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Holdem Lesson
6: The Turn
DON'T
STOP BETTING BECUASE A SCARE CARD HITS
Slowing
down on the turn is almost always a huge mistake, especially if nobody
has yet shown any signs that the turn card helped them. For example:
you have AdAh and there's 3 other players who see the flop with you. The
flop comes Kc Tc 6s. You bet this flop, the first player callers,
the next player raises and the third player folds. You reraise, the
original caller to your left calls, and the raiser calls. Now the
turn brings the 8c.

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You
need to bet here. Do not check. While the third suited card might
scare you, in a low limit game you can't be at all sure that either
of the other two players have now completed a flush. It's entirely
possible that the original caller has a hand like AT, and the flop
raiser has something like KJ, in which case you're still ahead. If
you checked at this point instead of betting you run the risk of
letting these worse hands improve on the river for free. Instead,
what you’d really like is for both of these hands to fold now,
and at least one of themprobably the ATwill often do
just that if you bet. By this time the pot has gotten fairly large,
so you’d be happy to take it now. If, however, neither player
has any intention of folding, you at least collect another bet those
times that they continue on with the hand. Again, this point can’t
be overemphasized; if you can’t make them fold, at least charge
them the maximum to continue on.

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If
you're raised on the turn, you'll have been put to a decision.
Against some players you'll have to fold here, and against others
you'll go to the river. But poker, at its core, is a game that
requires its participants to make these tough decisions. If you shy
away from making them by simply checking and calling here, you can't
beat the game in the long run.
Lessons
and quizzes courtesy of
Netbettor.com
- the online poker source for advantage players
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