“The Mad Genius” gives his shortest poker answers
Hold 'em, Other games, POKER, Strategy
A game that will energize your cardroom
Cardrooms, Gambling, Other games
A seven-card stud secret from my old note
Manipulation, Other games, POKER, Psychology, Strategy
A very important poker secret
Hold 'em, Other games, POKER, Strategy
Another seminar + let’s play Three-card Brag
ALL (newest first), Other games, POKER
Blackjack and poker have slow rolls in common
Odds, Other games, POKER, Strategy
Brunson: A state of mind
Entries by others, Motivation, Other games
Brunson: Dangerous side bets at the poker table
Entries by others, Manipulation, Other games
Brunson: Don’t talk yourself out of the pot
Entries by others, Manipulation, Other games
Brunson: Keep betting until they fold
Entries by others, General, Manipulation, Other games
Brunson: Let the dog die
Entries by others, Ethics, Manipulation, Other games
Brunson: Obeying poker speed limits
Entries by others, General, Other games, POKER
Brunson: Participating in the party
Entries by others, Other games, Psychology
Brunson: Proving your poker prowess takes time
Entries by others, Image, Manipulation, Other games
Brunson: Staying in action
Entries by others, Other games
Gambling stupidity: One minute before dawn
Gambling, Other games
Games you can beat + experts destroying bankrolls
Gambling, Odds, Other games
Games you can beat update and two tips
Gambling, General, Other games, POKER1 EXTRA, Strategy, Tips
High-low split secrets, plus great poker factors
ALL (newest first), General, Other games, POKER, Strategy
How to play Caro Hold ’em
Hold 'em, Other games, Rules
1 2 3 5

Everything is everywhere

Any Poker1 page takes you anyplace you want to go!

Poker1 

Megadex

Poker1 universe —
all in one place.

→ Collections
Special Poker1 groups

Poker1 Megadex tools

— main navigation departments —

Collections

Related groups of Poker1 content

↓ Major collections ↓

Gambling  •  Hold 'em  •  Info  •  Life beyond poker

Poker (all)  •  Poker dictionary  •  Poker psychology

Poker statistics  •  Poker strategy  •  Poker tells

Prediction*  •  Shopping  •  Zone 2*

↓ Tip collections ↓

All*  •  Gambling*  •  Life*  •  Poker*  •  Various*

↓ Contributor collections ↓

Brunson  •  Caro  •  McHaffie  •  Wiesenberg  •  Others*

↓ More collections ↓

Poker1 FAQ  •  Poker-tell videos  •  Review of poker lessons

Sunday sessions*  •  Targeted poker quizzes  •  Tuesday sessions

* Any collection followed by an asterisk ( * ) has no entries yet.

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home

Poker1 everything

Browse alphabetically

 

[a-z-listing display=”posts” post-type=”post”]

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home

Poker1 library

Content in categories

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home




≡ Content above: Poker1 Phase2a specification ≡

Mike Caro poker word is Suited


Note: Not at the old Poker1 site. A version of this entry was first published (2012) in Poker Player newspaper.


“I wouldn’t have played ace-seven if it hadn’t been suited,” Bill explained to me. He had just raked in a huge pot with the nut flush.

“I see,” said I. But I really didn’t see, not at all. He had jumped into my hold ’em pot pre-flop, calling a huge raise. His ace-seven was unprofitable, measured in the long term, whether the cards shared the same suit or not.

For readers who don’t understand the terminology, when two-card starting hold ’em hands contain different suits, we typically refer to them as “unsuited” or having “mixed suits.” When the suits match, we call them “suited.”

The concept of suited starting cards in hold ’em is misunderstood. So, we’ll investigate it in today’s self-interview.

Question 1: Isn’t being suited in hold ’em a big advantage?

It can be, when you need a flush to win. But the mathematics of being suited isn’t what most players think.

Question 2: What do you mean?

Well, it’s 3.25-to-1 against beginning with two suited cards. That’s a little misleading, because it includes the times you have a pair. And pairs, of course, are never suited. They happen once every 17 deals on average, so it’s 16-to-1 against being dealt a starting pair.

Question 3: In that case, what are the approximate odds against being suited, assuming you don’t have a pair?

If you don’t have a pair, then the odds aren’t “approximate,” they’re precise. Any non-pair hold ’em starting hand is exactly 3-to-1 against being suited.

Actually, it’s very easy to understand, when you think about it. You have one card and, let’s say it’s a spade. The next card, if it’s of a different rank, can be a club, a diamond, a heart, or another spade. That’s three non-spades and one spade, so obviously the odds are 3-to-1 against any non-paired hold ’em starting hand being suited.

Question 4: How often will you make a flush, if you begin suited and stay to the showdown?

Well, first of all, flopping a flush won’t happen often. Specifically, it’s 118-to-1 against flopping a flush when you begin with suited cards. But, after the flop, you can make a flush on either the fourth card (turn) or the fifth card (river), when two of your suit flop. And if only one of your suit flops, you can still catch a so-called “runner-runner” flush by connecting on both the turn and river.

