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What is every hand worth on an A J 4 two-tone flop?

On an A J 4 two-tone flop, the sets and top two pair crush a random hand, any ace is comfortably ahead, and pocket kings quietly lose their overpair status.

A J 4 two-tone

Two-tone draw boards

Equity vs one random hand

AA 94.3%
JJ 93.7%
44 93.2%
AJs 90.8%

Notable hands on A J 4 two-tone

HandFlopsEquityWhy it matters
AA set 94.3% Top set on the kind of flop that gets paid. The dream scenario.
JJ set 93.7% Middle set, breathing right down the neck of the aces.
44 set 93.2% Bottom set from the one card here nobody connects with on purpose.
AJs two pair 90.8% Top two pair, the hand this flop was practically named after.
A4s two pair 89.3% Aces up with the bottom card. Ugly preflop, lovely now.
J4o two pair 86.5% Two pair from two nothing cards. The gate-crasher of the table.
AKo pair 86.3% Top pair with the best kicker, comfortably clear of a random hand.
KK nothing yet 78.4% Demoted on arrival: an underpair to the ace, a tier below the good aces.
KQo nothing yet 59.2% Two overcards to the jack and a broadway gutshot. Busier-looking than it is.
T9s nothing yet 42.6% Missed everything, and its flush draw only exists when its suit cooperates.

A J 4 with two hearts is the raiser-friendly ace-high board with a twist stitched into the corner. The ace and jack connect hard with every strong preflop range, the four connects with almost nobody, and the two hearts mean hands that missed still have something to chase. It is a flop of haves and have-nots with a draw running through the middle.

The top of the table is a family portrait of strong preflop hands. Aces, jacks, and fours all flopped sets. AJ holds top two pair, A4 the other two pair, and AK top pair with the best kicker. The gate-crasher is J4, which turned two nothing cards into two pair and outruns nearly every respectable holding in the deck. Any ace at all sits comfortably in front of a random hand.

Two hearts on board split every suited hand into two lives. When its suit matches, it carries a flush draw alongside whatever else it makes; when it does not, the suited tag is decoration. Each suited class blends both cases, and this board adds fine print: suited hands containing an ace cannot be suited in hearts at all, because the ace of hearts is already face up, so their flush hopes ended before the turn.

The demotions cause the mistakes. Pocket kings and queens walked in as premiums and are now underpairs to the ace, still favorites against a random hand but a full tier below every decent ace. KQ holds two overcards to the jack and a gutshot to broadway, a hand that looks busier than it is. The classic error is paying two streets with those holdings on an ace-high flop. The ace is the most-played card in poker, and this board put it face up.

All 169 hands on A J 4 two-tone

Equity of every starting hand class against one random opponent hand on A J 4 two-tone, averaged over the class's possible suit combinations. Sorted best to worst within each group.

Suit note: on this board a suited hand only has flush potential when its suit matches the board's. The figures average over all suit combinations of each class.

Pairs

HandFlopsEquity
AA set 94.3%
JJ set 93.7%
44 set 93.2%
KK 78.4%
QQ 76.5%
TT 67.2%
99 63.9%
88 62.1%
77 60.2%
66 58.1%
55 57.4%
33 47.7%
22 46.0%

Suited

HandFlopsEquity
AJs two pair 90.8%
A4s two pair 89.3%
J4s two pair 86.0%
AKs pair 85.6%
AQs pair 85.1%
ATs pair 84.1%
A9s pair 83.0%
A8s pair 82.5%
A7s pair 82.0%
A5s pair 82.0%
A6s pair 81.8%
A3s pair 81.8%
A2s pair 81.7%
KJs pair 76.7%
QJs pair 76.0%
JTs pair 74.2%
J9s pair 73.1%
J8s pair 72.5%
J5s pair 72.1%
J7s pair 72.0%
J3s pair 72.0%
J6s pair 71.8%
J2s pair 71.7%
K4s pair 65.1%
Q4s pair 64.5%
T4s pair 63.2%
KQs 62.4%
94s pair 61.9%
54s pair 61.7%
84s pair 61.5%
74s pair 61.5%
64s pair 61.1%
KTs 60.4%
43s pair 60.3%
42s pair 60.3%
QTs 55.7%
K9s 52.3%
K8s 51.6%
K7s 51.0%
K5s 50.9%
K6s 50.3%
K3s 49.8%
K2s 49.3%
Q9s 47.8%
Q8s 47.3%
Q7s 45.5%
Q5s 45.5%
Q6s 45.1%
Q3s 44.4%
Q2s 44.0%
T9s 42.6%
T8s 42.0%
T7s 40.0%
T5s 39.2%
T6s 38.5%
T2s 38.0%
T3s 37.9%
98s 37.0%
53s 36.9%
97s 35.6%
52s 35.6%
95s 34.6%
96s 34.3%
32s 33.8%
87s 33.5%
92s 33.4%
93s 33.3%
85s 32.4%
86s 31.9%
75s 31.0%
76s 30.5%
83s 30.2%
82s 30.0%
65s 29.1%
73s 28.7%
72s 27.3%
63s 26.7%
62s 25.4%

Offsuit

HandFlopsEquity
AJo two pair 90.7%
A4o two pair 89.6%
J4o two pair 86.5%
AKo pair 86.3%
AQo pair 85.6%
ATo pair 84.6%
A9o pair 83.3%
A8o pair 83.0%
A7o pair 82.5%
A5o pair 82.3%
A6o pair 82.0%
A3o pair 81.9%
A2o pair 81.9%
KJo pair 77.2%
QJo pair 76.7%
JTo pair 74.9%
J9o pair 73.5%
J8o pair 73.0%
J7o pair 72.5%
J5o pair 72.5%
J6o pair 72.2%
J3o pair 72.1%
J2o pair 72.0%
K4o pair 60.9%
Q4o pair 60.6%
KQo 59.2%
T4o pair 59.0%
94o pair 57.6%
54o pair 57.5%
84o pair 57.4%
KTo 57.0%
74o pair 56.9%
64o pair 56.8%
43o pair 56.0%
42o pair 55.9%
QTo 51.9%
K9o 48.5%
K8o 47.5%
K7o 46.7%
K5o 46.5%
K6o 46.1%
K3o 45.1%
K2o 44.9%
Q9o 43.2%
Q8o 42.5%
Q7o 40.8%
Q5o 40.5%
Q6o 40.2%
Q3o 39.2%
Q2o 39.0%
T9o 37.5%
T8o 36.6%
T7o 35.0%
T5o 33.8%
T6o 33.1%
T3o 32.4%
T2o 32.3%
98o 31.4%
53o 31.3%
97o 30.1%
52o 29.9%
95o 28.9%
32o 28.3%
96o 28.1%
87o 27.7%
93o 27.5%
92o 27.4%
85o 26.5%
86o 25.8%
75o 24.7%
76o 24.3%
83o 23.9%
82o 23.5%
65o 22.8%
73o 22.4%
72o 20.7%
63o 20.3%
62o 18.7%

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