Sample is very small. Can't tell for sure (don't know your limp %, if it's 20% or more then it might be OK), but your PFR % looks a little low.
Your problem is more than likely something else though, most likely you're not recognizing when not to cbet certain hands, when to raise instead of call in certain spots, etc. That sort of thing is not going to be seen in the stats provided.
As Ryan says it not possible to identify your specific leaks from this output.
That said the stand out metric I can see is you are in the early levels you are doing better out of position than in position.
Some general rules of thumb:
1. You should have a bigger edge over your opponent @ deeper effective stacks
2. You should be making more in position that out of position
There are always exceptions vs villain's who make bigger mistakes shorter stacked, but you should almost certainly be doing better in position than out of position.
Some general tips which might help:
SB 20-25BB: open WIDE and cbet frequently until villain gives you a reason not to => make him play back at you by 3b a wider range or c/r bluffing more flops before you give up the ridiculous advantage of position. Heads up neither player has much of a hand, you want to be playing loosely aggressively from the button until your opponent starts putting up a fight. The button is worth more than your starting hand => ABUSE IT :)
BB 12-20BB: work through 3b jamming math vs opening & call off ranges. Build some intuition for when 3b jamming is better than folding to certain villain button behaviour. Use these as reference points for deciding whether you can do better by 3b jamming than folding. Against certain preflop + postflop tendencies, you may be able to do better by flatting, particularly in the 15-20BB region.
SB 8-12BB: Mersenneary's write up on ROFL theory is a good place to start.
SB <= 8BB: If you simply play Nash <= 8BB, you would probably be playing better than most of the nitfish who wait to pick up Ax good Kx or PP to get it in with. Fold equity is your friend and there is no better way to build intuition for it (other than working through the math) by expanding your open jamming range from the SB vs opponents who have proved to have a fold button in the early game. The nash ranges are unexploitable and are a pretty good starting reference point for playing <=8 BB in position.
Obviously this is the tip of the iceberg with respect to developing your game / ranges / strategies vs different villains. Filtering your tracker to see where you are making / losing money is not a waste of time. But you need to dig deeper to find the fundamental leaks in your game. Where are you playing your hands more profitably than your opponents? In terms of the easiest leaks to plug => I would focus on your button opening and cbetting strategies vs different villain BB behaviour. I think you can find a lot of + chips pretty easily there.
Sample is very small. Can't tell for sure (don't know your limp %, if it's 20% or more then it might be OK), but your PFR % looks a little low.
Your problem is more than likely something else though, most likely you're not recognizing when not to cbet certain hands, when to raise instead of call in certain spots, etc. That sort of thing is not going to be seen in the stats provided.
As Ryan says it not possible to identify your specific leaks from this output.
That said the stand out metric I can see is you are in the early levels you are doing better out of position than in position.
Some general rules of thumb:
1. You should have a bigger edge over your opponent @ deeper effective stacks
2. You should be making more in position that out of position
There are always exceptions vs villain's who make bigger mistakes shorter stacked, but you should almost certainly be doing better in position than out of position.
Some general tips which might help:
SB 20-25BB: open WIDE and cbet frequently until villain gives you a reason not to => make him play back at you by 3b a wider range or c/r bluffing more flops before you give up the ridiculous advantage of position. Heads up neither player has much of a hand, you want to be playing loosely aggressively from the button until your opponent starts putting up a fight. The button is worth more than your starting hand => ABUSE IT :)
BB 12-20BB: work through 3b jamming math vs opening & call off ranges. Build some intuition for when 3b jamming is better than folding to certain villain button behaviour. Use these as reference points for deciding whether you can do better by 3b jamming than folding. Against certain preflop + postflop tendencies, you may be able to do better by flatting, particularly in the 15-20BB region.
SB 8-12BB: Mersenneary's write up on ROFL theory is a good place to start.
SB <= 8BB: If you simply play Nash <= 8BB, you would probably be playing better than most of the nitfish who wait to pick up Ax good Kx or PP to get it in with. Fold equity is your friend and there is no better way to build intuition for it (other than working through the math) by expanding your open jamming range from the SB vs opponents who have proved to have a fold button in the early game. The nash ranges are unexploitable and are a pretty good starting reference point for playing <=8 BB in position.
Obviously this is the tip of the iceberg with respect to developing your game / ranges / strategies vs different villains. Filtering your tracker to see where you are making / losing money is not a waste of time. But you need to dig deeper to find the fundamental leaks in your game. Where are you playing your hands more profitably than your opponents? In terms of the easiest leaks to plug => I would focus on your button opening and cbetting strategies vs different villain BB behaviour. I think you can find a lot of + chips pretty easily there.