Omaha Hi/Lo 8 or Better
by Bill Burton
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There are two versions of Omaha. Omaha High only and Omaha High-Low Eight or Better which is a game where the high hand and low hand splits the pot.
You may hear the split game called Hi-Lo, Omaha 8, or simply Eight or Better. It is all the same game. Hi-Lo seems to be the most popular with the players and you will find more of these games than you will Omaha high only in the card rooms. Low Limit Hi-Lo is gaining in popularity as many of the players like the chance of having a split pot. Because the high and low are splitting the pot there are more players staying in for the River card making many of the pots very large.
Low Hand
In order to have a hand qualify as low there must be no cards higher than
8 in your five card hand. An ace can be used as either high or low. A
flush or straight is ignored when making a low hand. Therefore the lowest
hand is A 2 3 4 5. This hand is also called a "wheel. Since in Omaha
you must use two cards from your hand, there must be three cards on the
board that are eight or lower. If there is no qualifying low hand, the
winner with the highest hand will win the whole pot.
Ace - Deuce
Many players look at their starting four cards and if they see an A-2
they act as if they have just found the Holy Grail. They immediately raise
with this hand which is wrong for several reasons. First, is the fact
that in order to qualify for low there must be three more low cards on
the board. This is not always the case and if three high cards come on
the flop, you are in big trouble. Another reason not to raise pre-flop
with just A-2 is that if an ace or a deuce shows up on the board you hand
will be counterfeited as you no longer can use your A or 2 unless a fourth
low card shows p on the board by the river.
Getting Quartered
The final reason to consider when you raise with A-2 is the fact that
every other player with A-2 will also be in the hand. If you do make your
low instead of getting half the pot, you will get half of the low pot
which is a quarter. Being quartered will cost you money. For this reason,
you should not get into a raising war on the river in a multi-way pot
with low only as one of the other players may also have the low. Example:
There are three players in the hand. You start raising and you end up
putting in and additional $20 in the pot as do the other two players.
There is $60 in the pot from the three of you. One player turns over high
and collects half the pot of $30. The other player turns over a low hand
that ties you. You get $15 apiece even though you have contributed an
additional $20 to the pot. You lost money by raising.
Counterfeited
If you have an Ace and a deuce in you hand and there is an Ace or deuce
on the board, you hand is counterfeited if there are not four low cards.
Since you must use two cards from your hand you will need to have three
different low cards on the board or your hand will not count as low.
Example: You have A-2
The board is: 2 4 5 J Q
You make can't a low hand because the 2 is paired.
Scooping the Pot
Your ultimate goal in Hi-Lo is to scoop the pot. Since you have four cards
in your hand, you can use any combination of two for the high hand and
low hand. You may use two cards for high and two different cards for low.
The ideal situation in Omaha is to have a hand that will win both the
high hand and the low hand. The other way to win the whole pot is to have
the highest hand and have no low hand possible.
Bill Burton's website is: www.billburton.com
Bill Burton is the author of Get the Edge at Low Limit Texas Hold'em and
1000 Best Casino Gambling Secrets. He has been the casino gambling columnist
for About.com since 1998.
This article is published in cooperation with www.contentgambling.com
--#1 source for gambling content online.
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