In case you haven’t figured it out by now probability is a huge factor in the games of Texas Hold Em. The players of the game use the odds to figure out the actions. The chances of actually finishing a flush or a straight are based on odds. Odds will also determine the flush or the straight or getting an over card or even flop to set match your hold cards. By understanding what the odds are can help you play better.
Read these terms and see if you know what any of them mean. If not then get to know them, they can help become a better player.
Outs: This is the number of cards that are left in the deck that can actually improve your hand
Pot Odds: These are odds that you get when you figure out the current size of the pot vs. your next call.
Bet Odds: These are odds that you get in return of a result of evaluating the number of callers to raise.
Implied Odds: The odds that you are getting after the assumed result of betting for the remainder of the hand. The game of Texas Hold Em uses the Odds and the Pot Odds most commonly. If you really want to know about odds it could increase your chance of winning. Here is how you can figure out your odds.
If you want to know what the chances are of getting a Jack on the turn, then what you would do is figure out the number of out and then divides the number of cards in the deck. For example, there are 2 more Jacks in the 47 cards that are left; you have already seen 5 cards that bring you to 47 cards. You have the other 2 jacks as your pocket cards. The answer is 2/47 then covert to a decimal which is .0426 which is roughly 4.3 percent chance of getting a jack.
Maybe you don’t like those odds but you want to find out what the chances are getting the jack as the river card. Now there are still 2 jacks left but now there is no card less and the total cards are 46 so it is now 2/46 which is still close to 4.3 percent. Because only one more card left the deck the odds did not change much.
Pot odds are easy to figure out; with the pot odds you are comparing the outs or your chance of winning to the size of the pot. The chance of winning is better than the ratio of pot size to a bet. If the pot is less then you have bad pot odds.
For example, if you have a $5/$10 hold em game and you have a Jack-Ten facing one player on the turn. The boards has a 2, 5 9 and a Queen the river card is the only card left all you need is an 8 or a King to get a straight because you need an 8 with 46 cards left then you have a 4 in 6 chance of getting the 8.