Quote:
Originally Posted by klem1234
<face palm> There is no "maybe" it is not even close on what hands are a play and what is not. Some you guys are stubbornly making this Omaha forum worse.
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MarkD (or ANYONE), can you do us all a favor since you mentioned looking up the Solver on this one. Can you post a screen shot of Cutoff or Button 3betting filtered to single suited without an ace. Then filter for 3betting singled suited without an ace, pair or ten.
OP, I won't tell you how to play the flop on hands you should have never reached the flop. You would have correctly reached the flop with an Ace (often suited), a high pair like connected KKxx that on this board would be an over pair and straight draw or a a connected TEN in your hand that on this board would have a straight draw. This board greatly illustrates why 3betting with the correct range is important.
I filtered for CO 3bet vs MP open single suited without an ace - it's an empty set so a screenshot is not necessary.
If I include an ace, but remove a T or a pair there are 12 hands we can play before the EV of 3betting is zero relative to another action. Ax9w8y6x is the last 3! hand - this must be a weird strategic board coverage hand to add as part of the overall strategy. The difference between calling and 3 betting for a number of the hands in this category are essentially zero. edit: looking at this a bit more and there are exactly three hands that are clear 3bets and the rest indifference or potential rounding errors of the sim. Those three hands? They are AKQJ suited, but not having the ace suited. If the Ace is suited then you are better to call. The suited aces are much higher EV than the suited non ace versions of these hands but the simulator is indifferent to calling / three betting and places all of the Ahigh suited hands in this category(no ten) in the call category.
I also double checked two pair hands, surely KKQQss is a 3bet right? Nope, there is no single suited two pair hand it will 3bet in the CO that doesn't contain AA.
These conclusions are also true for the button.
Having an ace in your hand is
critical to betting single suited hands according to this simulator. Klem is not wrong.
edit: What about calling hands?
If you remove a pair, ace, you have a number of broadway hands you can call with - but they ALL have a Ten in them. If you remove a Ten then you are left with the pure rundowns 9 high and below down to 6543. There no hands with any broadway cards that don't have a Ten in them - this is shocking to me.
Last edited by MarkD; 08-29-2023 at 06:53 PM.