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| | Poker.Net - Shifting From HoldEm |
 | | Ideally, of course, you should learn to read your own hand—after all, all those bets and raises that got you to the river were based on your own understanding—but tabling your hand costs you very little, compared to what you stand to gain. |
 | | This advice applies even more strongly when a straight is possible, because good Omaha players like to play hands wherein all four cards "work together." If an Omaha board finishes up with a nine, a jack, and a queen on it, you can (in a high-only game) be fairly sure that someone has a straight. |
 | | In Omaha, position still matters, but far less: the pure value of your cards is more important. |
| www.poker.net /headlines/articles/shiftingfromholdem.htm (816 words) |
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