Last time I explored the problem of playing medium-strength hands on an untextured board depending on the style of your foe. But how should we adapt our game when the board is textured? Let’s say you hold A♣-K♥- 9♣-3♥ and the flop comes A♠-8♦-3♠.
The problem here is that two spades have fallen. Your primary obligation is to protect your hand, so you need to make sure of two things: 1) if your opponent does have a flush draw, you make him pay for it, and 2) you protect yourself against the nasty decision that will arise on the turn if a spade hits.
Poker Strategy: Omaha
Poker strategy
Talking texture

A textured board needn’t make your decisions more difficult, provided you’ve profiled your opponent
How your opponent’s post-flop pot-limit Omaha playing style should drive every decision you make
Email a Friend
To send this story to your friend, please fill the form below. You may also add your own message.
Advertisement
![[ PokerPlayer ]](http://photos.pokerplayer.co.uk/images/poker_player_logo.gif)
