The sample deal below assumes that a game is being played by four players:
Jimmy, who is dealing in the examples;
Larry, who is sitting to his left;
Craig to his left; and
Katherine to Craig’s left. All players ante 25¢. Jimmy deals each player two downcards and one upcard, beginning with Larry and ending with himself. Larry is dealt the
4♠, Craig the
K♦, Katherine the
4♦, and Jimmy the
9♣. Because they are playing with a $1 bring-in, Katherine is required to start the betting with a $1 bring-in (her
4♦ is lower than
4♠ of Larry by suit). She had the option to open the betting for more, but she chose to bet only the required $1. The bring-in sets the current bet amount to $1, so Jimmy cannot check. He decides to call. Larry folds, indicating this by turning his upcard face down and discarding his cards. Craig raises to $3. Katherine folds, and Jimmy calls. Jimmy now deals a second face-up card to each remaining player: Craig is dealt the
J♣, and Jimmy the
K♥. Jimmy’s two upcards make a poker hand of no pair,
K-9-high, and Craig has
K-J-high, so it is Craig's turn to bet. He checks, as does Jimmy, ending the betting round. Another face up card is dealt: Craig gets the
10♥ and Jimmy gets the
K♣. Jimmy now has a pair of kings showing, and Craig still has no pair, so Jimmy bets first. He bets $5, and Craig calls. On the next round, Craig receives the
10♦, making his upcards
K-J-10-10. Jimmy receives the
3♠. Jimmy’s upcards are
9-K-K-3; the pair of kings is still higher than Craig’s pair of tens, so he bets $5 and Craig calls. Each player now receives a downcard. It is still Jimmy’s turn to bet because the downcard did not change either hand. He checks, Craig bets $10, and Jimmy calls. That closes the last betting round, and both players remain, so there is a showdown. Since Jimmy called Craig’s bet, Craig shows his cards first:
Q♠ 2♥ K♦ J♣ 10♥ 10♦ A♦. He can play
A-K-Q-J-10, making an ace-high
straight. Jimmy shows (or, seeing he cannot beat Craig’s straight,
mucks his cards):
9♥ 5♦ 9♣ K♥ K♣ 3♠ 5♠. The best five-card poker hand he can play is
K-K-9-9-5, making
two pair, kings and nines. Craig wins the pot. == In popular culture ==