|
A lot of people mistakenly try to factor in burn cards and unseen cards when they compute odds. While it is wrong to do so, it can be difficult to explain to people why that is so.
I think I have a way of explaining it that is easy to follow. If it clicks for you, great. If not, oh well.
Assume a heads up, 2 man match without burn cards. You are dealt the 1st and 3rd card, your opponent is dealt the 2nd and 4th card. Cards 5, 6 and 7 form the flop. You have four to a diamond flush. You will hit your flush if, when the deck was shuffled, a diamond landed on either of the 8th or 9th card.
Assume the same situation but there is a PF-burn, pre-turn and pre-river burn. Now cards 6, 7 and 8 form the flop, 10 is the turn and 12 is the river. You will hit your flush if, when the deck was shuffled, a diamond landed on the 10th or 12th card.
Assume you are at a 5 handed table with no burn cards. Cards 11, 12 and 13 form the flop, 14 the turn, 15 the river. You will hit your flush if, when the deck was shuffled, a diamond landed on the 14th or 15th card.
And so it goes, no matter how many people are in the hand, no matter if you burn or not or even how many cards you choose to burn, you will hit your flush if a diamond landed in either of 2 predetermined slots in the deck when it was shuffled; with the only other known piece of information being 4 diamonds and one non-diamond are ineligible because they are in your hand or in the flop.
This is one of the things that makes Hold'em so much easier than a game like 7 card stud. In Hold'em, you know your two cards, then you know three community cards, then you know a community turn and then you know a community river. It makes the odds trivially easy to compute. This is why you can get sheets for Hold'em that will tell you the exact odds of improving to certain hands given you hole cards, then given the flop, then given the turn.
But in 7 card stud, you are constantly learning about entire sets of cards and none of them are community. So the odds of you improving are sliding all over the place based on 2-8 cards getting shown on each of 4 streets. And, as they are not community cards, the odds of your opponent's hands improving are fluctuating wildly. Assume an opponent has four to a flush showing. If you have none of that suit and none of the other 0-20 other face up cards are of that suit, you have to assume that it is very possible that he ahs a flush. However, if between your cards and the other 0-20 face up cards you can acocunt for 8 of the other cards of that suit, then it is significantly less likely.
That is why there are no equivalent sheets of odds for 7 card stud. The odds vary enormously from hand to hand and street to street.
|