Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Omaha hold 'em

Encyclopedia : O : OM : OMA : Omaha hold 'em



 

Omaha hold 'em (or Omaha holdem or simply Omaha) is a community card poker game ("flop game") similar to Texas hold 'em, where each player is dealt four cards and must make his best hand using exactly two of them, plus exactly three of the five community cards.

Explanation

In North American casinos, the unadorned term "Omaha" can refer to several games. Typically, it refers to the high-low split variant played with fixed limits: also called "Omaha eight-or-better," "Omaha Hi-Lo," "Omaha/8" and several other similar names. The original game is more commonly known as "Omaha High Only."

In Europe, "Omaha" still typically refers to the high version of the game, usually played pot limit. Pot Limit Omaha is often abbreviated as "PLO." Pot-limit and no-limit Omaha eight-or-better can be found in some casinos and online, though no-limit is more rare.

It is often said that Omaha is a game of the 'nuts', i.e. the best possible high or low hand, because it frequently takes "the nuts" to win a showdown. It is also a game where between the cards in his hand and the community cards a player may have drawing possibilities to multiple different types of holdings. For example, a player may have both a draw to a flush and a full house using different combinations of cards. At times, the players themselves have trouble figuring out what draws and possibilities that their cards hold.

The basic differences between Omaha and Texas hold 'em are these: first, each player is dealt four cards to his private hand instead of two. The betting rounds and layout of community cards are identical. At showdown, each player's hand is the best five-card hand he can make from exactly three of the five cards on the board, plus exactly two of his own cards. Unlike Texas hold 'em, a player cannot play only one of his cards with four of the board, nor can he play the board, nor play three from his hand and two from the board, or any other combination. Each player must play exactly two of his own cards with exactly three of the community cards.

Some specific things to notice about Omaha hands are:

Omaha Hi/Lo

In high-low split, each player, using these rules, thus makes a separate five-card high hand and five-card ace-to-five low hand (eight-high or lower to qualify), and the pot is split between the high and low (which may be the same player). To qualify for low, a player must be able to play an 8-7-6-5-4 or lower (this is why it is called "eight-or-better", or simply "Omaha/8"). A few casinos play with a 9-low qualifier instead, but this is rare. Each player can play any two of his four hole cards to make his high hand, and any two of his four hole cards to make his low hand.

The brief explanation above belies the complexity of the game, so a number of examples will be useful here to clarify it. The table below shows a five-card board of community cards at the end of play, and then lists for each player the initial private four-card hand dealt to him or her, and the best five-card high hand and low hand each player can play on showdown:

Board: 2♠ 5♣ 10♥ 7♦ 8♣
Player Hand High Low
Alan A♠ 4♠ 5♥ K♣ 5♥ 5♣ A♠ 10♥ 8♣ 7♦ 5♣ 4♠ 2♠ A♠
Brenda A♥ 3♥ 10♠ 10♣ 10♠ 10♣ 10♥ 8♣ 7♦ 7♦ 5♣ 3♥ 2♠ A♥
Chuck 7♣ 9♣ J♠ Q♠ J♠ 10♥ 9♣ 8♣ 7♦
Cannot qualify
Daniel 4♥ 6♥ K♠ K♦ 8♣ 7♦ 6♥ 5♣ 4♥ 7♦ 6♥ 5♣ 4♥ 2♠
Emily A♦ 3♦ 6♦ 9♥ 9♥ 8♣ 7♦ 6♦ 5♣ 7♦ 5♣ 3♦ 2♠ A♦

In the deal above, Chuck wins the high-hand half of the pot with his J-high straight, and Brenda and Emily split the low half (getting a quarter of the pot each) with 7-5-3-2-A.

Some specific things to notice about Omaha eight-or-better hands are:

Pot Limit Omaha

Pot Limit Omaha (also called PLO) is popular in Europe, online, and in high-stakes "mixed games" played in some American casinos. It is more often played high only, but can also be played high low. Even more so than Limit Omaha High Low, PLO is a game of drawing, if you are drawing, to the nut hand. For example, second best flushes and straights can be, and frequently are, beaten. Furthermore, because of the exponential growth of the pot size in pot limit play, seeing one of these hands to the end can be very expensive.

Redraws

A great hand to have in PLO is the nuts with a redraw. For example, if the board is Q♠ J♠ T♥, and you have A♠ K♣ Q♣ Q♥, then not only do you have the current nuts (your ace-king), but you also have a redraw with the two queens in your hand because if the board pairs, you will make queens full, or four queens. If your hand is A♠ K♠ Q♣ Q♥ , your hand is even better because you have flush and straight flush redraws as well. In fact, with the Q♠ J♠ T♥ board, A♠ K♠ Q♣ Q♥ is approximately an 80-20 money favorite over a random hand containing ace-king.

Variations

Sometimes the high-low split game is played with a 9-high qualifier instead of 8-high. It can also be played with five cards dealt to each player instead of four. In that case, the same rules for making a hand apply: exactly two from the player's hand, and exactly three from the board.

In the game of Courcheval, popular in Europe, instead of betting on the initial four cards and then flopping three community cards for the second round, the first community card is dealt before the first betting round, so that each player has four private cards and the single community card on his first bet. Then two more community cards are dealt, and play proceeds exactly as in Omaha.

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.


Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: