• Home
  • Archived Blogs
    • James Grosjean (AP)
      • About James Grosjean
      • View all posts
    • Bob Dancer (Video Poker)
      • About Bob Dancer
      • View all posts
      • Video Poker Classes
    • Richard Munchkin (AP)
      • About Richard Munchkin
      • View all posts
    • Lou Antonius
      • About Dr. Lou Antonius
      • View all posts
    • Blair Rodman (Poker)
      • About Blair Rodman
      • View all posts
    • FrankB (Sports)
      • About FrankB
      • View all posts
    • Jack Andrews (Sports)
      • About Jack Andrews
      • View all posts
    • Jimmy Jazz (AP)
      • View all posts
    • Anthony Curtis
      • About Anthony Curtis
      • View all posts
    • Guest Bloggers
    • Podcast
  • The Games
    • Bingo Rooms
    • Blackjack
    • Keno Rooms
    • Poker Rooms
    • Video Poker
      • Best Video Poker
      • Bob Dancer Articles
      • Game Room
    • Sports Betting Books
  • Shop
    • Blackjack Strategy
    • Casino Comps & Promotions
    • Casino-Game Strategy Cards
    • Game Protection
    • James Grosjean Strategy Cards (ShopLVA Exclusive)
    • GWAE-Author Products
    • Las Vegas Advisor Membership + Member Rewards
    • Poker-Strategy
    • Sports Betting & Daily Fantasy
    • Tournament Play
    • Video Poker Strategy
  • Arnold Snyder’s Blackjack Forum Online
  • LVA Home
  • Home
  • Advantage Play
  • Advice for Players
  • A Look at 9-5 Triple Bonus Poker Plus — Part 3 of 3

A Look at 9-5 Triple Bonus Poker Plus — Part 3 of 3

May 19, 2020 Leave a Comment Written by Bob Dancer

Today I want to look at the advanced strategy features of 9/5 TBPP. Unlike the previous two weeks, I’m not comparing this game to another. I’m just listing exceptions to the intermediate rules.

I assume you’re generally familiar with penalty cards and the difference between ‘when’ and ‘with’ inside parenthesized exceptions. These are common for all the Dancer/Daily Winner’s Guides and strategy cards. If you’re not familiar with our notation, this might be tough going. It would take several thousand words to explain all the features of the notation, and that’s kind of tough for 800-word columns.

QJT

KQJ (with neither fp nor Tp) > KK, QQ, JJ > RF3 others. (This says that QJT is always better than these high pairs and KQJ sometimes is. KQJ can handle an Ap or a 9p, but not a Tp. When straight flushes return 50-for-1, QJT and KQJ have very similar values. The extra straight flush you get from QJT is worth approximately as much as 50% more high pairs you get with KQJ. In this game, where straight flushes pay 100-for-1 rather than 50-for-1, the difference in value between the two combinations is worth 21 cents to the 5-coin dollar player.

AH, KH with no fp > AHHT, KQJ9 > AH, KH no fp. (This is a very common rule for games where two pair pays even money. Players who are used to penalty card situations are familiar with this.)

QJ (<A with no fp when 87 or 86 or any 9) (<A with fp when 97 or 96). (This is fairly tricky. Within each of the two parenthesized sections, the first part refers to penalty cards to the ace, and the second part refers to penalty cards to the QJ. The reason the list of “97 or 96” doesn’t say “97 or 96 or 95” is because the 5 would be a straight flush penalty to the ace — which combined with a flush penalty would be enough to make QJ > A.)

A (< JT with neither sp nor fp when {(fp + lsp) or (sfp)} (< JT with 7p when two fp).  (When I apply this rule, I first look for a flush penalty to the JT, or a 9, or an 8. If I see any of those, I just hold the A. If none of those are present, then I look to see if the ace is penalized twice (with a straight flush penalty counting as two penalties.) If both of these occur, which is a small percentage of the time, then I look closely to see if the exact rule applies.)

JT (< KJ when fp + sp). (This is considerably more restrictive than in DDB, which is because of the higher value for the straight flush.)

KT (no fp) < K.  (This was mentioned last week using slightly different notation. KT (with fp) is never held.)

That’s it. There aren’t very many rules, but some have more than one moving part.

