Poker Wisdom of the Day � It's a mistake to use experience
alone to determine what a good poker player is. 

Nelayan, here is your Championship Poker Guide
Part 4 - All about Odds - Part 4 of 4

Example #3 "Top two pair"
You get dealt a King of Diamonds and a Nine of Hearts.
The flop is lookin' pretty good for you with a King of
Spades, a Nine of Clubs, and a Four of Clubs. Top two
pair!

Lesson 1: What are my chances of getting a full house on
the turn?

To get a full house, you need another King or Nine to pop
up. There are presumably two of each left in the deck.
So you've got 4 outs. After the flop there's always 47
cards unaccounted for. 4/47 is around .085 or an 8.5%
chance of you getting that boat.

Lesson 2: What are my chances of getting a full house
on the river?

If it didn't happen on the turn, your chances usually
don't change all too much, but let's check. You've still
got 4 outs and now 46 unseen cards left. 4/46 is about
.087 or around an 8.7% chance of hitting it on the river.
A .2% difference. Sorry.

Lesson 3: How about the chances of getting the boat on
the turn OR the river?

Like the previous examples, to figure your chance of
something happening on multiple events, you need to
calculate the chance of it NOT happening first. On
the turn it won't happen 43/47 times. On the river
it won't happen 42/46 times. 43/47 is .915, and 42/46
is .913. Multiply them and get .835, or 83.5% chance
of it not happening. Invert that and you get a 16.5%
of getting at least a full house by the showdown.

Lesson 4: What do you mean by "at least"?

Since we figured the chances to NOT get dealt a full
house, the chances are built in if the turn and river
are two Kings, two Nines, or a King and a Nine. If you
are dealt two cards both of either King or Nine, it'll
be four-of-a-kind and not a King and Nine 33% of the
time. Think of it as being dealt one card then the other.
What are the chances of the first card matching the
second? Whether it's a King or Nine, there will be
only one unaccounted for, but two of the other.
That's 1/3, or 33%.

Lesson 5: Then what are my chances of getting
four-of-a-kind?
This is a little more abstract. I hope I warmed
you up for this with the previous lesson.
It doesn't matter which card we're banking on.
We need to first get a full house on the turn.
According to lesson #1, the chance of that happening
is .085. The chance of getting the same card we got
on the turn is 1/46. There's only one out, and the
usual 46 unseen cards. 1/46 is around .022, or 2.2%.
Multiply the two probabilities (.022 X .085) and get
.002 or one-fifth of a percent. It will be Kings half
of the time and Nines the other half

A lot of info to soak up, right? Yeah, I know. If
you really want to be a master of odds, you need to
see all this in action, over and over. Like
anything else, practice makes perfect.

Take advantage of the FREEPokerDeals.com
exclusive offers, visit:
http://www.freepokerdeals.com/offer2.htm

To your success,

May all your Pots be Monsters!

Dan
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
















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