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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 2:12 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 10:25 PM, Saturday December 20, 2008 EST
1)[9h,8h]
2)[Ks,Jd]
3)[5c,5d]
4)[Ac,Kd]

sick but it is true...
bozzer wrote
at 9:19 AM, Tuesday December 30, 2008 EST
98
55
kj
ak
basssinho wrote
at 5:33 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 6:45 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 3:04 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 11:49 PM, Thursday April 2, 2009 EDT
5-5
A-K
9-8
K-J
-=Ace=- wrote
at 11:07 AM, Friday May 15, 2009 EDT
[5c,5d] and [Ks,Jd] and [9h,8h] and [Ac,Kd]

KA
55
KJ
89
skyguy918 wrote
at 6:30 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 7:01 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 8:11 PM, Thursday September 17, 2009 EDT
KJ
AK
55
89
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