Texas hold 'em Texas hold’em poker hands
In the poker game Texas
hold 'em, a player's hand consists of two hole poker cards, which belong solely to the
player and remain hidden from the other Texas
hold’em pokerplayers. Five community poker cards are
also dealt into play. Poker hand betting begins before any of the community poker
cards are exposed, and continues throughout the hand.
The player's "playing hand", which will
be compared against that of each competing player, is the best 5-poker card poker
hand available from his two hole poker cards and the
five community poker cards.
Unless otherwise specified, here the term hand
applies to the player's two hole poker cards, or starting
hand.
Essentials
There are 1,326 different starting Texas hold’em poker hands in hold 'em,
but since suits have no relative value in poker, many of these Texas hold’em poker hands
are identical in value before the flop. For example, A♣J♣
and A♥J♥ are identical, because each is a hand
consisting of an ace and a jack of the same suit. There are 169 nonequivalent
starting Texas
hold’em poker hands in hold 'em. These 169 Texas hold’em poker hands
are not equally likely. Hold 'em Texas hold’em poker hands
are sometimes classified as having one of three "shapes":
- Pairs, (or "pocket pairs"), which
consist of two poker cards of the same rank (e.g. 9♠9♣). One hand
in 17 will be a pair, each occurring with individual probability 1/221.
- Suited Texas hold’em poker hands, which
contain two poker cards of the same suit (e.g. A♠6♠). Four Texas hold’em poker
hands out of 17 will be suited, and each suited configuration occurs with
probability 2/663.
- Offsuit, Texas hold’em poker hands, which contain
two poker cards of different suit and rank (e.g. K♠J♥). Twelve out of 17 Texas
hold’em poker hands will be nonpair, offsuit Texas
hold’em poker hands, each of which occurs with probability 2/221.
It is typical to abbreviate suited Texas hold’em poker hands
in hold 'em by affixing an "s" to the hand.
That is,
QQ represents any pair of queens,
AK (or, sometimes, AKo)
represents any ace and king of different suits, and
JTs represents any jack and ten of the same suit.
Specific Texas
hold’em poker hands
Pocket Aces
The most powerful starting hand in hold 'em is AA, a pair of aces. This hand is also known as
"Bullets", "American Airlines" and "Pocket
Rockets". Pocket aces are often played aggressively, for a variety of
reasons: First, it is automatically stronger than any starting hand. Second, it
is impossible for the flop to bring overpoker cards.
Third, AA plays well in virtually any situation, whether the poker game is
short-handed or a full table, whether many or few Texas hold’em pokerplayers
see the flop, and regardless of the style of play (loose/passive,
tight/aggressive). However, the most important reason that AA is played
aggressively is to drive out Texas
hold’em poker hands with high potential for improvement (which AA is not). AA
can easily lose to 89s if the board brings the right suit, but a strong
pre-flop poker hand bet will make it unfavorable to play the 89s.
Big Slick
The Texas
hold’em poker hands AKs and AK are both known,
commonly, as "Big Slick". According to David Sklansky
in Hold 'Em Poker for Advanced Texas hold’em pokerplayers, in a full limit poker game with 8-10 Texas
hold’em pokerplayers, the suited ace-king is the
fourth-best starting hand; the unsuited is the tenth. This evaluation may
change dramatically in other situations. For example, heads up, AK (suited or
not) is just a slight underdog against a lower pocket pair. AK is not a
"made" hand, in the sense that, before the flop (unlike a pocket
pair), it has not made a pair. Against a small number of opponents, however, it
will often be the strongest starting hand, and it will often be able to win the
showdown without improvement (that is, without pairing).
Pocket Kings
This hand is commonly rated second most powerful
opening hand in hold 'em. Often
referred to as "Pocket Cowboys", "Men", and "Ace
magnets".
Pocket Queens
Commonly known as
"Ladies". Occasionally "Girls with curls", "Siegfried and
Roy".
Pocket Jacks
Commonly known as
"Fishhooks" or "Jokers".
Pocket Eights
Referring to the
appearance of the eights, commonly known as "Snowmen" or "Frog
Eyes".
Pocket Sevens
Again referencing
appearance of the sevens, commonly known as "Walking Sticks" or
"Hockey Sticks."
Pocket Fives
Commonly known as "Speed Limit" (55
miles per hour was the national limit), "Nickels", and
"Presto".
Seven-Deuce
Seven-deuce offsuit (72), is generally considered to be the worst possible starting
hand; it is the lowest-ranking offsuit hand that
cannot use both poker cards in a straight. In some simulations resembling a
multi-player poker game, 72 has shown slightly poker
hand better performance than similarly weak Texas hold’em poker hands like 32 and 42.
Even still, the offsuit seven-deuce is a favorite
"textbook example" of a terrible starting hand.
Interestingly, however, the 7-2 offsuit, though perhaps contrary to common perception, has
about a 1 in 3 chance against AK (The Big Slick) heads up before the flop, or
any other two overpoker cards. The chances of the
seven or the two pairing in the community are about 50 % (as can be seen from
the 50-50 model of an underpair vs. two overpoker cards), but the AK of course has the advantage at
times when there is no help for either side, or when both sides pairs.
Countless Texas hold’em pokerplayers will fold the
7-2 late in a tounament to a big raise, while calling
with Texas hold’em poker hands like J10, K9, and Q8 which statistically are
only very slightly poker hand better heads up vs. two overpoker
cards. Moreover, there is a higher chance of one of the aformentioned
starting Texas
hold’em poker hands to have a piece of the raiser's hand, such as K9 vs. AK. In
this case, the underdog odds are much worse, as only one of the poker cards
pairing will help.
This hand has received exceptional notoriety after
a poker blog referred to the hand as "The
HAMMER!" (http://pokergrub.com/hammer.html)
(emphasis is as in the blog)
and made a challenge for Texas
hold’em pokerplayers to win with that hand.
Previously, "The Hammer" referred to the player last to act in a
round, a term possibly borrowed from curling.
For more details on the nuances of hold 'em starting Texas
hold’em poker hands, please see the main article on the poker game.
Retrieved from "http://en.poker resources/wiki/Texas_hold_%27em_Texas
hold’em poker hands"
Categories: Texas
hold 'em Texas hold’em poker hands
Bibliography
- Phil Gordon
and Jonathon Grotenstein (2004). Poker: The
Real Deal. Simon Spotlight Entertainment. ISBN 0689875908. The poker
lifestyle, strategies, and great anecdotes from the tables.
- Lee Jones
(1994). Winning Low-Limit Hold-em. Conjelco. ISBN 1886070156. An introduction to lower
limit poker game play.
- David Sklansky (1996). Hold 'em
Poker. Two Plus Two Publications. ISBN
1880685086.
- Ed Miller,
David Sklansky and Mason Malmuth
(2004). Small Stakes Hold'em. Two Plus Two
Publications. ISBN 1880685329. A book discussing all facets of "small
stakes poker games", i.e. poker games in which many Texas hold’em pokerplayers play too many Texas hold’em poker hands,
and too many bad Texas hold’em poker hands, too far.
- David Sklansky and Mason Malmuth
(1999). Hold 'em Poker for Advanced Texas hold’em pokerplayers. Two Plus
Two Publications. ISBN 1880685221. This book contains a thorough
discussion of strategies which apply to middle- and high-limit poker games
involving Texas
hold’em pokerplayers who generally play soundly.
- Bob Ciaffone and Jim Brier (2002). Middle Limit Holdem. Bob Ciaffone.
ISBN 0966100743.
- David Sklansky (1989). The Theory of Poker. Two Plus Two Publications. ISBN 1880685000.