You need to be logged in to your Sky Poker account above to post discussions and comments.

You might need to refresh your page afterwards.

Sky Poker forums will be temporarily unavailable from 11pm Wednesday July 25th.
Sky Poker Forums is upgrading its look! Stay tuned for the big reveal!

PLO question - folding the flopped nuts.

edited August 2014 in Tournament Strategy

Here's a spot I encountered on Friday night, in a £150 PLO Tourney @ The Vic.

The Tourney was 4/5/6 Card PLO, alternating every Level. 

At the time we were playing 5 card, on a very limpy final table.

Blinds were big, 7 players left, (6 paid, but this is not relevant) I had plenty of chips. This was a Tourney I genuinely thought I could win, as, one player excepted, the final table did not include any PLO hotties.
 
Pre-Flop

EVERY player limps in. (!). I have the almost very nice K-Q-J-10-7 in the BB. 

There is so much in the middle, I seriously consider squeezing here. I decide not to, as I'd prefer an ace in my hand, & that 7 is an ugly dangler. If the 7 were a 9 or A, I deffo squeeze here.
 
FLOP

It came 6-8-9, two spades.
 
So I have the temporary nuts, but I don't have any spades. I have the straight extensions all the way up, so I'm not bothered if someone has 10-J-x-x.

I decide, wrongly perhaps, to check, for reasons of pot control. I want to see a safe turn, & then I'll go potty pot pot, as they won't be able to call that if they are on the draw with spades or a set, so I planned to call any flop bet.
 
It goes....

POT

CALL

RE-POT


This will be a chip-leader pot.

What would YOU do now?

What can they have?

Well I sort of decided that at least one of them also had the flopped straight. They may be freerolling with the spades, too.
 
I assumed the other 2 were on the flush draw.
 
What is the correct play here with my hand?

In case any of you have read about this hand on another forum, I folded.......

Will tell you what hands I was up against, & what happened, after (hopefully) a few replies. 

It's a really interesting PLO Tourney spot, I think.

So, in my spot, you would.......?     

 

Comments

  • edited August 2014
    Stack sizes? Never played 5 card PLO but even in 4 card PLO I wouldn't be too happy with my hand at this point after a POT/CALL and repot. I imagine 5 card plays even tighter and especially with this many to the flop I just am not in love with my hand. Any back door flush draw? 

    I think folding is fine.
  • edited August 2014
    1. you only have a straight and straight redraws
    2. as you say you could be up against a straight with the flushdraw, and sets with nfd, so lots of draws that beat you and it is five-card
    3. it is a soft field so why go to war yet, plenty of time to find a clearer spot
    4. you're a nit

    = easy fold

    but then i'm not much of a Omaha player and have never played 5 card
  • edited August 2014
    folding is ok.... would just try to keep pot smallish untill the turn where the odds could swing dramatically
  • edited August 2014
    In Response to Re: PLO question - folding the flopped nuts.:
    folding is ok.... would just try to keep pot smallish untill the turn where the odds could swing dramatically
    Posted by Itsover4u
    That was Plan A - check call the flop, & then if we see a safe turn, boomio.

    Plan B had to be put into place after the betting though.

     
  • edited August 2014
    In Response to Re: PLO question - folding the flopped nuts.:
    Stack sizes? Never played 5 card PLO but even in 4 card PLO I wouldn't be too happy with my hand at this point after a POT/CALL and repot. I imagine 5 card plays even tighter and especially with this many to the flop I just am not in love with my hand. Any back door flush draw?  I think folding is fine.
    Posted by F_Ivanovic
    Well there were 4 of us, but we all had very playable stacks.
     
    No back door flush draw, no.
     
    I had the nut straight & improvers all the way up, but no flush & no set possibilities.
  • edited August 2014
    In Response to Re: PLO question - folding the flopped nuts.:
    1. you only have a straight and straight redraws 2. as you say you could be up against a straight with the flushdraw, and sets with nfd, so lots of draws that beat you and it is five-card 3. it is a soft field so why go to war yet, plenty of time to find a clearer spot 4. you're a nit = easy fold but then i'm not much of a Omaha player and have never played 5 card
    Posted by GELDY
    Geldy nails it.

    That was what I did, but the question is, was that a correct fold?*

    I think it's close.

    * By "correct", whether I would have won or not is irrelevant. It's the "10,000 times" thing, if we play the hands 10,000 times, what works out best, "as played"?

    Some Big Boys elsewhere are fairly convinced it was a bad fold. They might just be right, too. An intriguing spot.    
     
  • edited August 2014
    In Response to Re: PLO question - folding the flopped nuts.:
    In Response to Re: PLO question - folding the flopped nuts. : Geldy nails it. That was what I did, but the question is, was that a correct fold?* I think it's close. * By "correct", whether I would have won or not is irrelevant. It's the "10,000 times" thing, if we play the hands 10,000 times, what works out best, "as played"? Some Big Boys elsewhere are fairly convinced it was a bad fold. They might just be right, too. An intriguing spot.      
    Posted by Tikay10
    I rarely play PLO, but find this whole thing very interesting.

