The
showdown
If
a player bets and all other players fold, then the remaining player is awarded
the pot and is not required to show his hole cards. If two or more players remain
after the final betting round, a showdown occurs.
On the showdown, each player plays the best poker hand they
can make from the seven cards comprising his two hole cards and the five
community cards. A player may use both of his own two hole cards, only one, or
none at all, to form his final five-card hand. If the five community cards form
the player's best hand, then the player is said to be playing the board and can only hope to split the pot, because each other player
can also use the same five cards to construct the same hand.
If
the best hand is shared by more than one player, then the pot is split equally
among them, with any extra chips going to the first players after the button in
clockwise order. It is common for players to have closely valued, but not
identically ranked hands. Nevertheless, one must be careful in determining the
best hand; if the hand involves fewer than five cards, (such as two pair or three
of a kind), then kickers are used to settle ties (see the second example below). Note
that the card's numerical rank is of sole importance; suit values are irrelevant in Hold'em. The last player to bet is the
first player to show their hand.
Misdeal
If
the first card dealt is exposed, then this is considered a misdeal. The dealer
then retrieves the card, reshuffles the deck, and again cuts the cards.
However, if any other hole card is exposed due to a dealer error, the deal
continues as usual. After completing the deal, the dealer replaces the exposed
card with the top card on the deck, and the exposed card is then used as the
burn card. If more than one hole card is exposed, a misdeal is declared by the
dealer and the hand is dealt again from the beginning. A misdeal is also
declared if a player receives more than two hole cards by mistake (e.g. two
cards stuck together).
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