Think about your poor position, domination by the strong hand, and playability post flop.
Q5s is a poster child for problems. It can't make straights. The villains assume you're suited, so hitting a flush isn't getting paid a ton. Your top pair is dominated by both of the non-random ranges. It is a hand that plays much worse than its equity.
Play around with hands that fall just below the strong range that still might dominate the 30% player. JT is potentially dominated by AJ, but EP isn't playing any non-paired T's (and will only have one combo of top set when you hit top pair). If you really cold nail down ranges, do you see discontinuities where you sneak just under the narrow range?
You'd rather have a combo draw than just a draw. Even backdoor draws can help, so 7
6
picks up a 5 for a perfect BDSD on a K
5
2
board. Now, a bunch of cards give you extra outs on the turn.
I'd be picky in the small blind vs. a really strong range, a single cold caller, and a BB with a raise button.