fwiw, i had about 20%
equity on the turn... so basically i was calling off $40 to win about $54 Sklansky bucks. i have LOTS of outs other than the deuces. theoretically two aces (both out, actually), two queens, four sevens, AND four dueces (two of those out) to take some or all of the pot.
furthermore, if i wasn't willing to take this line, then i should NOT have reraised pf, imo.
i have also been thinking a lot about AA hands recently. Aisthesis made a lot of good posts regard AAxx hands in plo, and a lot of it carries over to plo8 -- esp. with hands like this. check out the pf equity:
http://twodimes.net/h/?z=1626190
pokenum -mc 500000 -o8 as 4d ah qc - ac ts 6c 2d - 8h ad kc 2h
Omaha Hi/Low 8-or-better: 500000 sampled boards
cards scoop HIwin HIlos HItie LOwin LOlos LOtie EV
As Qc 4d Ah 144282 238901 258901 2198 54411 119591 7638 0.423
Ts Ac 6c 2d 57379 133848 362592 3560 19915 41369 180591 0.297
Kc Ad 8h 2h 62471 123691 372749 3560 2460 58839 180591 0.279
i like this situation, and notice how my equity didn't change much after the flop even though i theoretically whiffed. the catch is that one needs to play well post flop if the CB is not an all-in, and one needs to be willing to get stacked and not sweat it. i can do this at the 200s and lower. the question is whether i can do this at the 400s and 1000s. this is why i think one actually needs a decent BR to play plo8 well. you give up A LOT of sklansky bucks if you get passive when you have these chances -- but you need to have the BR to withstand the variance.
anyway, i am CERTAIN that i did not make any mathematical errors in this hand. that doesn't bother me. the question is whether i could have managed the hand in a way that minimized my downside exposure while maintaining my upside potential. ultimately, i am not sure that one gets many chances like this in which people are willing to put so much money in the pot with such relatively weak holdings (e.g., pf and on the flop). the bulk of the money went in when i had at least a 8% equity advantage over my nearest opponent. i'm think that this amount is very significant in a three-way pot and these opportunities are rare.
i guess what i am trying to say is that it IS possible to wait around for hands like AA2Q (or AA3Q and a 2 on the flop) instead of AA4Q before you start rockin' and rollin'. that insures that you'll have nut low potential and the wonders of AA for your high. but if you wait for that -- or if you wait for a set before you start jamming -- are you giving up too much opportunity cost?
it seems like "yes" is the answer. hence the need for BR. i could be wrong, though, so that's why i'm asking.