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Hot Hand #2

I'm back today with the latest in my Hot Hand series of posts, where I describe and review a hand that actually occurred to me or at my table online, and we will discuss various options and strategies along the way as to how the hand should be played, what my opponent is likely to be holding, and possible plans for extracting chips from my opponent while protecting my own chips at the same time.

The setup is the first half-hour of Byron's latest WPBT tournament, a private $26 buyin HORSE mtt on Full Tilt. We're in the second orbit, and we're playing limit Omaha hi-low 8 or better, commonly called O8. Blinds are 40-80, and I am in the big blind with A34T in my hand, including the Ace being suited in clubs with both my 3♣ and my 4♣. The action is folded around to Dr. Pauly, who limps in for 80 chips. Heather then limps for 40 more chips from the small blind, bringing the action to me. Given my second-nut low starting hand with the A3, plus the A4 in case the 3 gets counterfeited on the board, and given my two cards to a straight flush (34 of clubs) as well as my suited Ace that can make a nut flush, this is definitely a hand that is worth seeing a cheap flop with, so I decide to check my option and see a free flop since I had already put in my 80 chips from the big blind.

The flop comes 55Q, with two clubs on the board. So, things are not looking good for anyone to make a low hand here, which is good and bad. It's bad in that I have an A3, a fairly good low, but won't likely get to make use of it here. But it's good as well for a few reasons. First, I don't have to deal with the possibility of losing the low to someone holding A2, often what ends up taking down most low hands in big O8 pots. Secondly, since I have the nut flush draw, I have a good shot of winning the entire pot with the best high hand. I have to be aware, because there is a pair on the board, but the odds of someone holding one of the two remaining 5s, in addition to one of the other three Queens in the deck, are very low.

Maigrey, an excellent HORSE player in her own right with whom I have final tabled the nightly HORSE mtt on full tilt on more than one occasion, checks this flop, and I check along as well since I am hoping to get a free card to my nut flush draw. Pauly bets out for 40 chips, and Maigrey surprises me with a checkraise to 80. Action is to me.

What's your move here? You've got a bet and a check-raise in front of you, and you are holding nothing more than a nut flush draw on a paired board. Call, Raise or Fold?

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