“Bad Chief G!” I shouted at the poor stupid dog
Odds, POKER, Tests
Another multiple-choice test
ALL (newest first), Bankroll, General, Manipulation, POKER, Psychology, Strategy, Tests
Death of a friend and a one-question quiz
ALL (newest first), POKER, Tests
Fast 2014-09-26: Hold ’em logic puzzle #1
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Hold 'em, POKER, Tests
Our paradox resolved!
Calculation, Gambling, General, Other games, POKER1 EXTRA, Strategy, Tests
Play the hold ’em insurance game? It’s your money!
Calculation, Odds, POKER, Statistics, Strategy, Tests
Review of poker lessons learned (quizzes): Index
Tests
Review of poker lessons learned: Quiz 1
General, Hold 'em, Tests
Review of poker lessons learned: Quiz 2
General, Strategy, Tests
Review of poker lessons learned: Quiz 3
ALL (newest first), General, POKER, Strategy, Tests
Review of poker lessons learned: Quiz 4
ALL (newest first), Image, POKER, Tests
Review of poker lessons learned: Quiz 5
ALL (newest first), General, POKER, Strategy, Tests
Review of poker lessons learned: Quiz 6
ALL (newest first), General, POKER, Strategy, Tests
Review of poker lessons learned: Quiz 7
ALL (newest first), General, Hold 'em, Image, Manipulation, POKER, Strategy, Tells, Tests
Targeted poker quiz 01: 7-stud (beginner)
Other games, Statistics, Tests
Targeted poker quiz 02: Hold ’em (beginner)
Hold 'em, Odds, Tests
Targeted poker quiz 03: Omaha-8 (beginner)
Odds, Other games, Tests
Targeted poker quiz 04: Psychology (beginner)
Psychology, Tests
Targeted poker quiz 05: Odds (beginner)
Odds, Tests
Targeted poker quiz 06: Opponents (beginner)
General, Motivation, Psychology, Tests

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 ≡

Why suited hold ’em starting hands often matter


Note: Not at the old Poker1 site. A version of this entry was originally published (1993) in Card Player magazine.


All this talk about hold ’em starting hands being only slightly better if suited than unsuited amuses me. The fact is, hold’em starting hands are a whole lot better if suited.

I’ll bet I know how the misconception came about. A few players began to use computers to put a hand like

A♣ K♠

heads up against two random cards. It won about 65 percent of the time Then they changed the hand to

A♣ K♣

and ran that against two random cards. Now it won about 67 percent of the time, and they scratched their heads, muttering, “Hey, there’s hardly any difference!” Soon the “secret” was out that a suited starting hand was only slightly better than an unsuited one.

The real truth about suited cards. Unfortunately, this new conclusion was wrong. Here’s the problem. By measuring A-K against just one other random hand, you’re unwittingly selecting an example in which the suited cards are least likely to matter.

Remember: (1) With fewer foes, it’s less important that your starting hand be suited, because you’re more likely to win without a flush; (2) The larger your ranks, the less likely you are to need a flush, because big pairs often win; (3) With small ranks against many foes, a surprisingly large percentage of your profit comes from flushes.

An interesting example. To use a far-fetched example, say you decided to play recklessly. Your opponents held these hold’em starting hands: 7♣ 7♠, Q♣ J♣, K♥ 9♦, A♠ K♦.

If you entered with J-6 unsuited, you’d win just seven percent of the time. But make that J-6 suited and you’d win 12.5 percent of the time (still unprofitable, by the way). The final truth: the more opponents, the more valuable the suits; the lower your ranks, the more valuable the suits, and; on average having suited cards is more valuable than many skillful players think. — MC

“Bad Chief G!” I shouted at the poor stupid dog
Odds, POKER, Tests
Another multiple-choice test
ALL (newest first), Bankroll, General, Manipulation, POKER, Psychology, Strategy, Tests
Death of a friend and a one-question quiz
ALL (newest first), POKER, Tests
Fast 2014-09-26: Hold ’em logic puzzle #1
ADDED FAST, ALL (newest first), Hold 'em, POKER, Tests
Our paradox resolved!
Calculation, Gambling, General, Other games, POKER1 EXTRA, Strategy, Tests
Play the hold ’em insurance game? It’s your money!
Calculation, Odds, POKER, Statistics, Strategy, Tests
Review of poker lessons learned (quizzes): Index
Tests
Review of poker lessons learned: Quiz 1
General, Hold 'em, Tests
Review of poker lessons learned: Quiz 2
General, Strategy, Tests
Review of poker lessons learned: Quiz 3
ALL (newest first), General, POKER, Strategy, Tests
Review of poker lessons learned: Quiz 4
ALL (newest first), Image, POKER, Tests
Review of poker lessons learned: Quiz 5
ALL (newest first), General, POKER, Strategy, Tests
Review of poker lessons learned: Quiz 6
ALL (newest first), General, POKER, Strategy, Tests
Review of poker lessons learned: Quiz 7
ALL (newest first), General, Hold 'em, Image, Manipulation, POKER, Strategy, Tells, Tests
Targeted poker quiz 01: 7-stud (beginner)
Other games, Statistics, Tests
Targeted poker quiz 02: Hold ’em (beginner)
Hold 'em, Odds, Tests
Targeted poker quiz 03: Omaha-8 (beginner)
Odds, Other games, Tests
Targeted poker quiz 04: Psychology (beginner)
Psychology, Tests
Targeted poker quiz 05: Odds (beginner)
Odds, Tests
Targeted poker quiz 06: Opponents (beginner)
General, Motivation, Psychology, Tests

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)