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Poker-Tipp: Top 10 Best and Worst Hold'em Poker Hands
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Richard Honegger
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Here's a quick guide to the ten best Texas Hold'em poker hands. If you start with any of these ten
hands during Texas Hold'em, you are in excellent shape.
For a more detailed guide to which hands to hold and which to fold, read Texas Hold'em Starting
Hand Selection.
1) Ace-Ace
This is the best Hold'em poker hand you can hope to have. It's the best of the best, and will win
more than any other hand. Also known as American Airlines,
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Poker-Tipp: Top 10 Best and Worst Hold'em Poker Hands
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Here's a quick guide to the ten best Texas Hold'em poker hands. If you start with any of these ten
hands during Texas Hold'em, you are in excellent shape.
For a more detailed guide to which hands to hold and which to fold, read Texas Hold'em Starting
Hand Selection.
1) Ace-Ace
This is the best Hold'em poker hand you can hope to have. It's the best of the best, and will win
more than any other hand. Also known as American Airlines, pocket rockets, and bullets.
2) King-King
This 2nd-best hold'em hand is still incredibly strong and will win you a good chunk of change. Two
kings, or "cowboys" are only dominated by aces.
3) Queen-Queen
Two queens, or "ladies" are a very good hand. Sure, kings and aces will beat you, but you've got
the upper hand on jacks and below.
4) Ace-King
Ace-king is a strong but tricky hand. It is the strongest of the drawing hands, but the flop needs
to work with you to give you a pair of aces or kings for it to really pay off. Suited it is
slightly stronger than unsuited, as then you can also make the nut flush much more easily.
5) Jack-Jack
A pair of jacks, ten-handed, will win almost 20% of the time. If the flop shows a queen, king, or
ace, watch out, but otherwise, it's smooth sailing.
6) Ace-Queen
Ace-queen is the second best drawing hand, and when suited, will win about 20% of the time as well.
7) King-Queen
King-queen, especially suited, is a great drawing hand that is only afraid of an Ace falling on
the board.
8) Ace-Jack
Ace-jack is another great drawing hand. Suited is always better here, but unsuited is still
playable.
9) King-Jack
King-jack, especially in later positions, is a fine hand to play, but can be beat by any of the
hands listed above and should be folded to big raises. Statistically, suited it will win just
under 19% of the time, but unsuited that drops to just 15%.
10) Ace-Ten
Ace-ten is still a good hand -- you've got the ace, and can make a straight if the miracle J-Q-K
falls on the board. But be wary of playing it too strong, especially unsuited, as if all you end
up with is a pair of aces, you may be out-kicked.
Sure, you know that a pair of aces are the best hand in Texas Hold'em, but do you know the worst
starting hands? Knowing that these hands are almost-always-fold'em hands in hold'em is just as
important to improving your poker game and not playing like a donkey.
Some of these "worst hands" are bad in the same way and will lose at about the same rate, so I've
called them ties, even when one is a slightly better hand.
1) 2-7
7-2 off suit is considered the worst hand in Texas Hold'em. They are the lowest two cards you can
have that cannot make a straight (there's 4 cards between 2 and 7). Even if they are suited, they
will make you a very low flush, and if either pairs, it's an awfully low hand.
Because it is the worst, some players will play it for fun and in online games, it is known
as "the hammer."
2) 2-8
This is the same basic problem as above, only you've got an 8 instead of a 7. Still pretty bad for
a high card. Suited or not, this is a fold'em hold'em hand.
3) Tie: 3-8 & 3-7
The 3 makes this hand able to beat the two above it, but with the 3-8 you still can't make a
straight and the 3-7 still, well, just sucks.
4) 2-6
While if the board gives you a miracle flop of 3-4-5, you will have a straight, someone with a 6-7
will have a higher straight. If you get a flush, someone will probably have a higher flush.
Against even 4 players, this hand will lose about 90% of the time. Not good odds.
5) Tie: 2-9, 3-9, & 4-9
The only thing these three hands have going for them over the hands above is the 9. If the 9
pairs, you'll have a middle pair that could still be beat by anyone holding pocket 10s, jacks,
queens, kings, or aces, yet you might be fooled by a board filled with low cards into thinking you
have the best hand and losing a lot of money. No straights can fill the gap between these cards,
either. Beware.
6) 2-10
This hand has a legendary quality because Doyle Brunson captured two World Series of Poker
Bracelets with it. But it's not a good hand -- Doyle Brunson is one of the all-time best in the
game and unless you're a Texas road gambler who's logged thousands of hours at the table, you
shouldn't try and win with the Doyle Brunson.
7) 5-9
Another hand people play because it's fun is the old 9 to 5, the "Dolly Parton." If you're playing
to win, it's not a good idea to play hands because they have a funny name. That may be how you
pick the winning horse in a race, but poker's a marathon, not a sprint, and over the long term
there's no doubt this hand is a statistical loser.
8) Tie: 4-7, 4-8, 5-8, 3-6...
All these hands will rarely win, especially unsuited. Toss 'em. Just toss'em. Yes, even in the
little blind. If you see two low cards in the hole, unless you're in the big blind and you can see
the flop for free, fold.
9) Face card + low card, unsuited
One of the most common mistakes I see beginners make is that when they see any paint in their
hand, they play it. J-2, Q-3, K-4 whatever -- and most of these hands are losers. They're junk
that may win a few pots, but more often will lose you huge cash when you find the other player has
a higher kicker and the winning hand.
10) Ace + low card, unsuited
This is another common beginner mistake, playing any ace. Again, it may win occasionally, and
heads-up it's a fine hand, but at a table of 4 or more, this hand shouldn't be played if there's a
raise in front of you. You're going to be outkicked a lot with Ace-little, and it's going to feel
like a kick in the junk when the other player shows their higher ace.
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