There
are a few times when you do not have to consider future bets when
assessing your pot odds. The first case occurs when either you or
your opponent is all-in or almost all-in. Obviously, when your opponent
has no more money to bet or you have no more money to call, the last
card will be free. So all you need to do is observe your immediate
pot odds and compare them to your chances of winding up with the best
hand. In the example just given, if either you or your opponent were
all-in when the opponent bet $10 on the flop and you called, it would
be worth drawing to your back-door flush since it would now be a case
of getting 26-to-1 on a 24-to-1 shot. However, you must remember that
the chances of making the hand you are drawing to are not the same
as your chances of winding up with the best hand. You might make your
hand and still lose to a better hand. In the example just given, if
either you or your opponent were all-in when the opponent bet $10
on the flop and you called, it would be worth drawing to your back-door
flush since it would now be a case of getting 26-to-1 on a 24-to-1
shot. However, you must remember that the chances of winding up with
the best hand. You might make your hand and still lose to a better
hand.
There is a second case, similar to the first, when you might call
in close situations even if your effective odds would indicate a fold.
This comes up when you have good reason to think your opponent might
check on the next round. If he does check, you are getting a free
card just as though you or he were all-in. Once again all you need
to consider are your immediate pot odds, since you expect to see two
cards for the price of one. Such situations might come up when you
suspect your opponent has a weak hand or when you think your opponent
might fear to bet on the next round because he interprets your call
to mean you're stronger than you really are, even when you don't catch
the card you need.
Finally, it may sometimes be correct to call to see one card only
when your effective odds indicate a fold. If that card does not make
your hand, you should not call any further bets. These circumstances
usually occur in games where there is a large increase in the bet
from one round to the next. You might, for example, be playing in
a $10-$50 hold ' em game and catch a four-flush on the flop. Your
opponent bets $10 into a $40 pot, and you expect he'll bet $50 on
the next round. To call both bets would mean you were getting effective
odds of 100-to-60, too low for you to contemplate going all the way
with a flush draw. However, you are getting 5-to-1 on your opponent's
first bet, which is greater than the odds against hitting on the next
card (not to mention your potential profits on the last two betting
rounds should you hit the flush). When deciding whether to call for
one card only, all you need to consider are your immediate pot odds
versus your chances of hitting on the next card only.
In most cases, however, when you have a hand that needs to improve,
you must realize that future bets cut down your apparent pot odds
substantially, frequently enough to make you throw the hand away.
Therefore, before deciding to go all the way with a hand, you must
calculate whether the effective odds you are getting by calling several
rounds of betting justify a call now.
|