with AAKQ and it comes A83....not many people are gona pay you off......whereas you raise with 5678 flop comes 345..........ive seen people pay whole stacks off with garbage like 54 and A2. your weaker cards are your money cards in my opinion. hope this helps mate....see you in the carribean ;) I agree. You should look at which hands are gonna pay you off. Go for the moster pots. Pocket aces is still a mighty hand though. I just think you should get as much money into the pot heads up as you can. If not, then be aware that folk are going to trapcheck you. It's like in high low, if someone raises, you know they probably have A2. Title: Re: omaha help Post by: M3boy on November 12, 2005, 01:38:23 AM The problem is that some players only raise preflop in omaha when they have pcoket aces. Therefore opponents can flatcall and then trapcheck if they hit two pair or somehting. It makes you very easy to read and can cost you some big pots. Avoid this by raising with some marginal hands and running cards like 5s 6d 7s 8d. You need to mix it up a bit. His call is very dubious. He holds a pretty weak starting hand. What was even worse was the way he played the flop. All he really had was a flush draw, and even then it was only king high. He shouldn't be drawing to a potentially losing hand. I don't think there was much wrong with your play. Personally, I never raise with aces preflop. I only reraise in an effort to get heads up in a big pot. Just to re-iterate snoopy's comments above. Below is a snapshot of an omaha $2 $4 P/L (please forgive the multi tableing, its the bottom one) , have a look in the chat box. My hand was 6 7 8 9 raised preflop, got re raised and called in 2 spots so i called as well. Other guys had AA rag rag , AA rag rag, KK rag rag [attachment deleted by admin] Title: Re: omaha help Post by: snoopy1239 on November 12, 2005, 01:40:04 AM I can't read it. What does it say?
Title: Re: omaha help Post by: M3boy on November 12, 2005, 01:41:32 AM now changed the pic :blonde:
Title: Re: omaha help Post by: dik9 on November 12, 2005, 01:43:05 AM Luurrrrvly
Title: Re: omaha help Post by: snoopy1239 on November 12, 2005, 01:44:14 AM nice pot.
well played. Guess they weren't too chuffed. Aces really aren't as good as people think. I don't think 6789 is very far behind at all. You were probably favourite against those hands. Title: Re: omaha help Post by: M3boy on November 12, 2005, 01:45:59 AM I was certainly favorite after a flop 5 8 9 rainbow :D
Title: Re: omaha help Post by: dan on November 12, 2005, 11:57:33 AM I was certainly favorite after a flop 5 8 9 rainbow :D this is where the hand i played differs i think. i would definetly not of reraised him all in on that board. the hand i played had no flush or staight on the board only draws which is why i made the move, i was basically trying to defend my hand from the draw by giving him bad odds which he didnt seem to care about. i know aces are not really that good in omaha but i felt they were good on that flop Title: Re: omaha help Post by: dan on November 13, 2005, 08:17:23 PM another question if you dont mind guys and this one has a slightly better ending lol.
it is pot limit again but lower level 0.15/0.25 im holding Qc Qd 8c 9s. i have limped in and there has been a pot size raise after me. its another 1.15 for me to call and 2 others have called it so i think im getting good enough odds to call with this hand. the flop is Ac Qs 5c. i check the flop and the original raiser makes another pot sized bet this time it is for 5.90 or something like that and i reraise him. i know he raised preflop and flowed that up on the flop but he only bet the flop after everyone else had checked, i was worried about trip aces but that was the only hand that was beating me plus i had the flush draw. anyway the money went in on the flop and he was holding Ah Ad x x. i hit my flush and he was a little rude to me :D :D. my question is should i of reraised the flop like i did? should i of put all my money in? ( it was a very low limit table and it would not of affected my bankroll if i had lost) or should i of folded, as if he did have trip aces i was only drawing to the 2nd nut flush?? thoughts and advice please :)up Title: Re: omaha help Post by: dik9 on November 13, 2005, 08:33:04 PM I would have taken him for AAxx so with the flush I doubt whether he had AAK(c)x(c) so I would put your flush draw ahead. Would I have called or re raised post flop? Probably I would have folded as he has top trips drawing to full house or top quads. However if calling, you know he is ahead but there is value in pot, wait to see what action on turn or river. If a club that doesnt pair the board comes up you are laughing.
Title: Re: omaha help Post by: dan on November 13, 2005, 08:46:34 PM like you dik i thought my flush draw was probably good.
so you think that the call preflop was ok but i should of just flatcalled on the flop Title: Re: omaha help Post by: dik9 on November 13, 2005, 08:53:02 PM so you think that the call preflop was ok but i should of just flatcalled on the flop It is a brave re raise, you should now know by the raise that he is representing AAA you are still drawing, what do you do if he re raises you back? You still know what he is holding. Title: Re: omaha help Post by: dan on November 13, 2005, 08:57:22 PM it was on the flop the money went in ,dik,
Title: Re: omaha help Post by: dik9 on November 13, 2005, 09:08:29 PM another question if you dont mind guys and this one has a slightly better ending lol. it is pot limit again but lower level 0.15/0.25 im holding Qc Qd 8c 9s. i have limped in and there has been a pot size raise after me. its another 1.15 for me to call and 2 others have called it so i think im getting good enough odds to call with this hand. the flop is Ac Qs 5c. i check the flop and the original raiser makes another pot sized bet this time it is for 5.90 or something like that and i reraise him. I know it was on the flop the money went in and you re raised him. I take it you re raised him all in? If you were both holding conisderably more money, then a re-re-raise back would not give you any more information, and now you have to make the decision to call, thats all i meant. Title: Re: omaha help Post by: dan on November 13, 2005, 09:24:23 PM yeah i see what you mean. i did reraise him pretty much all in as i said it was only 0.15/0.25 so the maximum sit down was 25
Title: Re: omaha help Post by: thetank on November 13, 2005, 11:04:30 PM When you think you might be against a bigger set, having wee draws in your hand is a good excuse to put the money in.
Good play Title: Re: omaha help Post by: snoopy1239 on November 13, 2005, 11:12:59 PM I don't think this is a particularly bad move.
Considering that the Ac is on the flop, your flush draw is probably good if he doesn't have that 1 possible holding that has you beat. I think I would have folded this hand preflop. Pocket queens aren't a particularly strong starting hand, and your flush draw isn't the nut draw. Can get you into trouble too often. Title: Re: omaha help Post by: thetank on November 13, 2005, 11:26:24 PM I know the money being played for is irrelevant but I couldn't pass 89QQ single suited for a dollar Snoopy.
Title: Re: omaha help Post by: dik9 on November 13, 2005, 11:27:18 PM Discipline.
Title: Re: omaha help Post by: thetank on November 13, 2005, 11:30:11 PM Actually I'd probably play this hand in that situation whatever the size of the game.
Title: Re: omaha help Post by: ifm on November 14, 2005, 03:16:46 PM I hate getting the money in on the flop, always seem to lose to draws.
I much prefer to call raises on the flop and then decide from there. |