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Four hands compete for a multiway pot, put the hands in order of best to worst to win the pot with random/unknown board cards.(1 to 4, best = 1, worst = 4)
JulesDogg wrote
at 7:12 AM, Sunday January 6, 2008 EST
The Hands: [5c,5d] and [Ks,Jd] and [9h,8h] and [Ac,Kd]

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_BLizZaRd_ wrote
at 3:25 AM, Sunday December 21, 2008 EST
1)[9h,8h]
2)[Ks,Jd]
3)[5c,5d]
4)[Ac,Kd]

sick but it is true...
bozzer wrote
at 2:19 PM, Tuesday December 30, 2008 EST
98
55
kj
ak
basssinho wrote
at 10:33 AM, Saturday January 3, 2009 EST
so if there are 4 players with these hands. When u look at the statistics 55 and AK is a coinflip but 55 is ahead pre flop.
So that makes 55 a little in favor pre flop
and because AK got KJ dominated and 9 8 got str8 and flush draw 9 8 comes at 3rd place (vunerable though because many ppl think those hands are good but if AA raises and u call and u get a str8 or flush draw u have a little chance still to beat AA and u will lose a lot of money, but no AA in this hand so)

1)55
2)AK
3)98
4)KJ
acmilanfan3 wrote
at 10:45 AM, Thursday April 2, 2009 EDT
The correct answer is
1) 98 LIVE CARDS AND DRAWS
2) AK Has the flush draws covered on 55
3) 55
4) KJ 3 outs. K is no good
acmilanfan3 wrote
at 7:04 PM, Thursday April 2, 2009 EDT
Ok heres my explanation for the above. 55 is good heads up situation, but now there are 3 other players with 5 OVER CARDS! Odds are one fo those will hit. 89 suited CAN YOU SAY LIVE CARDS. This hand can win multiple ways in this situation as no one holds a heart. AK is still pretty solid but the KJ is by far the WORST only a Jack would win it.

1 89
2 AK
3 55
4 KJ
Ando69 wrote
at 3:49 AM, Friday April 3, 2009 EDT
5-5
A-K
9-8
K-J
-=Ace=- wrote
at 3:07 PM, Friday May 15, 2009 EDT
[5c,5d] and [Ks,Jd] and [9h,8h] and [Ac,Kd]

KA
55
KJ
89
skyguy918 wrote
at 10:30 PM, Thursday September 17, 2009 EDT
If you're staring down at one of those hands and there are 3 other players whose cards you don't know the odds of winning for each is:

Ac,Kd 32.4
Ks,Jd 27.6
5c,5d 22.4
9h,8h 23.6

These aren't the actual probabilities once we see all 4 hands (each hand will have a few less ways to win based on the fact that they won't see the other hands' cards on the board) but the order should remain the same.
skyguy918 wrote
at 11:01 PM, Thursday September 17, 2009 EDT
Now that I looked at the answer, a little comparison is in order.

Hand is followed by odds knowing only your hand, followed by odds knowing all hands.

Ac,Kd - 32.4 - 27.4
Ks,Jd - 27.6 - 17.6
5c,5d - 22.4 - 24.9
9h,8h - 23.6 - 30.1

As many people pointed out, JulesDogg's Q and A are after relevant if everyone went all in pre-flop. But the likelihood of it getting there is slim because the 2 hands with kings are likely to bet much harder knowing only their own hand and the other 2 are more likely to fold knowing only their own hand,
Wyatt_Linklater wrote
at 12:11 AM, Friday September 18, 2009 EDT
KJ
AK
55
89
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