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Authors: Valerie Frankel

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BEVERAGE OF CHOICE: Cheap whisky in a dirty glass. Use a rusty nail to stir.

“What Beats What?”
Ranking Poker Hands Guide

From best to worst:

ROYAL FLUSH: ten, jack, queen, king, ace of the same suit (you will never get this, but dare to dream)

STRAIGHT FLUSH: any five cards of the same suit in order (for instance, all hearts, 6-7-8-9-10)

FOUR OF A KIND: four of the same card (a hand might look like this: Q-Q-Q-Q-4)

FULL HOUSE: any pair plus any three of a kind (say, 7-7-7-5-5)

FLUSH: any five cards of the same suit

STRAIGHT: five cards in order of any suit

THREE OF A KIND: three of the same card

TWO PAIR: two pairs of any cards

ONE PAIR: you know what this is—two of a kind

HIGH CARD: None of the above? Player with the high card wins. The ace is the highest card.

If two or more players have a flush, then the “higher flush” wins. To have higher flush, or higher straight, your high card must be better than your opponent. For example, say you have five diamonds (4-6-7-9-J), and your opponent also has five diamonds (2-6-7-9-K). Your opponent wins because she has a king high flush vs. your jack high flush. If you have a straight (8-9-10-J-Q), and your opponent has a straight (7-8-9-10-J), you win with a queen high straight vs. her jack high straight. Same thing with full houses. If you and another player both have a full house, the player with the higher full house wins. Say you have 6-6-6-7-7, and your opponent has 7-7-7-6-6. She wins because her three of a kind is higher than yours.

GLOSSARY

For at-home poker, you can use any damn terms you want. It’s your house. Your friends. Your
booze
. Your special brownies. You might not want to say, “I fold.” You folded three loads of laundry today already, and don’t want the reminder during your fun night of greed and lying. “I call” might remind you that you forgot to return your mother-in-law’s five urgent messages. “I check” naturally brings to mind the pile of bills on your desk. Substitute word choice at will. Personally, I prefer to say the noble “acting” to “bluffing.” It sounds more creative and artsy.

If you plan a trip to Atlantic City or Las Vegas to play poker against real gamblers with real money, you need to understand and speak the language. Some essential words and phrases:

ACTION: The speed and intensity of play at the table

ANTE: The amount each player adds to the pot at the beginning of each hand

BAD BEAT: Losing with a pretty good hand. If you have an ace high straight, and are beaten by a flush, that’s a bad beat.

BET: Putting money in the pot to stay in the hand

BLIND (BIG AND SMALL): The blinds are forced bets that are made before each poker hand. The big blind is made by the player second from the left of the dealer. (In a real casino, there is only the professional dealer, so a dealer “button” moves around the table instead.) The small blind made by the player immediately to the left of the dealer (or dealer button). Typically, a small blind is half the big blind ($3 and $6, for example). As the button moves around the table clockwise, so do the blinds.

BLUFF: Pretending you have a better hand than you really do to make a sucker fold—or, as I like to call it, “acting”

BURN AND TURN: The dealer puts one card to the side before dealing a faceup community card

BUTTON: A plastic button that moves clockwise around the table, denoting the dealer

CALL: Betting the minimum amount to stay in the hand

CHECK: Staying in a hand, but declining to bet. If another player bets, however, you will be forced to call or fold.

CHIP: A troublesome object sometimes found upon one’s shoulder, or a yummy morsel of chocolate, or a colored plastic disc used to represent an amount of money

FLOP: The first three community cards in Hold ’Em games

FOLD: What is done with laundry, or dumping a bad hand

HEADS UP: Play between only two players

HOLE (AS IN, “IN THE HOLE”): Facedown private cards

POCKET (AS IN, “IN THE POCKET”): Facedown cards; see “hole”

POT: A metal vessel for cooking which you will not be using tonight, or the big pile of chips in the middle of the table that the winner of the hand will claim while whooping

RAG: A dishtowel you will not be using to clean up with tonight, or a low- or off-suit card that does not help you make a winning hand

RAISE; RERAISE: Adding to the bet another player has made

RIVER: The fifth community card in Hold ’Em games

SHOWDOWN: When players reveal their pocket cards to see who won the hand

STEAM: What happens when a player gets frustrated and starts making emotional, reckless bets

TURN: The fourth community card in Hold ’Em games

WINNER: What you will surely be if you (1) understand the rules, (2) practice your poker face to Lady Gaga-esque perfection, and (3) accept risk as part of poker and life. As winner’s say, “Bet big or go home.” Since you are, possibly, already home, you’ve got nothing to lose.

Dedicated to
Dana Isaacson,
my hero

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

V
ALERIE
F
RANKEL
received critical acclaim for her bestselling memoir,
Thin Is the New Happy
. She was Joan Rivers’s co-writer on
Men Are Stupid … and They Like Big Boobs
and she collaborated with Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi on the
New York Times
bestselling novel
A Shore Thing
. Val is the author of fifteen novels, including
The Accidental Virgin
, and is a journalist much in demand. Her writing has appeared in
O Magazine, Allure, Self
, and
The New York Times
, among other publications. Her Q&A Love column in
Mademoiselle
was a popular favorite for many readers. She lives in Brooklyn Heights with her two daughters and husband, opera singer Stephen Quint.

www.valeriefrankel.com
.

BOOK: Four of a Kind
4.05Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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