Hand Review
When Set Mining With Small Pairs Loses Money
Small pairs need price, stack depth, and implied odds before calling preflop.
- Preflop: MP opens, Hero considers calling 44.
- Flop: Stacks are not deep enough for automatic set mining.
- Turn: Hero misses and faces c-bet pressure.
- River: The preflop call was the real decision point.
Looks first at hand strength and often misses position, range, and line.
Small pairs are not automatic calls. Set mining needs stack depth, implied odds, position, and a plan for missing the flop most of the time.
Start with range, sizing, equity, and defense frequency.
Then adjust to the opponent's leaks: over-calling, over-folding, or over-bluffing.
Hand Setup
MP opens, Hero has 44 in CO with 35BB effective. Players behind can squeeze.
Street-by-Street Training Map
| Street | Training focus |
|---|---|
| Preflop | Hero must call before seeing whether button or blinds squeeze. |
| Hit scenario | a set can win a large pot only if stacks are deep enough and villain pays off. |
| Miss scenario | Hero misses the set most of the time and often folds to pressure. |
| Stack depth | at 35BB, implied odds are far weaker than at 100BB or deeper. |
Pot and Sizing
- Preflop: Hero must call before seeing whether button or blinds squeeze.
- Hit scenario: a set can win a large pot only if stacks are deep enough and villain pays off.
- Miss scenario: Hero misses the set most of the time and often folds to pressure.
- Stack depth: at 35BB, implied odds are far weaker than at 100BB or deeper.
Range Changes by Street
- MP's range contains overpairs, broadways, and hands that can pressure low boards.
- Hero's 44 rarely flops a set and often faces overcards.
- Call quality improves with deeper stacks, passive players behind, and opponents who stack off too light.
- Call quality worsens versus squeezers, short stacks, and tight ranges.
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 Preflop Discipline and pot-odds-math in Practice Mode. |
| Review | Save one offline Analyze Lite note if the hand matches a leak from your own play. |
Decision Tree
Call more often if implied odds and position are favorable.
Fold more because payoff is capped.
Tighten because you may not realize the call.
Avoid calling just to surrender most flops.
Beginner Thought vs Professional Thought
Beginner: If I hit, I win everything.
Professional: You miss most flops and need enough payoff when you hit.
Beginner: The call is small, so it is fine.
Professional: Cheap calls add up when implied odds are weak.
Beginner: Pairs play themselves.
Professional: Position and players behind decide realization.
Exploit Adjustment Table
Next Drills
Practice low-pair and stack-depth decisions.
Open DrillCompare small pairs by position.
Open DrillTrain This Hand
Train opens, blind defense, 3-bet responses, and set-mining discipline before the flop.
Make the final-pot formula automatic before adding implied-odds adjustments.
Train big blind calls, folds, and blocker pressure by opener position, price, and equity realization.
Why does 44 become worse at 35BB than 100BB?
The payoff when hitting a set is capped, while the miss frequency stays high.
FAQ
What is the main lesson of this hand?
Small pairs are not automatic calls. Set mining needs stack depth, implied odds, position, and a plan for missing the flop most of the time.
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.