Advanced Balancing Aggression and Caution in the Hijack David Parker URL has been copied successfully! Smart hijack play depends on pressure, position, stack depth and disciplined hand selection The hijack is one seat before the cutoff, which makes it a profitable but sensitive position. It offers more stealing opportunities than middle position, but it is not late enough to ignore the cutoff, button, or blinds. A strong hijack strategy uses aggression to attack folds behind, while still respecting players who can 3-bet, call in position, or defend blinds well. Open-raising from the hijack should usually be wider than from early position, but not reckless. Strong aces, broadways, medium pairs, suited connectors, and suited kings gain value because there are fewer players left to act. The mistake is treating the hijack like the button. Hands that look playable can lose money when the cutoff or button calls and controls the rest of the hand. Aggression works best when the table behind is tight. If the cutoff and button overfold, hijack opens can pressure the blinds and collect uncontested pots. Against active 3-bettors, the range should tighten, especially with hands that cannot call profitably or 4-bet comfortably. Opening weak-suited hands into aggressive players creates awkward spots. Postflop caution matters because hijack raisers are often out of position against late-position callers. Continuation bets should target boards that favor the opener, such as ace-high or king-high textures. Low, connected boards often hit callers harder, so automatic c-betting burns chips. Stack depth changes the balance. Deep stacks reward suited and connected hands with implied odds, but they also punish dominated top-pair holdings. Shorter stacks favor high-card strength and hands that can call or shove over pressure. The best hijack players do not simply “play aggressive.” They apply pressure when fold equity exists and slow down when position, texture, or opponent tendencies turn against them.