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2014 World Series of Poker

Event #7: $1,500 Seven-Card Razz
Dias: 1
Event Info

2014 World Series of Poker

Resultados Finais
Campeão
Mão Vencedora
ax3x6x7x9x
Premiação
$121,196
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,500
Premiação
$475,200
Entries
352
Informações do Nível
Nível
27
Limites
40,000 / 80,000
Ante
10,000

Some Razz Strategy to Consider

Nível 2 : 75/150, 25 ante

Earlier today we told you the rules for razz, and now we thought we'd share some strategy information from the same article. Enjoy.

Starting Hands

There are not too many good combinations of starting hands. Low cards, between ace and five, are really good and comparable to hands like {10-}{10-}+ in NL Hold'em. A-2-3 is obviously the best starting hand. With three cards between ace and five you can bet aggressively on third street. If your range increases, for example between ace and seven, you should already play a bit more carefully. Paired hands are usually auto-folds, and playing hands with a card above a nine is -EV in the long run.

It is also very important to pay attention to your up cards. If you hold A-2-7 with ace as your door card, you can easily raise. When holding a good hand, you usually get paid off the most if your higher cards are open. On the other hand, when holding a bad hand like A-K-Q for example, you can still pretend to have a good hand if your Ace is open.

The Up Cards of Your Opponents

Pay attention to the up cards in front of your opponents. If you have the lowest up card in front of you on third street, you know what to do. You have the best open hand and you can raise. You can even do this if your door card is a ten and that ten is the highest of your three cards. As long as it's the lowest door card at the table, you will always be holding the best hand.

You should also react to your opponents getting dealt high cards. If your opponent gets a queen and/or a king on fourth and fifth street, you can often pick up the pot by being aggressive and betting. If your own hole cards are bad, but your open cards are good, you can often pick up the pot with little resistance.

In addition to that you should watch out for opponents with open cards that have the same value as your cards, as this would reduce the chance of you pairing one of your cards on one of the following streets. The more cards you see of the same value, the better. On the other hand, you can also use this information to predict the strength of your opponents hand. If two of your opponents already have an ace as one of their up cards and you yourself have one as well, the chance is pretty low that another opponent will be holding the case ace. Don't only pay attention to the cards of players who are still in the hand, but also try and remember the cards of players who have already folded.

Antes

Razz is an ante game. This means that, before you get dealt any cards, you have to put money in the pot. The game is played with a maximum of eight players per table. If it then gets checked towards you, while the player directly left of you paid the bring-in (and therefore has the highest door card), you can try and steal the pot with antes and bring-in. The same counts if you have the lowest door card at the table. By playing aggressive and betting you can try and pick the pot up right then and there.

Draws

Especially when you start playing marginal hands you need to know when to fold. Chasing a ten-low draw is often not a very good idea. Especially at the lower limits players will often call and seldom fold, so chasing draws or trying to bluff a missed draw could end up being pretty expensive for you.

Tags: Razz strategy

Yevgenyevich Takes on the Prince

Nível 2 : 75/150, 25 ante

Sergei Fomenkov has gotten off to a hot start here in Event #7: $1,500 Seven-Card Razz, which included winning a pot off Jean "The Prince" Gaspard.

We picked up the action on fourth street when Gaspard bet and Fomenkov called, action that would repeat itself on every subsequent street.

Fomenkov: {7-}{3-}{7-}{q-} / {2-}{5-}{6-}
Gaspard: {3-}{a-}{3-}{9-} / {a-}{5-}{8-}

Fomenkov waited for Gaspard to reveal his nine-eight low, and then tabled his seven-six low to take down the pot.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Sergei Fomenkov
Sergei Fomenkov
7,200
Jean Gaspard us
Jean Gaspard
2,575
-1,925
-1,925
WSOP 1X Winner

Tags: Jean GaspardSergei Fomenkov

PokerNews Impromptu: Chris "Fox" Wallace is No Stranger to Razz

Nível 2 : 75/150, 25 ante

Chris "Fox" Wallace used to make his living playing high-stakes razz online, and today he's in the field looking to test his mettle against some of the best in the game. In this interview Wallace talks about the position of razz in the poker world and his strategy coming in.

Tags: PokerNews ImpromptuChris Wallaceaudio

Nível: 2

Limites: 75/150

Ante: 25

1989 WSOP Legends Battle It Out

Nível 1 : 50/100, 75 ante
Don Zewin in earlier WSOP action.
Don Zewin in earlier WSOP action.

The 2014 World Series of Poker marks the 25th anniversary of Phil Hellmuth winning the Main Event. Everyone knows that he defeated Johnny Chan in heads-up play to keep the "Orient Express" from winning his third Main Event in a row, but do you know who came in third?

