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FAQ's Playing Three-Flushes 1. What are four things to consider in determining how and whether to play your starting three-flush? 2. If you have a three-flush and none of your suit is out, is your hand playable? 3. Example? 4. What if three or more of your suit are out? 5. What are the exceptions? 6. What can give a three-flush additional value? 7. Give an example of a totally worthless hand. 8. If two of your suit were out, but no tens, fives, or deuces, is it worth playing? 9. When is this hand unplayable? 10. If your cards are completely live, you are heads-up against a raiser, and your three-flush contain all small cards, should you fold? 11. But What if the raiser may not have anything? 12. What if almost all the tens, fives, and deuces are gone, but your flush cards are completely live? 13. You are the first one in and you have a three-flush with a high card showing. What do you do? 14. Suppose you hold a big straight flush draw such as A 15. What if you don’t raise, or if you can’t thin the field? 16. suppose you have a high three-flush with straight flush potential. How do you play if you are first one in? 17. What about a small three-card straight flush? 18. What if you have a three-flush with one card higher than the raiser’s door card? 19. If you have a three-flush, and two big cards ahead of you raise and reraise, when can you play? 20. Example? 21. Suppose there is just a raise and a call? 22. What if your three-flush is small and two of your suit are out?
23. Suppose there has just called the bring-in. when is it correct to raise with a three-flush? 24. What if you only have one overcard? 25. Example? 26. What if the Q 27. What if someone has already raised, you have two overcards, and one of them is up?
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