JJ vs A2s in Spin & Go – Wheel Trap or Just Variance?

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ENKHTAIVAN1

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💬 Post Content:

> Hey CardsChat friends,

Just wanted to break down a hand I played in a Spin & Go that left me wondering if I made a mistake — or just ran into a classic trap.

Format: $1 Spin & Go
Blinds: 10/20
Pot: 610

My Hand: J♦ J♥
Villain's Hand: A♦ 2♦

Board:
A♥ K♠ 3♣ – 4♠ – 5♥

❌ I went all-in preflop with JJ
❌ Villain snap-called with A2s
✅ Board ran out to give them a wheel straight (A-2-3-4-5)

🎯 My thoughts:

In regular MTTs, I expect A2s to fold to an all-in, but Spin & Go players seem to call looser

I was ahead preflop, but this board punished me — is this just bad luck or a strategic leak?


💡 My questions to you:

1. Should JJ be played more cautiously in Spin & Go formats?


2. Should I have folded postflop if I saw that board developing? (Hypothetically, if we saw flop first)


3. Is A2s a standard call in Spin & Go now, or was that reckless?



I'd really appreciate your input. I'm working on a strategy system where psychological traps and board awareness are central, so this hand is a key case study for me.
 
Tero

Tero

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I think you are reading way too much into this. All kinds of things happen on $1 level.
 
primrose

primrose

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1. You should not play spin and go, ever. It's a terrible format that's impossible to beat. Play something else.

2. This looks like you used an LLM to format the message. Did you? (If so, you should also not do that.)

3. If you disregard 1, you should probably not all-in JJ. You're playing ultra hyper giga turbo with 30BB starting stack; usually you won't see a hand this strong in the entire tournament. You should probably slowplay it. limp-jam or minraise-jam I think. But you shouldn't disregard 1, so, it's kind of whatever.
 
sandy358

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💬 Post Content:

> Hey CardsChat friends,

Just wanted to break down a hand I played in a Spin & Go that left me wondering if I made a mistake — or just ran into a classic trap.

Format: $1 Spin & Go
Blinds: 10/20
Pot: 610

My Hand: J♦ J♥
Villain's Hand: A♦ 2♦

Board:
A♥ K♠ 3♣ – 4♠ – 5♥

❌ I went all-in preflop with JJ
❌ Villain snap-called with A2s
✅ Board ran out to give them a wheel straight (A-2-3-4-5)

🎯 My thoughts:

In regular MTTs, I expect A2s to fold to an all-in, but Spin & Go players seem to call looser

I was ahead preflop, but this board punished me — is this just bad luck or a strategic leak?


💡 My questions to you:

1. Should JJ be played more cautiously in Spin & Go formats?


2. Should I have folded postflop if I saw that board developing? (Hypothetically, if we saw flop first)


3. Is A2s a standard call in Spin & Go now, or was that reckless?



I'd really appreciate your input. I'm working on a strategy system where psychological traps and board awareness are central, so this hand is a key case study for me.
A2o as other ace-highs is a relatively good hand to call all-ins preflop from later positions when short-stacked (and in spin'n'go you are always late position), but it seems a bit too loose for 15BB specifically, though at 11BB in BB vs BTN shove scenarios A2o is a definite call.
 
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