Omaha Poker

About

Omaha is a poker game which combines face-down cards, which are given out to each player, and face-up cards, which are communal.. A hand in Omaha needs to consist of two cards that were given face-down and three cards that were given face-up.

There are four betting rounds in a game of Omaha. Some games of Omaha are played with limits. This section will explain how to play a game of High Omaha, with a limit.

How to play the Game

Button and Blinds

Before a game of Omaha begins, the dealer position needs to be given to one of the players. A round disk called “button” picks the dealer for each hand, so that all the players around the table get to be dealers at some point of the game. The button rotates clockwise.
Once the button has chosen a dealer, “blinds” are posted. These are bets which are made before the cards are dealt to the players. The player sitting to the left of the dealer will post the “small blind”, which will amount to half of the minimum bet. The player sitting left of the small blind will then post the “big blind”, which will amount to the minimum bet.

The Rounds

Once both blinds are posted, the actual game begins. The dealer gives out four cards, faced down, to each of the players. He gives the first card to the small blind, and the last card to himself.
The player on the left of the big blind starts the first betting round. The round goes clockwise, and finishes at the big blind.

The player has the option of calling, thus matching the bet made by the big blind, raising that bet or folding and dropping out of the hand. In Limited Omaha the bets taken on the first and second rounds have a low limit minimum to them, and the bets taken on the third and fourth rounds have a high limit minimum bet.

After the first round of bets is finished, the dealer puts on the table the “flop” cards: three communal cards, put face-up. The player to the left of the dealer starts the second round of bets.

After the second round ends, a fourth community card is put face-up on the table. This card is call the “Turn”. The third round of betting takes place.

Last Round and Showdown

The dealer then deals out the fifth and last card, faced up, otherwise know as the “river”. The number of raises which may be made at the final round is usually limited up to three or four. If, however, it’s a “heads-up” play, meaning that only two players are left. then there will not be a limit to the number of raises.
Following the final bet will be a showdown. The first player to show his hand is always the last player who showed strength when making a bet. A hand of Omaha must consist of two “hole” cards, which were given to the player faced down, and three communal cards, which were set on the board face-up. After the showdown, one player will collect the pot.

Joining a Table

If you wish to join a poker table which is already playing Omaha, you need to put in the pot an amount equivalent to the big blind. After doing this you may join the game, and when it’s your turn to be the big blind you need to bet the same amount again. You also have the possibility of waiting to join in until the position of big blind rotates to your seat. However, if you sit in a game and miss three blind rotations, you will be asked to leave the table.

Strategy

The most important thing to think about in a split pot game is the wide spread in profit between winning just half the pot vs. winning (or “scooping”) it all. – It ends up being a lot more than just double the amount.

Scooping the pot can build a healthy addition to your stack of chips. Getting half hardly puts you ahead of where you were before you started playing the hand.

A skilled Omaha Poker player will usually only play starting hands that have a solid chance of winning both ways.

Omaha is a game of “nuts”. There are numberous players with numerous cards finding so many reasons to play. A final hand with a pretty good high and a fairly good low can easily get clobbered by nut hands both ways. So after the flop or maybe the turn, if it looks like you don’t have an almost certain nut for one end and a good shot at the other, your best bet is to fold up and wait for the next hand.

Tips

A Pair is more of a burden than an advantage. If one of the Pair is a communal card of equal value as one your hidden pocket low cards, this means that your hidden pocket card won’t end up giving you a low-hand advantage.

Even when there are less than four players at the table, you still end up losing money if the pot is quartered.

Decide quickly if you are eligible to play the low hand, and adjust your betting accordingly.

If you have a strong high hand after the flop, it is recommended that you play aggressively right through to the end. This ensures that you have a good chance at taking at least half of the winnings.

Omaha Hi-Lo Poker

Omaha Hi/Lo has become in recent years one of the most popular poker games, due to its fast-action nature and the big pots which can be won in a game.

Omaha Hi/Lo is a form of Omaha poker, in which the pot may be split between two players: the player with the highest ranking hand and the player with the lowest ranking hand. The game is also know as Omaha Eight Or Better, because a low hand should consist only of cards that rank eight or lower. If no player has a qualified low hand, the whole pot is given to the player with the highest ranking hand.