    Out of interest, how short would you need to be to call here?
  • edited August 2014
    In Response to Re: PLO question - folding the flopped nuts.:
    In Response to Re: PLO question - folding the flopped nuts. : Geldy nails it. That was what I did, but the question is, was that a correct fold?* I think it's close. * By "correct", whether I would have won or not is irrelevant. It's the "10,000 times" thing, if we play the hands 10,000 times, what works out best, "as played"? Some Big Boys elsewhere are fairly convinced it was a bad fold. They might just be right, too. An intriguing spot.      
    Posted by Tikay10
    'As Played' from the start ie: 'checked in the BB' pre- flop and post- flop .  We think the fold was then correct. 100% ..
    However, we wonder if maybe a 'min raise from you (the BB) pre-flop might have changed everything and also easier decision making, once you know how many players are then left in ? (Would players to your left want to call a min-raise with players to the right of them to act again?)
    As you can tell, 'We' are having this discussion over lunch, but feel that the way the hand played, with the 'check' to the flop, then once all that action started, you were 100% right to fold ..(You don't want to be involved in 4-way all-in action at that stage) 
    PS.. Hope you cashed ? Tesla
  • edited August 2014
    I'm pretty bad at PLO never mind 5 card version, so feel free to rip any of this apart

    Is this not good enough to pot pre? I know the 7 is a dangler but still surely with 5 cards that's not so bad, and no one has shown strength behind

    Planning to c/c flop sounds ok, is planning to c/r not a reasonable option? Surely you get it in against other hands than just the nuts with flush redraw? 

    As played with that action idk depends on pot odds. You also have decent redraws v the bare nuts. . If I'm reading action correct there should be 56bb in pot, you have only 1 invested, how deep are you?
  • edited August 2014
    In Response to Re: PLO question - folding the flopped nuts.:
    In Response to Re: PLO question - folding the flopped nuts. : I rarely play PLO, but find this whole thing very interesting. Out of interest, how short would you need to be to call here?
    Posted by Wilhelm
    Very!

    I can't imagine much worse than being all-in 4 or 5 way here.

    PLO & PLO8 are very different from NLH, & we can comfortably trundle along with much smaller stack sizes, & the traditional "M" values go out of the window.
     
    Whilst it is not ideal, & we would prefer it not to happen, 10 or 12 Bigs in PLO & PLO8 is plenty. Even 5 Bigs, whilst bad, is not disastrous in PLO & PLO8.

    When I'm short in PLO or PLO8, my golden rule is to try & get heads up, even if I only have spanners. My cards are almost certainly "live", & this is the perfect spot, as we can rarely be far behind. 3 way or more, no thanks.
     
    In PLO, the 80%-20% scerios we see in NLH do not exist, it's rare to be much worse than 40%-60%.

    It's a beautiful game, & requires much thought & nous, its full of nuances, you should try it, you'd enjoy the challenge I suspect. But make sure you play PL not NL, NL Omaha is a different kettle of fish entirely, & much more akin to NLH.

    If I were King For a Day, I'd ban NL Omaha. Luckily for those that enjoy it, it probably ain't gonna happen.     

  • edited August 2014
    In Response to Re: PLO question - folding the flopped nuts.:
    In Response to Re: PLO question - folding the flopped nuts. : 'As Played' from the start ie: 'checked in the BB' pre- flop and post- flop .  We think the fold was then correct. 100% .. However, we wonder if maybe a 'min raise from you (the BB) pre-flop might have changed everything and also easier decision making, once you know how many players are then left in ? (Would players to your left want to call a min-raise with players to the right of them to act again?) As you can tell, 'We' are having this discussion over lunch, but feel that the way the hand played, with the 'check' to the flop, then once all that action started, you were 100% right to fold ..(You don't want to be involved in 4-way all-in action at that stage)  PS.. Hope you cashed ? Tesla
    Posted by GS16Tesla
    Ooh, welcome to the Community Tesla, glad we've converted you from lurker to poster. Tell us about this "discussion group" you have.

    Min-raise from the BB? Don't like that, position is VERY important in PLO, & I don't want to play a big pot OOP. I am looking to play for stacks, yes, but not OOP.
     
    I did strongly consider a full-pot "squeeze", & maybe I should have, but I bottled it. It would have been tough to call, for sure. As you will soon see though, it would not have got through. Generally speaking, a full-pot squeeze might be the best play here, but I just bottled it, as I really felt I could beat this table without risking my stack yet awhile. "Find a better spot" as one wily veteran taught me many years ago.   

    You hope I cashed? Yup, managed that.

    If you are genuinely interested in the little story of the Tourney, I did a bit of a write up. I keep a diary of a little PLO8 DYM Challenge I am doing, & post in it every day, but I go off-topic & waffle now & then, so I did a write up of the whole Tourney.
     
