
Final Table Poker with Phil Gordon on Calculating Odds
Video Description: Get the DVD at http://www.ExpertInsight.com !
This is a clip from Phil's new DVD that offers an easy to understand method for counting outs and calculating odds. This DVD runs for 100 min and has 2 viewing modes for beginner and advanced. It also comes with a FREE Starting Hand Guide and an Odds & Outs Chart. Get the DVD and get inside Phil's mind at http://www.expertinsight.com !
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Because their cards could just as easily include your outs as they could other cards.
You are wrong, not him.
The other player's cards are irrelevant. What!!!
btw if ur playing online plz do give me the site and your nick
tata
The odds that those 16 cards of your opponents include/don't include your outs are the same as on any random 16 cards left in the deck. Making them irrelevant in this calculation.
Also, you calculated odds for 1 card to hit your outs. In poker, there are 2 cards left to be dealt after the flop, so your odds are of course higher.
(Google Taylor Series - have someone explain it to you slowly and repeatedly)
Each turn of the cards is one card and hence one outcome. The odds for each card can be calculated separately and summed to produce the same overall answer - that is, if you can calculate the sum correctly.
Even mindless blabbering automatons should one-day realize that a rule of 4 or rule of 2 is, at best, only an approximation.
Keep yapping!
The other players cards are irrelevant(unless you have seen them.)
After the flop there are 5 known cards.This leaves the possibility of any of 47 different unseen cards that could come on the turn. No one card more or less likely than then next. (Unless it's the card you need, then you have zero chance.)
I mean its like saying you're more likely to get AA heads up because with more player they might have the other aces