Hand Analysis with Coach Commentary #9 – A Thoughtful Preflop All-In Call Pays Off

This is a very instructive microstakes hand. It touches on something you’ll see constantly at $0.05/$0.10: wild preflop shoves from short stacks. Let’s walk through it like a coach would.
As usual, feel free to watch the action as it unfolded.

Hand Summary
Blinds: $0.05 / $0.10
Hero: VoightKampf ($9.85)
Villain: SB ($3.71)

Preflop
Hero: A♦Q♠ (exact suits unknown)
1. Under the Gun Folds
2. Hijack Folds
3. Hero in the Cutoff raises to $0.50 (5bb) from early/middle position.
4. Button folds to SB.
5. Small blind who has just sat down at the table and is small stacked with 37 Big Blinds shoves for $3.71.
6. BB folds.
7. After a good think, Hero calls $3.21 more.
8. SB turns over 8♠ and A♦

Board
Flop: A 6♣ 3♣
Turn: K♠
River: T♣

Result
Hero wins $7.57 with pair of Aces vs 88.

Step-by-Step Coaching Analysis
1. Preflop Open — Excellent
You opened to 5bb.
At microstakes this is perfectly reasonable, especially when:

  • Players limp a lot
  • Players call too wide
  • Tables are loose

Your open accomplishes two things:

  1. Builds the pot with a strong hand
  2. Punishes limpers

Nothing to change here.

2. The Small Blind Jam — What Does It Mean?
Villain has $3.71 (≈37bb) and jams.
At these stakes this shove usually means one of three things:

Typical Microstakes Jam Range
Value

  • 99+
  • AQ+
  • AJ

Panic / Tilt / Short stack

  • 22–88
  • AT
  • KQ
  • random suited hands

Players with 30–40bb stacks shove way too wide.
88 is a very common shove.

3. Your Decision — The Key Spot
You must call $3.21.
Pot before your call:

  • Your raise: $0.50
  • SB shove: $3.71
  • blinds: $0.15

Pot = $4.36
Call $3.21 to win $7.57
Pot odds ≈ 2.35 : 1
You need ~30% equity.

4. Your Equity vs Likely Range
Against a reasonable jam range:
AQ vs (77+, AJ+, KQ)
You have about 45–48% equity.

Against a looser microstakes shove:
AQ vs (22+, AT+, KQ)
You have ~55% equity.

So the call is clearly profitable.

✔ Correct call

5. Why AQ is Strong Here
Key concept for your improvement plan:
Short-stack jams = call wider

Because:

  • Their range is wider
  • Dead money from blinds + your raise
  • You have position
  • Your hand dominates many holdings

AQ crushes hands like:

  • AJ
  • AT
  • KQ
  • KJ

And flips with many pairs.

6. Flop Result
Flop: A-6-3
You spike top pair and the hand is basically over.

Villain needed:

  • an 8
  • runner-runner miracles

You were ~90%+ favorite on the flop.

7. What You Did Well
✔ Good open sizing
5bb is great for microstakes.

✔ Took time before calling
You used More time — good discipline.

✔ Correct call mathematically
AQ is well ahead of many shove ranges.

✔ No fear of the all-in
Many improving players overfold here.
You didn’t.

8. One Strategic Note for Future Hands
Against 40bb shoves, you should generally call with:

Always Call

  • TT+
  • AQ+
  • AK

Often Call

  • 88–99
  • AJ
  • KQs

Usually Fold

  • AT
  • KQ offsuit
  • small pairs

AQ is comfortably in the call zone.

9. The Most Important Lesson
This hand shows a key truth about microstakes:
You make money by calling bad shoves correctly.

Players will constantly jam:

  • small pairs
  • dominated aces
  • random suited junk

Your job is simply:
Call correctly and let math work.
Over time this is huge EV.

Final Coach Verdict

StreetGradeComment
Preflop openAPerfect
Facing shoveAEasy profitable call
PostflopANothing to do

Overall: A
You played this exactly right.