You have a small pair and you get no help on the flop. Since you have only two outs, the chance of making the hand by the river is only 8.4%. And this is not even considering the times you make your hand and still lose.

If you have 5v 54» and the flop is 8+ 7* 64», you almost cannot win even if you make your hand. A 9 gives you a straight but it's very likely that it made someone else a higher straight. A 5 makes you a set of 5's but it makes a possible straight for everybody else. A 4 makes you a straight and this is actually the best card you could hope for, even though you could still be beat. This type of hand just doesn't show a profit in the long run, especially if you play it against many players.

6. You Get a Nondescript Flop
You get a nondescript flop and the blind bets into a large field. He will often have flopped two pair and has to bet it to protect himself against the possibility of an overcard on the turn helping another player. The blind will ordinarily not bet if he has just a pair with a medium-strength kicker. He will have a much better hand than that. You should throw away most average hands in this situation. If you call, you're just playing a guessing game because a blind hand could have anything.

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You have two big cards such as Av K4» and the flop is something like 8* 3v 5* and there is a bet. You should usually muck your hand. Using the same table as metioned above on page 204, you see that you have six outs which gives you only a 24.1% chance of hitting an Ace or a King by the river. The problem is, an Ace doesn't necessarily help you because it could likely make someone else Aces-up. A King doesn't necessarily help because you can't be sure if it makes the best hand or not. You should fold and not chase the hand.

2. You Have a Big Pair
You have a big pair in the pocket and there is a uniform flop that does not give you a hand or a draw. For example, you have K* K* and the flop is Jv 9v 8v and there are several callers. Let it go. Anyone holding just one card to the straight flush has a 45% chance of making a straight or a flush. This is not counting the fact that you could already be beat and are drawing dead.

3. You Raised Pre-flop
You raised pre-flop and you totally missed your draw. You might be able to run it through one or even two players, but if there's more than two players, you should check and fold. It's too likely that any flop would have helped one of the several callers.

4. You Have an Ace
With a mediocre kicker and an Ace flops, let it go if there's any interest at all in the pot, especially from an early position. It's just too expensive to call all the way down just to find out that your kicker is no good. At best, you will have a split pot and even when you do occasionally hit your kicker, the hand will still not show a profit in the long run. It's difficult to flop a pair of Aces and then throw it away, but it's a move that you should get accustomed to making with a bad kicker.

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Tags: pair of aces, poker, straight flush