    If you are interested, & to save you searching through 80 pages, it starts on this page, & continues onto the next page, starting
    HERE 
  • edited August 2014
    In Response to Re: PLO question - folding the flopped nuts.:
    I'm pretty bad at PLO never mind 5 card version, so feel free to rip any of this apart Is this not good enough to pot pre? I know the 7 is a dangler but still surely with 5 cards that's not so bad, and no one has shown strength behind Planning to c/c flop sounds ok, is planning to c/r not a reasonable option? Surely you get it in against other hands than just the nuts with flush redraw?  As played with that action idk depends on pot odds. You also have decent redraws v the bare nuts. . If I'm reading action correct there should be 56bb in pot, you have only 1 invested, how deep are you?
    Posted by grantorino
    Hi Gran.

    No, the hand is just not good enough to pot pre (imo), that 7 sort of ruined the hand. If that 7 were a 9 or an Ace, yes.

    The plan was to c/c the flop, as one card in PLO can change so much, & I needed a safe turn card. (There were something like 17 "bad" turn cards in the pack), & then take off if the turn was a safe card.
     
    The ONLY hands that call me there are.....
     
    The same straight, so I'm risking my stack for half the pot.
     
    The same straight with freeroll flush draw

    Any set

    Nut flush draw & any flush draw.

    To be honest, I think better players DO get it in there, but my game is a bit quirky, & I did not llike that spot at all.
      
  • edited August 2014


    Anyway, I'm still unsure what the right play should have been, reactions here & elsewhere are very mixed.

    I think it's close, very close, & maybe there is no right or wrong answer.

    So, what actually happened?

    Remember, what happened does not make my play right or wrong, we can only judge that over a 10,000 hand sample, but for what it's worth.....
     
  • edited August 2014

    So, I folded, & THREE players got it all-in.

    It went....

    RAISE

    Call

    Re-Raise all-in

    Call

    Call

    The hands were, in the same order.....

    2nd nut flush draw.

    Nut straight with exactly the same extensions as me, & no spades.

    Nut flush draw.

    The turn came another spade, & that was that. Oddly, & to my surprise, there were no sets out.

    When the hands were tabled, I nearly fainted, because......
     
  • edited August 2014

    Pre-Flop, the kid on the button, after THREE players had limped, also limped.

    His hand? Double suited aces.

    Wowzer, what WAS he thinking?!

    Three limpers, plus the Blinds, he has the Button & DS Aces & just limped.

    His suits included spades, & he got the lot.
     
    If I had been asked to "assign a range" to his hand, I'd never have got that in 1,000 attempts.
     
    He eventually busted, despite that massive pot, in spectacular style when once again limping with good aces. 

    I can't think of any examples when limping with good aces in a PLO MTT is a good play.
  • edited August 2014


    Anyway, thank you for the responses, & if any of you have any interesting hands, or questions, please start a thread, we can all learn from them, especially if they involve PLO or PLO8. 

     
  • edited August 2014
    In Response to Re: PLO question - folding the flopped nuts.:
    Pre-Flop, the kid on the button, after THREE players had limped, also limped. His hand? Double suited aces. Wowzer, what WAS he thinking?! Three limpers, plus the Blinds, he has the Button & DS Aces & just limped. His suits included spades, & he got the lot.   If I had been asked to "assign a range" to his hand, I'd never have got that in 1,000 attempts.   He eventually busted, despite that massive pot, in spectacular style when once again limping with good aces.  I can't think of any examples when limping with good aces in a PLO MTT is a good play.
    Posted by Tikay10
    presumably unless looking for a squeeze from the blinds, but you need pretty good reads that someone will oblige. same as limping AA in NLHE.
  • edited August 2014
    In Response to Re: PLO question - folding the flopped nuts.:
    In Response to Re: PLO question - folding the flopped nuts. : presumably unless looking for a squeeze from the blinds, but you need pretty good reads that someone will oblige. same as limping AA in NLHE.
    Posted by GELDY
    Well exactly, yes. We feel pretty silly when they don't raise!

    I like to be the one "controlling" the action where possible, rather than hoping others will do what I assume.
  • edited August 2014
    Well you cashed, so from that point your play of folding was justified . The people who told you it was a 'bad fold' may be good players , BUT had they've been in your seat on the night, they would have been homeward bound before the next deal. .. 
     'Our discussion group' ?  err No, just two friends giving our opinion over lunch. :)
    Well done on the cash finish. 
  • edited August 2014
    In Response to Re: PLO question - folding the flopped nuts.:
    Well you cashed, so from that point your play of folding was justified . The people who told you it was a 'bad fold' may be good players , BUT had they've been in your seat on the night, they would have been homeward bound before the next deal. ..   'Our discussion group' ?  err No, just two friends giving our opinion over lunch. :) Well done on the cash finish. 
    Posted by GS16Tesla
    Thank you Tesla.

    Well yes, it all worked out OK in the end, but that does not make the fold necessarily good or bad, we need to make the right decisions on a longer-term view.

    It felt a fairly easy fold to me, but it did draw a few raised eyebrows afterwards.

    I nearly fainted whebn the button limper, 3rd to act, showed up with good aces. What was THAT all about?!  
     
Sign In or Register to comment.