
In a competitive event, mulligan decisions matter more than most players want to admit. You can play tight, know your matchups, and still lose games before turn one because you kept a hand that never had a real plan. At the same time, over-mulliganing is a quiet way to give away percentage points, especially across a long tournament. The goal isn’t to chase perfect hands. It’s to recognize when an opening seven actually wins games in the matchup you’re playing.
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