Poker Strategy: Omaha

InsideEdge: Omaha Poker Guide

Head For Omaha - Part 1

Man playing cards wearing shades
In Omaha you must use two - and only two - of your four hold cards in forming your final five-card hand

Many Texas hold'em players are trying their hands at Omaha, but their assumption that they can make the leap easily is often their undoing. So how do you avoid looking like a tenderfoot when you make the switch?

At first glance, taking up Omaha when you already understand Texas hold’em seems easy – just a case of moving from a five community- card game with two hole cards to a five-community-card game with four hole cards.

Yet just as first glances at members of the opposite sex and their apparent attractiveness has led most of us into trouble at one time or another, so too has the hold’em player’s first lustful glance at Omaha. They’re lulled into a false sense of security by their hard-won hold’em knowledge – all too often their understanding of hand values and what’s important in the game leads them to incorrect conclusions in Omaha.

Email a Friend

To send this story to your friend, please fill the form below. You may also add your own message.

Your Email:
Your Friend's Email:
Your Message:

 
Advertisement

SPONSORED LINKS