I’ll end with a 10-question quiz. Even if you’ve mastered what has been presented above, it’s going to be pretty difficult.  When dealt the following cards playing 9/5 TBPP, select the cards you would hold:

  1. K♥ Q♥ J♥ Q♠ 7♥
  2. Q♣ J♣ T♣ J♦ 7♣
  3. A♦ Q♦ J♠ T♠ 7♠
  4. K♦ Q♦ J♣ 9♣ 6♦
  5. A♣ K♥ Q♥ J♥ J♠
  6. A♠ Q♦ J♣ 8♥ 7♠
  7. K♣ J♥ T♥ 6♥ 2♠ 
  8. A♦ Q♣ J♥ 9♥ 4♦ 
  9. A♣ J♥ T♥ 7♣ 3♦
  10. A♥ J♣ T♣ 4♦ 2♠ 

Answers — the cards in red or black are the ones you should hold. The ones in the yellowish color should be discarded.

  1. K♥ Q♥ J♥ Q♠ 7♥
  2. Q♣ J♣ T♣ J♦ 7♣
  3. A♦ Q♦ J♠ T♠ 7♠
  4. K♦ Q♦ J♣ 9♣ 6♦
  5. A♣ K♥ Q♥ J♥ J♠ 
  6. A♠ Q♦ J♣ 8♥ 7♠
  7. K♣ J♥ T♥ 6♥ 2♠ 
  8. A♦ Q♣ J♥ 9♥ 4♦ 
  9. A♣ J♥ T♥ 7♣ 3♦
  10. A♥ J♣ T♣ 4♦ 2♠ 

If and when I find an opportunity to play this game again, I’ll use these three articles to get up to speed fast. It gives me basically everything I need to know and quizzes me on the sneaky ones. I’ll still practice the advanced hands on Video Poker for Winners, but these articles will jump start the process I need to go through. Perhaps that’s true for you as well.

Facebooktwitteryoutubeinstagram
Advantage Play, Advice for Players
Bob Dancer, triple bonus poker, video poker
Gettin’ Skilli Wit It
Podcast – listener emails

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Join LVAs Mailing List


Sign me up for:

GWAE Post Categories

  • Advantage Play (653)
    • Advanced Strategy (262)
    • Advice for Players (258)
    • Comps & Promos (75)
    • Game Protection (10)
  • Breaking News (8)
    • News Stories (3)
  • Casino Games (395)
    • Blackjack (31)
    • Craps (11)
    • Other Table Games (13)
    • Poker (33)
    • Slot Machines (5)
    • Video Poker (302)
  • Daily Fantasy Sports (2)
  • Gambling Glossary & Terminology (19)
  • Gambling Online (7)
  • General Thoughts/Opinion (78)
  • GWAE Podcast Episodes (643)
  • Non-Casino Games (3)
  • Reviews: Books, Movies, TV (29)
  • Sports betting (46)
  • Tournaments (2)

Recent Comments

  • coconut on What Would You Do?
  • KOAficionado on Colin Jones (S1 E9): Knockout KISS
  • A McGill on New Blackjack, Same Old Baloney
  • 바카라사이트 on The Cheating Game
  • Bajilive on “You’ve Already Hit the Royal”

Recent Posts

  • Business credit cards for profession gamblers and APs
  • Podcast – Sherriff AP episode 9
  • Spinach!
  • THE IMPORTANCE OF EVALUATING YOUR RESULTS IN BLACKJACK
  • Billy’s Book
Never miss another post

GWAE Bloggers

  • About Andy Uyal
  • About Anthony Curtis
  • About Bill Ordine
  • About Blair Rodman
  • About Bob Dancer
  • About FrankB
  • About Jack Andrews
  • About James Grosjean
  • About Nicholas Colon
  • About Richard Munchkin
  • Bloggers
  • Play Desert Diamond
  • Podcast – attorney Bob Nersesian 12/8/22
  • Podcast – Mickey Crimm 3/23/2023
  • SuperBlog
“Gambling With An Edge” is a unique cyber-hub where some of most-respected minds in professional gambling collectively share their expertise, advanced-strategy tips, insights, and opinions via the GWAE “SuperBlog” and weekly GWAE radio show.
The expertise to be found here spans the full spectrum of casino games, advantage-play techniques, and legal-wagering opportunities in the U.S., with contributors including James Grosjean (AP, table games), Bob Dancer (video poker), Richard Munchkin (AP, author), Blair Rodman (poker), Frank B. (sports betting), and others.

Other LVA Blogs

Frugal Vegas with Jean Scott
LVA Travel
Stiffs & Georges with David McKee
Vegas with an Edge
Powered by LasVegasAdvisor.com copyright 1983-2018 Huntington Press | All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy