If it's not a satellite, don't fold AA preflop
If it's on the bubble of a normal tourney, don't fold. If you are worried about the mincash then you are playing too high for your roll. If you've sattied into the Milli or Super Tuesday or something really big, and a mincash at that stake would make a huge difference to your life/roll, then I suppose there might be a genuine argument, but certainly not in your normal tournaments, just shovel it in as quickly as you can.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ropecore
MTTs are so top heavy that you having 6BB instead of 2BB won't really make big of a difference in the long run. You won't realistically win it or reach final table so it's better to mincash.
Firstly, against three villains, as you describe in your OP, you'd end up with 13-14bb (depending on antes) if you win the hand, not 6bb, and that's hugely better than 2bb. Taking the negative route of simply aiming to mincash is a vastly inferior play, compared to giving yourself a genuine chance at a stack with fold equity.
You won't mincash every tourney, you won't even mincash 1 in 4 tourneys, so aiming for that alone is a long term losing strategy.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ropecore
AA is often a fold in 6max SNGs with 3 players left (2 get paid), so I am fairly certain it's even easier to fold them in MTTs.
Lol no it isn't "often a fold" at all; it's only a fold under the most extreme ICM circumstances. And it's even harder (or rather, it's plain wrong) in an MTT, because there's no ICM pressure unless we're at the FT. You actually have this concept completely upside-down.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ropecore
AA probably have around 65% of holding. In 1 out of 3 ocassions you will get nothing so you are minus and in 2 out of 3 you will get something. You need to go deep enough in those 2 out of 3 situations to counter the loss in 1 situation. Since MTTs are so top heavy this usually means you have to go very deep, which is unlikely with 6BB.
What does this even mean?
Of course you'll go out sometimes, that's the whole point of MTTs, but that's not a very good excuse not to go all in. And the ones where you survive the all in, you will go much deeper on average than the ones where you decline the all in just to hang on for the mincash.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ropecore
MTT structure is so top heavy.
THIS is exactly why the mincash is so worthless compared to trying to win the damn thing, and why we want to get it in with the best starting hand that NLHE has to offer.