Like regular Omaha, four cards are given to the players face down and five cards are communal cards, put on the table faced up. A hand in Omaha must consist of two face down cards and three face up cards. A poker player may try and win both parts of the pot by succeeding in forming both the high hand and the low hand, using different card combinations.

How to play a game of Omaha Hi/Lo:

Button and Blinds

Before a game of Omaha begins, the dealer position needs to be given to one of the players. A round disk called “button” picks the dealer for each hand, so that all the players around the table get to be dealers at some point of the game. The button rotates clockwise. Once the button has chosen a dealer, “blinds” are posted. These are bets which are made before the cards are dealt to the players. The player sitting to the left of the dealer will post the “small blind”, which will amount to half of the minimum bet. The player sitting left of the small blind will then post the “big blind”, which will amount to the minimum bet. So if you are playing a $5-$10 game, the small blind will be $2.5 and the big blind will be $5.

The Rounds

Once both blinds are posted, the actual game begins. The dealer gives out four cards, faced down, to each of the players. He gives the first card to the small blind, and the last card to himself. The player on the left of the big blind starts the first betting round. The round goes clockwise, and finishes at the big blind.
The player has the option of calling, thus matching the bet made by the big blind, raising that bet or folding and dropping out of the hand. The bets taken on the first and second rounds have a low limit minimum to them, and the bets taken on the third and fourth rounds have a high limit minimum bet. So if you are playing a $5-$10 game, the minimum bet for the first two rounds is $5 and the minimum bet for the last two rounds is $10.

After the first round of bets is finished, the dealer puts on the table the “flop” cards: three communal cards, put face-up. The player to the left of the dealer starts the second round of bets.

After the second round ends, a fourth community card is put face-up on the table. This card is call the “Turn”. The third round of betting takes place.

Last Round and Showdown

The dealer then deals out the fifth and last card, faced up, otherwise know as the “river”. The number of raises which may be made at the final round is usually limited up to three or four. If, however, it’s a “heads-up” play, meaning that only two players are left. then there will not be a limit to the number of raises.
Following the final bet will be a showdown. The first player to show his hand is always the last player who showed strength when making a bet. A hand of Omaha must consist of two cards which were given to the player faced down, and three communal cards, which were set on the board face-up.

After the showdown the pot is either split in two and given to the highest hand and the lowest hand, or, if there is no qualified low hand, it will be given all to the highest hand. A player may try to win both halves of the pot by using different card combinations to compile both the high hand and the low hand.

In case of tied hands, the pot will be split. For example, if there is one high hand and two low hands, the high hand will receive half of the pot and each of the low hands will receive a quarter of the pot. (This is called “getting quartered”, because the player received only a quarter of the pot.)

Joining a Table

If you wish to join a poker table which is already playing Omaha Hi/Lo, you need to put in the pot an amount equivalent to the big blind. After doing this you may join the game, and when it’s your turn to be the big blind you need to bet the same amount again. You also have the possibility of waiting to join in until the position of big blind rotates to your seat. However, if you sit in a game and miss three blind rotations, you will be asked to leave the table. If you put the blind in the pot but “disappear” when it’s your turn to act, your hand will be disqualified and you will not get your money back.

A Qualified Low Hand

A low hand in Omaha Hi/Lo must consist of cards which rank eight or below. A pair disqualifies a low hand. The Ace card, which may be used as the highest card in the deck, may also be used as the lowest card on deck, ranking one. The best low hand in Omaha Hi/Lo is called the “wheel”, and it is a straight of Ace to 5.
If two players show a low hand, the winner is the player who’s highest card is lower. For example, player A has a hand of 7, 5, 4, 3, 2 and player B has a hand of 8, 6, 5, 3, 2. Player A is the winner because his highest card, a 7, is lower than his opponents highest card, an 8.

If two low hand players tie in their highest card, than the next highest card is the deciding card. For example, player A has a hand of 8, 6, 5, 2, Ace and player B has a hand of 8, 6, 4, 3, 2. The first two high cards, the 8 and 6, are tied. So the next high card is the determining card. Player A has a 5 and player B a 4, therefore player B has the winning hand. (Sometimes players get confused in such situations because they see that player A has the lowest ranking card, which is an Ace. So it’s important to remember that the deciding factor is the highest card in the hand, not the lowest.)

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