Jared Bleznick Goes Back-to-Back in High Stakes Duel 4g4cw
The second High Stakes Duel battle between Jared Bleznick and Patrik Antonius went the way of the former on PokerGO…
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In this guide, we’ll show you how to handle them in different positions, game types, and situations so that you know when to call, fold, or set-mine for value. Let’s break down the strategy behind one of poker’s tricky hands to play well.
Small pocket pairs refer to any pocket pair from twos through sixes (22, 33, 44, 55 or 66). These hands are typically considered speculative, as they look strong preflop but rarely improve unless they hit a set.
Statistically, a pocket pair will hit a set on the flop only about 11.8% of the time (roughly 1 in 8.5 flops). Because of this low hit rate, small pairs are often played with the goal of set-mining on the flop, especially in deep-stacked cash games.
In poker tournaments, they lose some value as stack sizes shrink. Knowing when to play or fold them can save you chips… and sometimes your tournament life with it.
Set-mining means calling a pre-flop raise (PFR) with the main goal of flopping a set and stacking your opponent. It’s one of the most profitable ways to play small pocket pairs – when the conditions are right.
Here’s when set-mining works best and is a profitable play:
Example:
You’re on the button with a pair of fives. A tight player raises to 3BB from UTG. Blinds are 1/2, and stacks are 150BB deep. You call to set-mine. You flop a five on a board like K♦ 5♣ 2♠ and win a huge pot when your opponent can’t fold ace-king. This is the classic dream scenario. But , set-mining can quickly become a losing play when conditions aren’t right (such as two short stacks battling or aggressive opponents in every seat). Read the table and make the right play for the situation at hand.
Position and table dynamics matter a lot when deciding how to play small pocket pairs. Here’s how you should break down how to play a small pocket pair from different positions around the felt.
These hands are usually a fold in early position, especially in tournaments. Opening 22 – 66 from UTG puts you at risk of facing aggression with a hand that rarely improves. In deep cash games, you can consider raising 66 or 55 occasionally but tread carefully.
Middle position opens up more options for you. If the table is ive or you’re deep-stacked, set-mining is viable. You can also occasionally raise if you’re trying to balance your range. Just don’t overdo it; small pairs still don’t play well without improvement.
This is where small pocket pairs shine. You’ll often find opportunities to steal the blinds or call in position against weak openers. If the action folds to you, raising your 22 – 66 can force folds from your opponents and let you control the pot. There’s always the off-chance they call when you’ve missed the flop, of course… but then you’ve always got turn and river to either catch or pile on the pressure.
Small pocket pairs can also serve as decent bluffing hands, especially against players who fold to flop or turn aggression.
In the small blind, you’ll often want to fold or call depending on the raise size and your opponent. In the big blind, defending against a late-position open with a small pair can be reasonable. If you three-bet with a small pocket pair, be prepared to fire multiple barrels or give up post-flop unless you flop a set.
Small pocket pairs behave differently in tournaments compared to cash games due to stack sizes and payout pressures. The risks and rewards are varied, so understanding how to play small pocket pairs in each situation is vital.
Example: Folding 44 with 20BB in middle position is often correct – you simply don’t have the implied odds to justify a call.
Example: In a 100BB deep $1/$2 cash game, calling a 3BB raise from the button with 55 is a solid line when stacks are deep, and your opponent will likely pay off your sets.
When you don’t hit a set, you’ve obviously got to adapt. Your set-mining failed to strike gold! Of course, 91.5% of the time, you will miss the flop. That’s where the danger lies.
When you do hit a set, congratulations, that was the object of the exercise. Now it’s time to extract value.
The goal? Get paid off, not trapped by a better hand. If your opponent is acting strong then reference your previous observations of them. Could they have a better set, or are they prone to bluffing in this spot when they miss the flop? Understanding your opponents’ ranges will be key here.
Here are some pitfalls you’ll want to avoid:
Mistakes with small pocket pairs are subtle but can be very costly to your stack, whether you’re in a tournament situation or deep in a cash game.
Be selective, be strategic, and play the long game.
Here are three examples of when playing small pocket pairs can work out for our hero… hopefully you.
Game Type: $1/$2 No-Limit Hold’em
Stacks: $200 effective
Player’s Hand: 5♠ 5♥
Position: Button
Preflop Action: UTG+1 (tight-aggressive) raises to $6. One caller in MP. Hero (on the button) calls $6 with 55 to set-mine. Blinds fold.
Pot: $21
Flop: 5♦ K♣ 9♠
MP and UTG+1 check. Hero bets $12. UTG+1 raises to $36. MP folds. Hero calls.
Turn: 2♦
UTG+1 shoves $130. Hero calls with bottom set.
River: Q♠
Hero wins against K♠ Q♣, stacking the opponent.
Why It Worked: Our hero had position, deep stacks, and the right odds to set-mine, when the set hit, villain couldn’t fold top pair/top kicker.
Game Type: $33 Online Tournament
Blinds: 800/1600/200
Stacks: Hero (48,000), CO Villain (40,000)
Player’s Hand: 6♣ 6♦
Position: Big Blind
Preflop Action:
CO opens to 3,200. Folds to Hero in BB who calls.
Pot: 8,200
Flop: T♠ 4♠ 2♣
Hero checks. Villain c-bets 4,000. Hero calls.
Turn: 7♦
Both players check.
River: 3♥
Hero checks. Villain shoves 32,800 into 16,200. Hero tanks and calls.
Villain shows A♠ Q♠ (missed flush draw). Hero wins with pocket sixes.
Why It Worked: Hero recognized the missed draws and used showdown value to bluff-catch profitably, even though they didn’t flop, turn or river a set.
Game Type: $0.50/$1 Online Cash Game
Stacks: Hero ($120), SB Villain ($100)
Player’s Hand: 3♠ 3♣
Position: Button
Preflop Action:
Folds to Hero, who raises to $2.50. SB calls. BB folds.
Pot: $6
Flop: 8♥ 6♦ 3♦
SB checks. Hero bets $4. SB calls.
Turn: T♣
SB checks. Hero bets $11. SB calls.
River: Q♥
SB checks. Hero shoves for $102 into $36. SB calls with K♦ K♠. Hero scoops pot with a set of threes.
Why It Worked: Hero opened light in position, got value on all three streets, and stacked an opponent who slow-played a better overpair… until it wasn’t.
Small pocket pairs can be sneaky profit-makers or slow leaks. The difference comes down to context and discipline when executing your strategy.
We recommend playing them aggressively in position, tighter from early seats, and only pressing with them when stack sizes and implied odds make sense for you to do so. Post-flop, you must adapt not only to your opponents, but to your own perceived image.
If you always bet big with a small pocket pair on the flop when you hit, players will cotton on to your plan and start folding, costing you value, which is the main reason you’re playing small pocket pairs in the first place.
, you’re not trying to win every pot with these hands – you’re trying to win the big pots when you hit.
Stay patient, set-mine smart, and fold when the math isn’t in your favor.