Texas Holdem River Rat

Texas Holdem River Rat 4,7/5 2635 reviews

The order in which Texas Hold’em is dealt is very specific and, assuming you’re playing with a table full of lucid, honest people, never changes. First, you are dealt two hole cards. Then comes the flop, turn and river cards.

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Holdem

The flop

After a round of betting for the hole cards, a card is burned off the top of the deck (meaning discarded without being looked at — this is done in case the top card had somehow been exposed or marked), and three cards are dealt face-up to the center of the table. This is known as the flop and is the start of the community cards on the table — those cards that everyone may incorporate in his hand.

Everyone who has not folded now has a five-card hand — two hole cards combined with the three community cards. A round of betting takes place.

The turn

River

After the flop betting round, another card is burned from the deck and a fourth community card is exposed. This card is known as the turn (sometimes fourth street).

All players still in the hand now have six cards to choose from to make their best five-card Poker hands. There is another round of betting and one more card yet to be exposed.

The river

A card is burned and the most infamous of community cards, the river (sometimes called fifth street) is dealt. All remaining players have seven cards for selecting their best five-card Poker hand (their two hole cards combined with the five community cards). A round of betting takes place, and the best five-card hand at the table is the winner.

Texas

To determine their five-card hand, players may use zero, one, or both of their hole cards in combination with five, four, or three community cards, respectively.

Because a player is required to use at least three community cards to make a hand, there can be no flushes if there are not three cards of the same suit (multiple suits with no flush possibilities based on the current exposed community cards is known as a rainbow). Nor can there be a straight if there aren’t three cards from a five-card sequence (for example, 5-8-9).

Here, George is playing the board and has a king-high heart flush. John is using one hole card for an ace-high flush, but Ringo is the big winner using both hole cards for a straight flush.

If you play Texas Hold’em, you have no doubt heard of the term, “River Rat”. That is the unglamorous phrase used for people who by any stretch of the imagination should have folded their cards earlier but by sticking around and throwing in their money, they end up winning the hand.

You may have encountered “Turn Rats” in low limit no limit games or games where people want action:

You are in the big blind at a $40NL table. Players just come in and no raises. The stacks are all roughly the same. Here is our flop:

You bet $5 and everybody folds except one player who calls.

You Your Opponent

You are the favorite here but since it is low limit, no fold’em $40 hold em you aren’t sure if this player is holding pocket queens. Well, you are actually. He didn’t go all in so what can you do so you don’t make it worth his while to stay in the hand?

You can try to raise him $10 and in this case, and he may call. If you go all in and he has enough money in his pocket to rebuy, he might call you to try and catch a miracle card.

Texas Holdem River

With players like this who are action addicts, they will call you no matter what.

And if the turn comes like this (and it will once in awhile):

You will have to just force a smile, force the acid from coming up your throat and watch yourself lose no matter what. The comfort in this is that players like your opponent will go bust and a lot of times in the same session after a few hours. They have a lot of lucky hours but they might end up with unlucky days when the dust settles.

Texas Holdem River Rattlesnake

I’ve talked to some players and for the most part, they still remember the few times that they win with cards that come at the last minute. I am tempted to ask some of them, and I do this of my friends, “But how many times have you tried that and lost?” Generally you get a “I dunno” and a shrug of the shoulders. It is random reinforcement. People tend to remember the things they want rather than what actually has happened.

Texas Holdem River Rat

Texas Holdem River Card

Hey, the truth can hurt but it is better in business and in gambling that you at least be honest
with yourself so you don’t end up bluffing yourself out of your money in the long run.

Texas

Texas Holdem River Rates

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Texas Holdem River Means

Tags: Business, expectations, gaming, honest with yourself, odds, poker, random reinforcement, river rat, Texas Hold'em, turn rat