In rare cases, I had to catch my hand on the river. Much less than on the flop or turn. If the turn can still be hit cheaply, then the river gets expensive in most cases and the chances of getting something on the river are small.
Well, it really kinda depends on how you play the hand. If you've played an 87s and turn an open-ender w/a flush-draw, as well, then you've got plenty of outs. If you flop a set and are hoping to beat a straight on the river by pairing the board or making quads then your outs are slightly lower. If you're straight-up racing in a flip situation then you're grasping at straws. Trying not to get into those situations is the main key, here, but hey that's where the action is, right?
Don't get me wrong, here. I play for the river as much as the next average grinder but Itry to make it to where the odds are in my favor. GL.
it all depends on how we play our hand if we are dealt a cooler, for example KK vs AA and on the river we got K then this is pure luck) and if we get an all-in from the opponent on the turn and we have a nut flush draw, overcards and good pot odds then math comes to the fore