Tournament Strategic Use of Min-Raises in Satellites David Parker URL has been copied successfully! A clinical approach to pot control ensures you don unnecessarily risk your tournament life In satellite poker tournaments, the primary strategic objective is survival rather than chip accumulation. Because the payout structure is flat—awarding identical prizes to all qualifiers regardless of their final stack size—players must adopt a risk-averse approach that differs significantly from standard multi-table tournaments. The min-raise serves as a critical tool in this environment because it allows players to exploit the “tight-to-survive” mentality of opponents who are incentivized to avoid high-variance confrontations near the bubble. By opening for the minimum 2x sizing, a player can effectively steal blinds from risk-averse opponents who fold at an inelastic frequency. This means opponents often fold the same range of hands whether the raise is 2x or 3x, making the smaller sizing more mathematically efficient for the raiser. Furthermore, the min-raise provides essential risk management when facing aggressive short stacks. If a player opens for 2x and a short-stacked opponent moves all-in, the min-raiser can fold while losing the smallest possible number of chips. Preserving stack depth is vital for maintaining the tournament equity needed to outlast the bubble. Mathematically, the “Bubble Factor” in satellites is much higher than in regular tournaments; a player might need over 80% equity to justify calling an all-in, even with a strong hand. Consequently, the strategy shifts toward “loose shoves and tight calls.” Medium stacks should utilize min-raises to chip up safely against other medium stacks, while large stacks should often transition to a strategy of folding 100% of their range once their qualification is mathematically assured.