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Pro Tip # 103: A Calling Hand in Stud Hi-Lo
- 5-6-2008
In split-pot games,
beginners are often cautioned against playing hands that have them drawing to
half the pot. But in Seven-Card Stud Poker, a situation sometimes arises where
drawing with a modest chance at the whole pot and an even smaller chance at
half the pot is clearly the correct play.
Say you're playing
eight-handed, $4/$8 Stud Hi/Lo, with a $1 ante and a $1 low card bring in.
You're dealt 2s-5d-5c and, with the low card showing, you bring it in for $1.
It's folded to a player showing a King, who completes to $4. Everyone else
folds; you call and head to
Both you and your opponent
pick up a 7. He bets $4 and you call. On
The action so far has
already created a significant pot. There's $8 in antes, and another $16 from
the betting on Third and Fourth Streets. You'll need to call bets of $8 on
Fifth
The odds here are so compelling that even if you were playing Seven Card Stud Hi only, you'd have to consider calling your opponent down. You'd have a 30 percent chance of cracking the Kings, which isn't quite enough to justify calling against an over-pair. However, if there was a chance that your opponent was bluffing, then calling would be okay.
However, Stud-Hi/Lo gives you an additional way of getting money out of the pot. You'll go runner-runner to a low often enough so that your pot equity increases to about 37 percent. Those odds are way too good to consider folding.
Stud-Hi/Lo is a complex game that presents players with decisions that they're not going to encounter in Texas Hold’em or in any other high-only game. If you're looking to improve your Stud-Hi/Lo game, play some hands in an online poker room, and then try running some computer simulations to see if you're making the best mathematical decisions.
