Kanetuck
Legend
Bronze Level
It seems like almost every time I hit trips on the flop, there is a flush draw. And quite often three of the same suit on the turn. Anyone else noticing a similar pattern? I haven't figured the odds of having a two toned flop, so maybe that is just higher than I think it should be.
It doesn't seem to matter what room, just seems to be a situation that I find myself in frequently.Hello friend, and so are the odds on the game, not now my past me, but I want to know in which room you happened. Greetings.
It seems like almost every time I hit trips on the flop, there is a flush draw. And quite often three of the same suit on the turn. Anyone else noticing a similar pattern? I haven't figured the odds of having a two toned flop, so maybe that is just higher than I think it should be.
I was thinking that might be the case, thank you for posting those percentages.Flop all of 1 suit about 5 %, two suited cards 55 %, none suited 45 %. Since the board flops two suited 55 % of the time I think that answers your question.
Very true, plus at the stakes I play, good chance someone calls anyway and gets lucky. Certainly a hand I like to have, but also much harder to fold, so easy to get stacked.When this happens, you have to alter your play a little bit. You have to ensure that your play makes it marginally unprofitable for your opponents while keeping it tempting for them. But you can’t get in the habit of trying to bet people off of draws, because you will lose tons of value in the long run. Remember: while they have 8 or 9 outs to hit their flush, you still have 7 to make a boat (including maybe one of their flush cards), and your hand will always have more to hit after the turn.