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  #1  
Old 07-27-2005, 10:08 AM
blackaces13 blackaces13 is offline
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Default HoH v.2 pg. 38 on flopping flushes...

I don't understand the following quote referring to the dangers of flopping less than the nut flush:

[ QUOTE ]
Slow-playing a flush when the Ace is on the board is the safest situation; good players will often play Ax suited but are much less likely to play 2 lower suited cards. If the Ace is on the board your chances of facing a DRAW to a better flush go down. (Online weak players love to play any 2 suited cards, so this logic doesn't apply here.)

[/ QUOTE ]

The section refers to flopping the made flush, not a draw. So what does players playing Axs, or any 2 suited as in the case of online players, have to do with facing a DRAW to a better flush?

Perhaps this would make sense if you had 2 low suited connectors and flopped a draw yourself, here you'd rather see the A of your suit on the board for the reasons mentioned in the quote. But if you flop a made flush then you are in danger of redraws if its not the nuts or close to it, and the propensity of the other players to play SUITED cards of any variety has absolutely nothing to do with your hand anymore since it only takes 1 big suited card to wreck your hand when the flop is monotone.

Even mentioning suited hole cards as threats to DRAW OUT on a made flush is an obvious mistake. Did Harrington forget what he was talking about halfway through the paragraph here?
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  #2  
Old 07-27-2005, 12:50 PM
AZnuts AZnuts is offline
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Default Re: HoH v.2 pg. 38 on flopping flushes...

Harrington said this in the sentence prior to what you quoted:

"The danger here is that a player with a high card which matches the board will stick around and draw to a flush that beats you."

So, I think his true sentiment is what you would expect concerning flopping a non-nut flush.

However, his next comment about "Ax suited" maybe is not clear. Perhaps he's saying that "good" players will tend to make flushes with the A suited, but online that's not as true, and therefore you don't have to worry as much slow playing a non-nut flush online? (because your JQs flush will still beat the 56s flush online even when another suited card hits the board).
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  #3  
Old 07-27-2005, 01:04 PM
blackaces13 blackaces13 is offline
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Default Re: HoH v.2 pg. 38 on flopping flushes...

[ QUOTE ]
Harrington said this in the sentence prior to what you quoted:

"The danger here is that a player with a high card which matches the board will stick around and draw to a flush that beats you."

So, I think his true sentiment is what you would expect concerning flopping a non-nut flush.

However, his next comment about "Ax suited" maybe is not clear. Perhaps he's saying that "good" players will tend to make flushes with the A suited, but online that's not as true, and therefore you don't have to worry as much slow playing a non-nut flush online? (because your JQs flush will still beat the 56s flush online even when another suited card hits the board).

[/ QUOTE ]

Yes, but in context the sentences that I quoted are of no relevance whatsoever. Why is he talking about Axs and any 2 suited having DRAWS against my already made flush?

Trust me, I like these books as much as anyone, but as I'm reading them things like this really put me off. To me its pretty clear that the text here is referring to things other than the situation which they are discussing according to the section title. If you mention Axs and any 2 suited as having DRAWS out against you when you FLOP A FLUSH, clearly something is wrong.

I'm simply bringing it up, if its wrong its wrong. Let's not try to make excuses.
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  #4  
Old 07-27-2005, 01:21 PM
AZnuts AZnuts is offline
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Default Re: HoH v.2 pg. 38 on flopping flushes...

My goal in responding to your post was honestly trying to interpret his actual meaning, that is afterall the point of buying and reading his book - to understand what concepts he's conveying. (It has nothing to do with making "excuses").

If you simply want company in finding gotchas and blasting about errors, fine. I'll find other posts to involve myself in.
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  #5  
Old 07-27-2005, 03:06 PM
RowdyZ RowdyZ is offline
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Default Re: HoH v.2 pg. 38 on flopping flushes...

Whats is hard to understand?
IF you have a made flush you face 2 dangers and it might not be wise to slow play it.
1. That someone has a higher flush already
2. That someone has 1 higher card of your suit and can make a higher flush then you if a fourth hits.
Then he says your risk is less if one of the on the board is the Ace because good players might typically play Axs but probably not Kxs and bad players might very weil play Ace anything and beat you on a redraw to higher flush.So if the Ace is out there 2 less things you have to worry about.
Then he points out this doesn't apply online because you will run into bad players who not only play Axs and Axo but ANY 2 suited cards so they might have K3s or some other rag hand to make a higher flush. Not sure how well I have explained it but I understand exactly what he means.

