Thread: Stars question
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Old 08-27-2007, 09:39 PM
Floyd13 Floyd13 is offline
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Join Date: Sep 2005
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Default Re: Stars question

[ QUOTE ]
As I said - how odd it is depends on what you define as "same hand" and "same flop." (You got the same hand up to suit symmetry. You do not have the same flop on your two tables.)

If by "same", you mean "same ranks represented in the flop but I'll ignore suits, and I'll notice whether my hand is suited, but not whether those suits match the flop cards", there are around 75,000 possible deals (not all equally likely) making the odds somewhere between 1 in 5000 and 1 in 10000 for a situation like the one shown above at any given instant. (If they were all equally likely, it'd be 12500 to 1; if they were all as likely as the most common combinations, it'd be around 4000 to 1.)

The above is for the case of four hands dealt simultaneously. Bear in mind that with 4 tables open, hands arent dealt at the same instant at every table, so you may get to compare each deal with SIX others instead of just three -- making this much more common than the above. Say 1000 to 1. On the other hand, not every table has a flop on every hand -- making it rarer again.

Quantifying it with any kind of precision requires a much more precise statement of what "it" is.

[/ QUOTE ]

Thanks for the explanation.
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