Heads-Up Managing Pressure Lines vs Pot-Control Lines in Heads-up Poker David Parker URL has been copied successfully! Heads-up poker depends on knowing when to build pressure and when to keep the pot manageable Heads-up poker removes the safety of waiting for premium hands. With only two players involved, ranges widen, blinds arrive every hand and post-flop decisions become more personal. A pressure line means betting, raising or barreling in a way that forces the opponent to make repeated decisions with medium-strength hands. A pot-control line does the opposite. It checks, calls or sizes down to avoid inflating the pot with a hand that has showdown value but does not want heavy resistance. The first adjustment is hand strength. Top pair can be strong heads-up, but not every top pair should become a three-street value hand. A top pair with a weak kicker on a coordinated board often plays better through pot control. The same hand on a dry ace-high board may support a pressure line, especially against an opponent who over-folds turns or rivers. Board texture matters. Pressure works better on boards that clearly favor your range. If you raised preflop and the board comes ace-high or king-high with few draws, continuation betting can apply clean pressure. On wet boards with connected cards and flush draws, large bets need more equity or stronger value. Opponent type should decide the line, not ego. Against a passive caller, pressure lines lose value unless you hold enough hand strength. Against a cautious opponent, small and medium barrels can win many pots before showdown. Against an aggressive player, pot control with bluff-catchers becomes more useful because it keeps their bluffs alive. Good heads-up play is not about constant aggression. It is about choosing aggression that has a reason. When the pot grows, the range story must still make sense. When the pot stays small, the hand should have enough showdown value to justify getting there.