By the way, it’s 16.3-to-1 against catching exactly three more of your suit on all five board cards. That’s an important figure, because often you want exactly three, not four or five more of your suit. Surplus cards of your suit give opponents the chance of beating your flush by holding a single higher rank of that suit. Unless you hold the highest ranking card possible of the flush, more than three of your suit on board is potentially costly.

Question 5: How much more likely are you to make a flush with suited starting cards vs. unsuited cards?

Keep in mind that there are two chances to make a flush when you hold unsuited cards. It requires at least four matching suits on the five-card board, though. I’ve heard it argued that there’s little advantage to holding suited ranks relating to flush-making.

I guess it centers on what we mean by “little advantage.” You have about a 6.5 percent chance of ending up with a flush (including a straight flush) when you begin suited and stubbornly stay to see the river. You have a bit less than a two percent chance if your cards are of mixed suits.

Question 6: When does being suited matter most?

Suited starting cards matter more when many opponents are active in the pot. That’s because, with so many competing, you’re more likely to need a flush to win.

In hold ’em, remember that a starting hand being suited never should be the primary reason you play. It’s a bonus. Sometimes it’s enough to tip the scales in favor of playing. Usually, if you win the pot it will be with something other than a flush.

When you find yourself playing lower-ranking cards (usually in a late position or a blind), being suited has more value. Why? It’s because you’re less likely to win another way, such as with a big pair or even just high cards. So, flushes make up a bigger portion of your wins than when you hold, say, ace-king – which has better chances of winning, anyway.

With high cards, you may not need the flush. If you would have won without it, the flush is irrelevant, sort of. I say “sort of,” because a flush might make it more likely that you won’t fold a winning hand and also more likely that you’ll wager and win extra.

But, in general, the lower your two ranks, the more important it is that be suited.

There are many more aspects to suited starting hands than those. Sometime, we’ll probe more deeply. Not now. — MC

“The Mad Genius” gives his shortest poker answers
Hold 'em, Other games, POKER, Strategy
A game that will energize your cardroom
Cardrooms, Gambling, Other games
A seven-card stud secret from my old note
Manipulation, Other games, POKER, Psychology, Strategy
A very important poker secret
Hold 'em, Other games, POKER, Strategy
Another seminar + let’s play Three-card Brag
ALL (newest first), Other games, POKER
Blackjack and poker have slow rolls in common
Odds, Other games, POKER, Strategy
Brunson: A state of mind
Entries by others, Motivation, Other games
Brunson: Dangerous side bets at the poker table
Entries by others, Manipulation, Other games
Brunson: Don’t talk yourself out of the pot
Entries by others, Manipulation, Other games
Brunson: Keep betting until they fold
Entries by others, General, Manipulation, Other games
Brunson: Let the dog die
Entries by others, Ethics, Manipulation, Other games
Brunson: Obeying poker speed limits
Entries by others, General, Other games, POKER
Brunson: Participating in the party
Entries by others, Other games, Psychology
Brunson: Proving your poker prowess takes time
Entries by others, Image, Manipulation, Other games
Brunson: Staying in action
Entries by others, Other games
Gambling stupidity: One minute before dawn
Gambling, Other games
Games you can beat + experts destroying bankrolls
Gambling, Odds, Other games
Games you can beat update and two tips
Gambling, General, Other games, POKER1 EXTRA, Strategy, Tips
High-low split secrets, plus great poker factors
ALL (newest first), General, Other games, POKER, Strategy
How to play Caro Hold ’em
Hold 'em, Other games, Rules
1 2 3 5

Everything is everywhere

Any Poker1 page takes you anyplace you want to go!

Poker1 

Megadex

Poker1 universe —
all in one place.

→ Collections
Special Poker1 groups

Poker1 Megadex tools

— main navigation departments —

Collections

Related groups of Poker1 content

↓ Major collections ↓

Gambling  •  Hold 'em  •  Info  •  Life beyond poker

Poker (all)  •  Poker dictionary  •  Poker psychology

Poker statistics  •  Poker strategy  •  Poker tells

Prediction*  •  Shopping  •  Zone 2*

↓ Tip collections ↓

All*  •  Gambling*  •  Life*  •  Poker*  •  Various*

↓ Contributor collections ↓

Brunson  •  Caro  •  McHaffie  •  Wiesenberg  •  Others*

↓ More collections ↓

Poker1 FAQ  •  Poker-tell videos  •  Review of poker lessons

Sunday sessions*  •  Targeted poker quizzes  •  Tuesday sessions

* Any collection followed by an asterisk ( * ) has no entries yet.

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home

Poker1 everything

Browse alphabetically

 

[a-z-listing display=”posts” post-type=”post”]

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home

Poker1 library

Content in categories

A-to-Z     Library     Collections     Top     Home




≡ Content above: Poker1 Phase2a specification ≡

Published by

Mike Caro

Visit Mike on   → Twitter   ♠ OR ♠    → FaceBook

Known as the “Mad Genius of Poker,” Mike Caro is generally regarded as today's foremost authority on poker strategy, psychology, and statistics. He is the founder of Mike Caro University of Poker, Gaming, and Life Strategy (MCU). See full bio → HERE.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Let's make sure it's really you and not a bot. Please type digits (without spaces) that best match what you see. (Example: 71353)