RZ
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  #6  
Old 07-27-2005, 10:35 PM
blackaces13 blackaces13 is offline
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Default Re: HoH v.2 pg. 38 on flopping flushes...

My point is that he's speaking about the dangerous DRAWS out there against your already made flush and talking about SUITED hands. You don't see the problem there?

Why is my 56s "safest" when I flop a flush with an A on the board? It certainly has nothing to do with how often people play Axs or any 2 suited. So why are those hands even mentioned in a paragraph which is specifically about flopping a made flush?
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  #7  
Old 07-27-2005, 10:41 PM
blackaces13 blackaces13 is offline
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Default Re: HoH v.2 pg. 38 on flopping flushes...

[ QUOTE ]

If you simply want company in finding gotchas and blasting about errors, fine. I'll find other posts to involve myself in.

[/ QUOTE ]

I'm simply bringing up an instance in the book that I think is wrong as written, and makes little sense. I even mentioned in my last reply that I like the book. I'm not just knit-picking a typo or something and saying, "look at this". I posted it because if the error lies with me and I'm misinterpreting it then I'd like to know about it.

But if as it appears, I'm not misinterpretting anything then I think I bring up a valid point and by no means do I care to be the one who says, "gotcha". I already paid for the book and it has helped my play. That doesn't mean that it is beyond reproach however and for you to read my first 2 posts in the thread and basically tell me that I'm not worth talking to anymore is completely ridiculous.
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  #8  
Old 07-27-2005, 11:09 PM
RowdyZ RowdyZ is offline
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Default Re: HoH v.2 pg. 38 on flopping flushes...

[ QUOTE ]
My point is that he's speaking about the dangerous DRAWS out there against your already made flush and talking about SUITED hands. You don't see the problem there?

Why is my 56s "safest" when I flop a flush with an A on the board? It certainly has nothing to do with how often people play Axs or any 2 suited. So why are those hands even mentioned in a paragraph which is specifically about flopping a made flush?

[/ QUOTE ]

All I can say is keep reading it really isn't that hard to understand.

RZ
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  #9  
Old 07-28-2005, 12:12 AM
AZnuts AZnuts is offline
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Default Re: HoH v.2 pg. 38 on flopping flushes...

[ QUOTE ]
for you to read my first 2 posts in the thread and basically tell me that I'm not worth talking to anymore is completely ridiculous.

[/ QUOTE ]

Well, I offered a polite, plausible response to your original posted question and your rebuttal was:
[ QUOTE ]
if its wrong its wrong. Let's not try to make excuses.

[/ QUOTE ]

What's ridiculous about not wanting to continue? But, I'll overcome that impulse and add this . . . I've reread Harrington several more times, and find myself agreeing with RowdyZ. It does make sense, just not in the way you would like.

Harrington is mixing two different ideas, first is you flopped and flush and don't want to be outdrawn (which is the main point). The second thought is more of an aside, that with an A of your suit on the board you're less likely to already be beaten by a better made flush.

Granted, the second concept is not about being outdrawn anymore, but still within the topic of flopping a flush and how to play it.

I find myself more comfortable with Harrington's paragraph now than when we started this discussion; although it could be made a touch clearer.

If I've just been making more excuses, I don't know what else to say.
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  #10  
Old 07-28-2005, 02:09 AM
PokrLikeItsProse PokrLikeItsProse is offline
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Default Re: HoH v.2 pg. 38 on flopping flushes...

Warning: I haven't actually bought the book. I think that the passage makes more sense if the parenthetical statement comes before rather than after the sentence about draws.

[ QUOTE ]
Slow-playing a flush when the Ace is on the board is the safest situation; good players will often play Ax suited but are much less likely to play 2 lower suited cards. (Online weak players love to play any 2 suited cards, so this logic doesn't apply here.) If the Ace is on the board your chances of facing a DRAW to a better flush go down.

[/ QUOTE ]

reads much better to some. However, it is a stylistic choice and some feel that insertion of a parenthetical remark detracts from a paragraph's train of thought if inserted in the middle. Personally, I think it could be modified to say that "Online weak players love to play any 2 suited cards or draw to a non-nut flush, so this logic doesn't apply here."
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