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						I believe Anosmic raised a bet of 7 (by 14) to 21.  Then he got min-re-raised 14 to 35. 
 
When a flush flops, no-one will believe that you hit it.  I think you should play this like the nuts and if the board doesn't pair, or another club doesn't come get it all-in on the river. 
 
If that makes you uncomfortable, then like you said, don't play suited connectors.  At low stakes, I've pushed over the re-raise and been called by 2 pair.  That's gratifying. 
 
If you're going to post your results white them out, my thought process may have been compromised. 
 
As for the math:   
Given: 
You have suited hand, and the flop was three equal suited cards.  There are now 47 cards left in the deck, 8 cards of the same suit and we need to deal x hands.  I'm using x = 9 for the example. 
 
Prob one specific person has a matching suited hand (out of 9 people): 
total hands: (47, 9*2) * (9*2 - 1)!! = 1.57e20 
total hands with one suited: (8, 2) * (47-2, (9-1)*2) * ((9-1)*2 - 1)!! = 3.67e19 
 
3.67e19 / 1.57e20 = 0.233 => 23.3% 
 
# Other Players, prob someone else has flush, odds of another flush 
9, 23.3, 1:3.3 
8, 20.7, 1:3.8 
7, 18.1, 1:4.5 
6, 15.5, 1:5.4 
5, 13.0, 1:6.7 
4, 10.4, 1:8.7 
3, 7.8, 1:11.9 
2, 5.2, 1:18.3 
1, 2.6, 1:37.6 
 
Haha, so it's a straight line.  I'm not solving the algebra above (although fairly simple), but it's appx: 
2.6% * x 
 
Note: this is the probability that at least one person has a flush.  It's less likely, but possible there are 2+.
					 
				 
				
			 
			 
		  
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