Vi esse post na 2+2 e achei bom. Dicas basicas, mas bem importantes.
Link pro original: new omaha - Small Stakes Pot Limit Omaha - Small Stakes PL Omaha Forum
1) Be careful when short-stacks are in the hand. You don't want to raise a limper with QQT9ss and have him limp/re-raise you to $50 forcing you to call OOP to a big stack who's also in there. That said, please beat the sh-- out of the short stacks.
2) The nut flush draw is the straight draw's worst enemy (and your best friend). The best straight draw you can flop is 20 outs (a full wrap). On a two-flush board, that hand is a 59:41 underdog to a naked nut flush draw. Be very careful when drawing to a straight on a two-flush board.
3) If you can get most of your stack in pre-flop with AAxx, do it. Any aces, almost any time. And if you get 1/2 your stack in pre-flop, you're shoving/calling almost any flop.
4) Don't play out of position. If you're not a good PLO hand reader, good players will abuse you when scare cards hit.
5) Don't defend your blinds. PLO plays so much bigger than NLHE that $2 isn't worth doing anything for. If Cliff is going to steal your blinds from the button, don't even give it a second thought if you hold a marginal hand. AT92ds is an insta-muck.
6) Draw to the nuts. When you get better at the game you can identify situations where your non-nut flush or underfull is worth a raise/call. If you're not very good at PLO, draw to the nuts.
7) If you KNOW he has top set, then there's no need to push your 17-out straight draw. You can just call, see the turn and and commit if the board doesn't pair. He can't price you out in PLO.
8 ) You will have to fold the current nuts on the flop or turn. It's a fact of life. If you're in a three way hand holding 65xx (no flush draw) on a 8c 7c 4d 2d board and it's pot, re-pot to you, your screwed. Fold it and move on.
9) I find pairs below QQxx are a waste of time in early or middle position. JJxx and under are lifetime money losers for me. Late position for a limp, fine. But in early/middle position unless they have other value going for them (say JJT9ss), I get rid of them.
10) Unless the flop is super-dry (ie. K72 rainbow), put some money in with the nuts. There are a million draws that will pay you $$$. Take it from them.
11) AA + the nut flush draw is probably good enough to stick in 100 BBs. On a non-paired board, if you're not up against a set, you can't go too wrong.
12) Bottom two pair is a terrible hand. Fold and move on.
14) If you think he re-raised you with aces, you're betting off calling with 4 random unpaired cards than you are kings. Heads up vs AAxx: KKxx is about 30%. KT73 is about 36%
15) 9875 is a million times better than 9765. I exaggerate, but have the gap in your run hands near the top. More of your straight outs will be nut outs.
16) If you have an open-ended straight draw multi-way, you have nothing. 13-, 17- and 20-out straight draws are possible. An OESD is crap. Watch for people stacking off with these.
17) Watch for people drawing to the ass-end of the straight. And don't be one of them.
18) If you read Pot-Limit Omaha Poker: The Big Play Strategy by Jeff Hwang, you will murder low-limit casino PLO.
19) Be ready for some massive suckouts. If people don't know what their hands are worth, you are going to put them in some awful spots. Some of them will hit. Take it in stride. As well, there are a lot of 60:40s in PLO. Be ready for the swings.
20) People will over-commit on the flop with the naked nut straight. Have a re-draw with your nuts (flush draw, set, two pair, higher straight draw) and freeroll the **** out of them. The nut straight before the river is a small-pot hand. But most people won't treat it like that.
21) If a player donks through 3+ players on the flop, he has it. What you do with that knowledge is up to you. If he has the nut straight and you flopped top set, you can peel. If you want to float him, you can do that too.
22) If you've been betting into an aggro to super-aggro player and you make an unlikely nut hand on the river (flush, straight, full house to a lesser extent), a river check-raise is definitely worth considering. Backdoor nut draws can pay off big.
22a) If you've been betting into an aggro to super-aggro player and the obvious flop draw has not completed by the river, a river check-call is definitely worth considering.
Flop: A T 7 rainbow, you bet with ATxx/he calls
Turn: 4, you bet/he calls
River: 2, you check, he may fire a big bluff bet at it with KQJx or T98x that you can snap off for value.
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