Omaha hold'em poker
was originally created as a high-hand only poker game, but the
high-low split variant called Omaha/8 or better has become so popular that the
unadorned term Omaha usually now refers to that poker game, while the original
poker game is more
commonly known by the phrase Omaha High. It plays best with 5 to 10
players.
Before undertaking to learn Omaha, be sure that you are familiar with
Texas
hold'em poker as well as with general poker game play and hands, and particularly
ace-to-five low poker hands. In casino play, Omaha is generally played with the same
betting structure as Texas hold'em. Omaha high is particularly well-suited to
pot limit play.
The basic differences between Omaha and Texas hold'em are these: first, each
player is dealt four cards to his private hand instead of two. The betting
rounds and layout of community poker cards are identical. At showdown, each
player's
hand is the best five-card poker hand he can make from exactly three of the five cards
on the board, plus exactly two of his own cards. Unlike Texas hold'em
poker, a player
cannot play only one of his cards with four of the board, nor can he play the
board, nor play three from his hand and two from the board, or any other
combination. Each player must play exactly two of his own cards with exactly
three of the community cards.
In high-low split, each
player, using these rules,
thus makes a separate five-card high poker hand and five-card
ace-to-five low poker hand
(eight-high or lower to qualify), and the pot is split between the high
hand and low hand (which may be the same player). To qualify for low, a player must be able to
play an 8-7-6-5-4 or lower (this is why it is called 8 or better, or simply
Omaha 8. A few casinos play with a 9-low qualifier instead, but this is rare.
Each player can play any two of his four hole cards to make his high hand, and
any two of his four hole cards to make his low hand.
The brief explanation above belies the complexity of the game, so a number of
examples will be useful here to clarify it. The table below shows a five-card
board of community cards at the end of play, and then lists for each player the
initial private four-card hand dealt to him or her, and the best five-card high
poker hand and low poker hand each player can play on showdown:
| Board:
2♠ 5♣ 10♥ 7♦
8♣ |
| Player |
Hand |
High |
Low |
| Alan |
A♠ 4♠ 5♥
K♣ |
5♥
5♣ A♠ 10♥ 8♣
(A♠5♥ + 5♣10♥8♣) |
7♦
5♣ 4♠ 2♠ A♠
(A♠4♠ + 2♠5♣7♦) |
| Brenda |
A♥ 3♥
10♠ 10♣ |
10♠ 10♣ 10♥
8♣ 7♦
(10♠10♣ + 10♥8♣7♦) |
7♦
5♣ 3♥ 2♠ A♥
(A♥3♥ +
2♠5♣7♦) |
| Chuck |
7♣ 9♣ J♠
Q♠ |
J♠ 10♥
9♣ 8♣ 7♦
(J♠9♣ + 10♥8♣7♦) |
9♣ 8♣ 7♣
5♣ 2♠
(Does not qualify for low) |
| Daniel |
4♥
6♥ K♠ K♦ |
8♣ 7♦
6♥ 5♣ 4♥
(4♥6♥ + 5♣7♦8♣) |
8♣ 7♦
6♥ 5♣ 4♥
(4♥6♥ + 5♣7♦8♣) |
| Emily |
A♦ 3♦
6♦ 9♥ |
9♥
8♣ 7♦ 6♦
5♣
(9♥6♦ + 5♣7♦8♣) |
7♦
5♣ 3♦ 2♠ A♦
(A♦3♦ +
2♠5♣7♦) |
In the deal above, Chuck wins the high hand half of the pot
with his J-high straight, and Brenda and Emily split the low
hand half (getting a quarter of the pot each) with 7-5-3-2-A.
Some specific things to notice about Omaha
poker hands are:
In order for anyone to qualify low, there must be at least
three cards of differing ranks 8 or below on the board. For
example, a board of K-8-J-7-5 makes low possible (the best
low poker hand would be A-2, followed by A-3, 2-3, etc.). A board
of K-8-J-8-5, however, cannot make any qualifying low (the
best low poker hand possible would be J-8-5-2-A, which doesn't
qualify).
As in Texas hold'em poker, three or more suited cards on the board
makes a flush possible, but unlike that poker game a player still
needs two of that suit in his hand to play a flush. For
example, with a board of K♠ 9♠ Q♠ Q♥ 5♠, a player with A♠ 2♥
4♥ 5♣ cannot play a flush using his ace; he must play two
cards from his hand and only three from the board. A player
with 2♠ 3♠ K♦ Q♥
can play the spade flush.
Likewise, two pair or trips on the board does not make a
full house for anyone with a single matching card as it does
in Texas hold'em poker. For example, with a board of
J♠ J♦ 9♦ 5♥
9♣, a poker hand of A♠ 2♠ J♥ K♦ cannot play a full house; he can
only use his A-J to play J♠ J♥ J♦ A♠ 9♣, since
he must play
only three of the board cards. A player with 2♣ 5♣ 9♠ 10♠
can use his 9-5 to play the full house 9♠ 9♣ 9♦ 5♥ 5♣. With
trips on the board, the player with the fourth card of that
rank can play quads because any other card in his hand can
act as kicker.
Low poker hands often tie, and high straights occasionally tie as well. It is
possible to win as little as a 14th of a pot (though this is extraordinarily
rare). Winning a quarter of the pot is quite common, and is called
getting quartered,
a term referring to the ancient torture of being
"drawn and quartered."
When four or five low cards appear on the board, it can
become very difficult to read the low poker hands properly.
For
example with a board of 2♦ 6♥ A♣ 5♣ 8♠, the
hand
2♥ 4♠ 5♠ K♦
is playing a 6-5-4-2-A (either his 2-4 with the board's
A-5-6, or his 4-5 with the board's A-2-6--either way makes
the same poker hand). In this situation he is often said to
be playing his "live" 4, that is, his 4, plus some other low card that matches
the board but still makes a low hand because the one on the board isn't needed.
A player with 3♠ 5♠ 10♥ J♦ is playing a "live" 3, for a low
hand of 6-5-3-2-A, which
makes a better low. However, a player with 3♣ 7♦ Q♦ Q♠
can only play 7-5-3-2-A low; even though he has a "live" 3, he
must play two low cards from his hand, and so he must play
his 7-3, and cannot make a 6-high low poker hand.
Starting poker hands with three or four cards of one rank are very
bad. In fact, the worst possible poker hand in the game is 2♠ 2♣
2♥ 2♦! Since the only possible combination of two cards from
this hand is 2-2, it is impossible to make low; since no
deuce remains to appear on the board, it will be impossible
to make three deuces or deuces full, and anyone with any
matching card to the board will make a higher pair. Likewise, starting with four cards of one suit makes it less
likely that you will be able to make a flush.
Variations
Sometimes the high-low split poker game is played with a 9-high
qualifier instead of 8-high. It can also be played with five
cards dealt to each player instead of four. In that case,
the same rules for making a poker hand apply: exactly two from the
player's hand, and exactly three from the board.
In the game of Courcheval
Poker, popular in Europe, instead of
betting on the initial four cards and then flopping three
community cards for the second round, the first community
card is dealt before the first betting round, so that each
player has four private cards and the single community card
on his first bet. Then two more community cards are dealt,
and play proceeds exactly as in Omaha poker.
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