Hand Review
KQ Top Pair Faces a Nit's Turn Raise
Top pair can be strong until a passive player chooses a rare aggressive line.
- Preflop: BTN opens KQo and BB nit calls.
- Flop: Flop K94 rainbow. BB checks, Hero bets, BB calls.
- Turn: Turn 7h. BB checks, Hero bets again, BB check-raises large.
- River: River is not reached often because the turn decision carries the hand.
Looks first at hand strength and often misses position, range, and line.
The hand is not about whether KQ is top pair. It is about what a rare turn check-raise means from a tight-passive profile.
Start with range, sizing, equity, and defense frequency.
Then adjust to the opponent's leaks: over-calling, over-folding, or over-bluffing.
Hand Setup
6-max cash, 100BB effective. Villain is a tight-passive big blind with low turn raise frequency.
Street-by-Street Training Map
| Street | Training focus |
|---|---|
| Preflop | Preflop pot is about 5.5BB. |
| Flop | Flop bet-call builds a normal top-pair value line. |
| Turn | Turn bet targets worse Kx and pairs, but the check-raise sharply changes range. |
| River | Calling turn without a river plan creates expensive guessing. |
Pot and Sizing
- Preflop pot is about 5.5BB.
- Flop bet-call builds a normal top-pair value line.
- Turn bet targets worse Kx and pairs, but the check-raise sharply changes range.
- Calling turn without a river plan creates expensive guessing.
Range Changes by Street
- BB preflop range is tighter than average and contains many pairs and suited broadways.
- Flop call includes Kx, 9x, pocket pairs, and slowplays.
- Turn check-raise from a nit is weighted toward sets, two pair, and strong value.
- Bluffs exist in theory, but profile evidence says not enough.
Hand-to-Drill Prescription
| Step | What to do next |
|---|---|
| Read | Name position, stack depth, board texture, and opponent type before reading the conclusion. |
| Replay | Step through each street and state the value target, bluff target, or pot-control reason. |
| Practice | Run live-exploits and player-type-exploits in Practice Mode. |
| Review | Save one offline Analyze Lite note if the hand matches a leak from your own play. |
Beginner Thought vs Professional Thought
Beginner: Top pair second kicker is too strong to fold.
Professional: One-pair strength depends on action and player type.
Beginner: A nit can still bluff here.
Professional: Possible is not frequent. Frequency drives the decision.
Beginner: Call and hope river is safe.
Professional: Decide which rivers and sizes continue before calling turn.
Alternative Lines
- Bet turn smaller: keeps value target wider.
- Check back turn: controls pot versus a passive range.
- Fold to large raise: strong exploit versus nit profile.
- Call turn: needs exact evidence of over-bluffing.
Exploit Adjustment Table
Next Drills
Train nit, station, and maniac adjustments.
Open DrillReview tight-passive behavior.
Open DrillTrain This Hand
Compare calling stations, nits, maniacs, over-folders, and regulars after naming the baseline.
Adjust versus calling stations, nits, maniacs, and regulars after naming the baseline.
Name worse calls before betting medium-strength hands.
What changes KQ most in this hand?
Not the board alone. The big change is the nit's rare large turn check-raise, which makes the range value-heavy.
FAQ
What is the main lesson of this hand?
The hand is not about whether KQ is top pair. It is about what a rare turn check-raise means from a tight-passive profile.
What is the difference between GTO baseline and exploit adjustment?
The baseline prevents obvious exploitation. Exploit adjustments intentionally deviate when an opponent has a clear leak.
What should I record when reviewing a hand?
Record positions, stack depth, board texture, bet sizes, opponent type, your thought process, and the better alternative line.