When I am asked what my favorite poker game is, the answer is easy – pot-limit Omaha (high only). And if I were asked in what poker game does an expert have the greatest edge over mediocre players, I would also state pot-limit Omaha – but I realize that in certain live-game situations, there may be more skill involved in no-limit poker. In tournament play, there is generally much more skill required in pot-limit than no-limit (hold'em). Many experts agree that there is too much luck involved in no-limit tournaments, primarily because of so much going all in before the flop (a "crapshoot").
But in pot-limit and no-limit, what is the best general strategy after the flop? There are certain types of hands with which you generally want to push or pull.
Although I missed the recent World Poker Open tournament in Tunica because of a conflicting bridge tournament in Biloxi, I did manage to get up to Tunica and play in the Horseshoe's wonderful pot-limit Omaha (high) game. There often are two tables going, with a $500 buy-in and $5-$10 blinds.
In the following hand, I won more than $1,000 due to a relatively small pulling after-the-flop bet.
Holding a K-Q-J-10, I made it $30 to go before the flop. With four-way action and $125 in the pot, the flop came J 6
3
. The big blind led with a $50 bet. There was one caller to me, and one player to act after me. My queen and 10 were both diamonds; I decided to call ("take one off"). This "combination hand" was clearly a speculative call on my part, but the price was right. The fourth player folded.
Note that if the next card was not very good, I would have to fold. With three-way action, the turn card was the 9. One of my opponents said, "The Curse of Scotland." (According to Michael Wiesenberg's Poker Talk: A Complete Guide to the Vocabulary of Poker, the 9
is called the Curse of Scotland because every ninth Scottish king was (supposedly) a tyrant, and diamonds were a symbol of Scotland.) But it was certainly not a "curse" for me. Actually it was one of the best cards for me, giving me several draws, including an open-end straight-flush draw.
With $275 in the pot, the big blind bet $200. The next player called, and I certainly called, since any facecard, 10, 8, or diamond might give me the winning hand.
The last card was the K, one of many cards that gave me the nut straight. Because of the possible straight, both of my opponents checked. There was $875 in the pot, and I went all in for a little more than $400. The big blind called with his 6-6-5-4 for a set of sixes, and cursed his bad luck.
Note that the big blind had hit a great flop (a set of sixes and an open-end straight draw). If he had bet the pot after the flop, I would have been unable to call.
But, once the Curse of Scotland hit the table on the turn, giving me more than a score of hits, I was in for the duration, even if he had bet the pot (after the turn, I would get the usual 2-to-1 odds plus rebets).
One of the main skills in pot-limit and no-limit poker is knowing what to do after the flop – push with a fragile made hand or pull with a solid hand or nut draw. Because of the inherent volatility of Omaha (a four-card game), one extra card can often turn a nothing hand into a percentage favorite. Many experts routinely push (a big bet) after the flop with a set or nut straight, or sometimes even the nut flush.
Betting a small amount on the theory that you want more business is often a shaky play, from the standpoint of the extra money you might win versus how much you might lose. But, of course, the relative stack sizes of the participants is also a key factor in planning ahead.