PokerStars Hand #146646845618: Omaha Pot Limit ($0.02/$0.05 USD) - 2016/01/07 17:02:24 ET
Table Agamemnon II 6-max Seat #6 is the button
Seat 1: Charon xx ($5.25 in chips)
Seat 3: Dwatier ($10.17 in chips)
Seat 5: desouza19077 ($21.31 in chips)
Seat 6: Sacr3D ($8.56 in chips)
Charon xx: posts small blind $0.02
Dwatier: posts big blind $0.05
Crash135: sits out
Holecards Dealt to Sacr3D
desouza19077: calls $0.05
Sacr3D: raises $0.15 to $0.20
Charon xx: folds
Dwatier: raises $0.47 to $0.67
desouza19077: folds
Sacr3D: calls $0.47
Flop (Pot : $1.41)
Dwatier: bets $0.85
Sacr3D: calls $0.85
Turn (Pot : $3.11)
Dwatier: bets $1.76
Sacr3D: folds
Uncalled bet ($1.76) returned to Dwatier
Dwatier collected $2.99 from pot
Summary Total pot $3.11 | Rake $0.12
Board
Seat 1: Charon xx (small blind) folded before Flop
Seat 3: Dwatier (big blind) collected ($2.99)
Seat 5: desouza19077 folded before Flop
Seat 6: Sacr3D (button) folded on the Turn
TianYuan   Korea (South). Jan 08 2016 09:58. Posts 6817
Could you explain what you were thinking in this hand? You don't need to make 0 equity floats on anything but the most dry of boards. Like 228 rainbow, here you need to call some airy stuff but J49? You have way more than enough stuff to continue.
I think you need to review just simple pot odds stuff, turn should be a very clear call even if he shows you top set. It's even a call if he shows you top set and a better flush draw, even if he folds every time you make a straight (need 26% on turn to call, you have 27.5% vs JJ with ace high spades).
I was playing scared mostly. Figured he had a set. Didn't want to spew more money chasing. Which is obviously not the right mindset to have... Still getting used to PLO but every time I seem to have a draw or a set someone has the nuts lol.
4
TianYuan   Korea (South). Jan 08 2016 15:25. Posts 6817
If you're playing scared, you should probably not call this flop bet with 0 outs
Just focus on equity.... He bet like 60% pot on turn, you have a nut wrap (mostly, the 7 hits 8T but not a big deal) and a flush draw, he can never bet big enough that you should fold.
Again, just focus on equity and playing hands with a strong structure, don't make floats or no equity bluffs (you can still bluff but make sure you have really good blockers for it and your opponent has given you some indication that they are capable of folding). This is PLO5, don't get fancy (same advice holds true for many stakes past that point).