That would be Don Zewin, who actually finished runner-up to Hellmuth in this very event back in 2012 when the "Poker Brat" won his 12th bracelet.

"It was exciting, but when the end result isn’t first place, it’s just a huge letdown," Zewin previously told PokerNews in an interview. "Everybody was aware Johnny Chan was going for his third title in a row, but I was really tuned in that year, and I wasn’t intimidated at all. When you get that deep in that particular tournament, you’re just tuned in and nothing is really going to rile you."

The 2014 WSOP also marks the 25th anniversary of Frank Henderson's one and only bracelet win. It was at the 20th Annual World Series of Poker that he took down Event #4 $2,500 Pot Limit Omaha w/ rebuys for $184,000. All told the former electrical engineer has amassed 36 cashes for $825,076.

Both Zewin and Henderson are in action today and seated at the same table along with Marco Johnson, who won a gold bracelet last year.

In a recent hand, a player brought it in with a {Q-} and Zewin raised to 50 showing a {6-}. Henderson then made it 100 with a {4-}, Johnson called showing a {2-}, and player that brought it in folded. Zewin called and three players went off to fourth street.

Zewin: {6-}{9-}{7-}{8-} / ({5-}{4-}{2-})
Henderson: {a-}{3-} / {4-}{5-}{8-}{7-} / {9-}
Johnson: (x-x) / {2-}{k-}{6-}{10-} fold

Henderson bet 50 on fourth, both his opponents called, and then a bet followed on fifth. Again both Johnson and Zewin called, and then Henderson bet 100 on sixth. Johnson folded, Zewin called, and Henderson bet another 100 in the dark, which Zewin called without hesitation.

Henderson showed that he had a seven-five low, which beat Zewin's seven-six low.

"I was drawing dead," Zewin said. Indeed he had been.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Frank Henderson us
Frank Henderson
5,200
5,200
5,200
WSOP 1X Winner
Marco Johnson us
Marco Johnson
4,100
-400
-400
WSOP 2X Winner
Don Zewin us
Don Zewin
3,850
3,850
3,850

Tags: Don ZewinFrank HendersonMarco Johnson

How to Play Razz: A Quick Tutorial for the Uninitiated

Nível 1 : 50/100, 75 ante

Razz isn't the most popular of games, so there is a chance you don't know the rules. If you find yourself in that camp, fret not as we have dug back in the PokerNews archives to find a tutorial to catch you up in this game, which is sometimes called Seven-Card Stud Low.

Betting rounds

In razz every player starts with getting dealt three cards. Before receiving the cards, every player in the hand has to post an ante. In a $0.50/$1 razz game, the ante is usually $0.05, although this can vary. In all other examples in this article it will be also assumed that we're playing limits of $0.50/$1. After posting the ante, every player gets dealt three cards. The first two cards are dealt face down and can only be seen by you, while the third card, called the "door card" is dealt open for every player at the table to see.

The player with the highest door card is forced to pay the "bring-in." The bring-in in a $0.50/$1 game is half of the low-limit bet (in this case $0.25). However, the player also has the option to bring-in a complete bet, which is the full low-limit bet (in this case $0.50). All other bets and raises in the first round, also called third street, will be the size of the low-limit bet.

In all following rounds, the player with the lowest open cards starts the betting. If more than one player has the same combination of low cards, the player closest left of the dealer will start the betting. On fourth street, the next betting round, again all bets and raises will be the size of the low-limit bet. On fifth, sixth, and seventh streets, all bets and raises will be the size of the high-limit bet.

If the action continues all the way to seventh street, a player will have received seven cards at this point. Of these seven cards, the first two and the last one are face down, while four cards are facing up for everyone to see.

Hand Values

The lowest hand wins the pot at showdown. Aces count as the lowest cards in razz. The lowest possible combination of cards, the nuts, is A-2-3-4-5. Flushes and straights don't count. When deciding on who starts the betting on and after fourth street, the lowest hand is first to bet. On fourth street the lowest possible hand is X-X-A-2. A hand like X-X-A-K will also "win" here against a hand like X-X-2-2.

When deciding who has the best showdown hand, you start by looking at the third highest card in your hand (as you only play five of your seven cards and the two highest cards don't play) and start counting down. For example, a hand like 9-8-7-6-5 will win against a hand like 10-4-3-2-A, as the nine is lower than the ten. If the highest cards of two or more players have the same value, you look at the second highest cards and so on. So 8-7-5-3-A will win against 8-7-5-4-A, because one player has a 8-7-5-3 low against the other player with a 8-7-5-4 low. If two or more players have the exact same combination of cards, the pot is split.

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Nível 1 : 50/100, 75 ante
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Tags: RunGoodGear