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Pro Tip #62: Fourth Street Decisions in Seven Stud
- 12-7-2007
In an earlier article,
Perry Friedman gave some guidelines as to what you should be looking for at the
start of a Seven Card Stud hand. Perry concentrated on
When playing Stud,
On
For example, say one player
open-raised with the Qd as a door card, and I called with split 8s and a suited
6. If he catches a total blank (something like the 2c) on
I won't know for sure if a
Ten, Jack, King or Ace helps my opponent's hand, but at that point, his board
presents too many warning signs for me to continue. Many players will enter
pots when they start with three big cards, so any high card on
Another sort of situation develops when I catch two-pair on the turn. Say that I started with a split pair of 8s and a 6. My opponent open-raised with the Qd and I called. The turn brings me another 6, giving me two pair. My opponent catches a blank and bets.
In a spot like this, I
think raising is a big mistake because the two-pair is well hidden. If I raise
on
Moving on to a third
example, say I have Kings in the hole with the 6d as my door card. Again,
assume my opponent open-raised while showing Qd on
After I call the
third-street raise, I'm hoping that the turn brings a card like the 8d. If my
opponent then leads at the pot, I'll raise, hoping to give the impression that
I'm on a draw. Once my opponent has that impression, he'll probably call my
raise on
These are
just a few situations you might run into on

