In omaha, in any spot where you know REGARDLESS what happens you're putting your money in on the next street, AND you have some sort of made hand, you should push all in. Here, if a pair falls on the turn, you're golden, if a low falls, you have low and a ten card draw to win high and scoop. If a high card falls (your opponent's only real safe card, other than perhaps a 2 or 3), you still have quarter of the deck to scoop on the turn plus another 15 or so outs for low, and so obviously have to call for such a small amount on the turn.
The fact you have to ask whether you should call on the turn is slightly worrying; folding there would be beyond abysmal, so you really should be able to answer that question there yourself! At this point, even if you ONLY have the set of aces, and no low, you should call for as much as about 40% of the pot bet (i.e. if there's 100 in the middle and he bets 40, you should call) because you have ten cards to win it on a scoop, with no low out. With the additional equity of having a low draw to make a probable half (or at least quarter) of the pot that last $15 is a fairly easy call. You can call a pot-sized raise on this turn, with 20-25% shot at scooping and probably around 35-45% equity on average against your opponent with a flush, depening on him holding low cards or not.
You also need to put in the amount of money each player has in the pot when you ask a question! I'm guessing here that there's about $30 in the pot by the turn when your opponent puts in the $15, but that's only a guess. You should make clear how much money the players have at the start of the hand, and/or the amount in the pot at each street. Omaha, and PLO8 especially, is a game that relies almost entirely on pot odds, which is dependent on stack and pot sizes, not just cards. Keep working on the mathematics of the game and you'll be winning very solidly before long!
In this hand you just got unlucky. Next time on that flop, do everything you can to get as much money in the pot as possible, especially if there's multi-way action.
Hope this helps! And welcome!
Monk
xxxxxStatistics: Posted by Felonius_Monk — Mon Jun 06, 2005 12:59 pm
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