Strategy Notes
Once the nut flush comes in, the made hand is clearly ahead, but top set retains a focused set of river outs. With one card to come, this becomes less about vibes and more about price, blockers, and whether the pot odds justify continuing.
Turn spots like this are perfect for training exactness. The flush hand should not fear imaginary outs, and the set hand should not chase without a price that respects the limited number of board-pair rivers.
What to Learn From This Spot
- Turn nut-flush spots often reduce to clean river-out math.
- Sets retain meaningful but limited equity against made flushes.
- Avoid both overfolding made nuts and overpaying with redraws.
Related Spots
Top set vs. middle set on a flushing, connected flop. Even with the best made hand, equity is rarely 100% in PLO.
A 20-out wrap draw against an overpair on a medium-connected flop. The classic 'am I a favorite or an underdog?' question.
Nut flush draw with a gutshot vs. top set on a two-tone flop. How much equity does the draw actually have?