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Pay Off
- To call a bet when the bettor is representing a hand that you can't
beat, but the pot is sufficiently large to justify a call anyway.
Example: "He played it exactly like he made the flush, but I had top set
so I paid him off."
Play the Board - To show down a hand
in Texas Holdem when your cards don't make a hand any better than is shown on
the board. For instance, if you have 2 2,
and the board is 4 4 9 9 A
(no flush possible), then you must "play the board" : the best possible
hand you can make doesn't use any of your cards. Note that if you play
the board, the best you can do is split the pot with all remaining
players.
Pocket - Your unique cards that only
you can see. For instance, "He had pocket sixes" (a pair of sixes), or
"I had ace-king in the pocket."
Pocket Pair - A
Texas Holdem starting hand
with two cards of the same rank, making a pair. Example: "I had big
pocket pairs seven times in the first hour. What else can you ask for ?"
Post - To put in a blind bet,
generally required when you first sit down in a card room game. You may
also be required to post a blind if you change seats at the table in a
way that moves you away from the blinds. Example: a player leaves one
seat at a table and takes another in such a way that he moves farther
from the blinds. He is required to post an extra blind to receive a
hand. See also "extra blind."
Pot-Limit - A version of poker in
which a player may bet up to the amount of money in the pot whenever it
is his turn to act. Like no-limit, this is a very different game from
limit poker.
Pot Odds - The amount of money in the
pot compared to the amount you must put in the pot to continue playing.
For example, suppose there is $60 in the pot. Somebody bets $6, so the
pot now contains $66. It costs you $6 to call, so your pot odds are
11:1. If your chance of having the best hand is at least 1 out of 12,
you should call. Pot odds also apply to draws. For instance, suppose you
have a draw to the nut flush with one card left to come. In this case,
you are about a 4:1 underdog to make your flush. If it costs you $8 to
call the bet, then there must be about $32 in the pot (including the
most recent bet) to make your call correct.
Price - The pot odds you are getting
for a draw or call. Example: "The pot was laying me a high enough price,
so I stayed in with my gutshot straight draw."
Protect
(1) To keep your hand or a chip on your cards. This prevents them from
being fouled by a discarded hand, or accidentally mucked by the dealer.
(2) To invest more money in a pot so blind money that you've already put
in isn't "wasted." Example: "He'll always protect his blinds, no matter
how bad his cards are."
Quads - Four of a kind.
Ragged - A flop (or board) that
doesn't appear to help anybody very much. A flop that came down
J♦-6♥-2♣
would look ragged.
Rainbow - A flop that contains three
different suits, thus no flush can be made on the turn. Can also mean a
complete five card board that has no more than two of any suit, thus no
flush is possible.
Raise - To increase the amount of the
current bet.
Rake - An amount of money taken out of
every pot by the dealer. This is the card room's income.
Rank - The numerical value of a card
(as opposed to its suit). Example: "jack," "seven."
Represent - To play as if you hold a
certain hand. For instance, if you raised before the flop, and then
raised again when the flop came ace high, you would be representing at
least an ace with a good kicker.
Ring Game - A regular poker game as
opposed to a tournament. Also referred to as a "live" game since actual
money is in play instead of tournament chips.
River - The fifth and final community
card, put out face up, by itself. Also known as "fifth street."
Metaphors involving the river are some of poker's most treasured
cliches, e.g., "He drowned in the river."
Rock - A player who plays very tight,
not very creatively. He raises only with the best hands. A real rock is
fairly predictable: if he raises you on the end, you can throw away just
about anything but the nuts.
Runner - Typically said
"runner-runner" to describe a hand that was made only by catching the
correct cards on both the turn and the river. Example: "He made a
runner-runner flush to beat my trips." See also "backdoor."
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