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Pot Odds
By: ITAY ROKNI

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You must know some of the simple mathematical calculations before deciding whether to call a bet or fold. When you need an extra card to get your hand, one of the most important abilities is to figure out the pot odds. In other words, how much is the pot offering, compared to the amount you have to pay.

Some basic terms first:

Outs – the number of cards left in the deck that will improve your hand. For example: if you hold As 5s and the flop is Ks, 4s, 3h, it seems that you have 13 outs - 9 spades that will make you a flush and another 4 two’s. But pay careful attention not to count the 2 of spades twice. Therefore you have only 12 outs.

Odds – calculating the odds of getting one of the outs is quite simple. You divide the number of outs by the number of cards you haven’t seen yet. If we take the previous example, the odds of getting the winning hand in the turn is 12/47 = 25% because there are 47 cards you haven’t seen yet. Phil Gordon developed a simple rule of “four and two”: he calculated the approximate odds of getting the winning card on the turn, by multiplying the number of outs by two. And for getting it by the river, he multiplied the number of outs by four. This is not the exact percentage, but it’s almost always good enough because rarely do you need the specific calculation.

Pot odds – the final calculation you’ll need is checking if the pot is big enough for you to call with a hand that needs to be improved on in order to win. If the pot is $100 and your opponent bets $50 after the turn, this means you have to pay $50 in order to get the chance of winning $150. This means you get 3 to 1 odds on your call. If you win one time for every 3 times you lose, you’re even. So you must win at least one out of every 4 games in order to make the call the right decision. The final calculation you’ll need to make is to see if your odds of getting the winning card are above 25%. You should call if they are higher than 25%, and fold if lower.

Example: you hold 87 and the board is AQ65. You have 8 outs to make a straight. If the pot is $300 and a player bets $100, you have to bet $100 to win $400, and your pot odds are 20%. Since you have 8 outs, by the rule of 2, you have approximately 16% of making your straight. Therefore you are not getting enough pot odds and should fold.

Learn more Texas Holdem tips at MyHoldemTips.com.



Black Jack


Blackjack was first played in France, in the early 1700s, where it was called Vingt-et-un, the French equivalent for Twenty and One. The name blackjack was a result of a special bet where a player was rewarded for picking the ace of spades and the jack of spades as the first two cards.From then to the 20th century, the game spread across the globe. In 1956, a person named Roger Baldwin wrote a paper on the optimum strategy in blackjack, which was published in the journal of the American S. . .




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