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23 Comments - you say something?


  • 19 January 20128:31 pm 1segundo

    First of all you have to read your oponent and try to guess what is his hand… than you aply the odds and compare to see who (you or him) has the most probability to win, thats why its important besides it is really hard and boring for someones.

  • 19 January 20129:19 pm Pomonoli

    and why do we have to know this? lol.. and what are the chances of getting a four of a kind with a pocket, and what are the chances of getting royal flush with QK suited and what are the chances of getting a straight flush with 23 suited and what with A2 suited?? why don’t you tell us that?

  • 19 January 201210:05 pm RussellsParadox

    @bigzacaq actually the ODDS are 649739 to 1.

  • 19 January 201210:16 pm sienipata

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  • 19 January 201210:44 pm DarkCloudedSoul

    Pardon my ignorance, as I am new to the sport of poker, but how does knowing this actually help you? Is it supposed to help you decide when to fold or bet to the river?

  • 19 January 201211:38 pm MrLoouie86

    dont worry i got it lol

  • 20 January 201212:06 am MrLoouie86

    why u multiply there by 3/51?

  • 20 January 201212:58 am bigzacaq

    1 in 649740 hands

  • 20 January 20121:10 am USERNAMEKLEMPTOR

    what are the odds od ROYAL FLUSH?

  • 20 January 20121:35 am hyppEreL

    they say the chance of getting any pocket pair , not two 9`s.

  • 20 January 20121:44 am lostcause31

    Because a physicist clearly trumps any other field that would utilize math.

  • 20 January 20121:52 am vaico

    La probabilidad de sacar CUALQUIER PAR es la misma, no porque en la carta diga “A” en vez de “9” va a cambiar la probabilidad…

  • 20 January 20122:35 am notengonickcojones

    what are u talking about? stupid, i’m physicist don’t try to teach me anything.

  • 20 January 20122:58 am chadkwong

    ANY pocket pair is 5.8..

  • 20 January 20123:00 am notengonickcojones

    the chance of getting two 9 is: 4/52 * 3/51 wich is approx: 0,5%.
    the chance of getting two pairs, no matter what pair, is: 3/51 wich is approx: 5.9% or 1 every 16 hands. don’t trust these videos if u want money, look for a course in mathematics.

  • 20 January 20123:30 am jmb765

    Yeah, I see you’re right. It was just a quick reply at the time, I don’t guess I actually stopped to think about it. Thanks man.

  • 20 January 20123:43 am SuperChuck3

    chance, can’t* sorry for the spelling

  • 20 January 20124:16 am SuperChuck3

    The change of getting two 9’s is 1/221, lol, same as Aces. You can just double it to get your fraction right. The change of getting any pocket pair is 100% of getting any card (example a Jack), and then there’s 3 Jacks left for the 2nd card, and 51 cards left in the deck. 3/51 = 1/17 change of any Pocket pair.

  • 20 January 20124:54 am SuperChuck3

    1/17 chance of getting pockets, 13 different pocket hands 17*13=221, 1/221 of getting 1 certain pocket pair (example A’s). But she said 1/222, so they obvioiusly rounded at once point when they put it to decimals, no biggie.

  • 20 January 20125:36 am jmb765

    Well, she referred to pocket pairs first, which has a fairly good percentile, but when she went on to the pocket aces, she said something like 1/222 hands you’ll get it. She referred to it because it is the best possible pocket pair you can have, and because there are only 4 of those cards in the deck, the chances of you getting those SPECIFIC cards are that ratio. The first time she mentioned it, she was talking about pocket pairs in general.

  • 20 January 20126:35 am djax4mvp

    no it wouldn’t, if nobody had what u were looking for than ur odds would increase. the odds stay the same.

  • 20 January 20127:11 am djax4mvp

    yeah but their is only 3 nines if u already have one.

  • 20 January 20127:28 am saintsrulethegay

    no it meant any pocket pair, not necaserily a pair of 9’s but they just used that as an example for a pocket pair


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