While you’re abstracted in thought, let me permeate your meat for a moment.
March holds two events that have the power to unhinge even the most GTO of minds. One is in North America, and the other is, unusually, in Eastern Europe, and that’s where we’ll begin.
After Storm Dennis catapulted ghost ships upon Irish rocks and forced Tesla’s autopilot to save at least eight lives, Rob Yong showed us that he could swim, but can he ski?
partypoker’s first exclusive high roller tournament series comes at you from the Casino Sochi in Russia 6-15 March. Christened the partypoker MILLIONS Super High Roller, the event is the byproduct of Yong and his high stakes buddies fancying some time on the piste, and then creating an event around the pastime.
Here is the schedule.
6-7 March – $25,500 No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) Short-Deck (SD) 7-8 March – $25,500 NLHE 8-9 March – $25,500 NLHE SD 9-10 March – $51,000 NLHE 10-11 March – $51,000 NLHE SD 11-12 March – $100,000 NLHE 12-13 March – $100,000 NLHE SD 13-15 March – $250,000 NLHE Super High Roller Bowl (SHRB)
The schedule contains the 5th SHRB held outside of Las Vegas.
Here are the previous non-Vegas winners.
SHRB China (2018) – Justin Bonomo beat 75-entrants to win $4.8m SHRB London (2019) – Cary Katz beat 12-entrants to win $2.6m SHRB Bahamas (2019) – Daniel Dvoress beat 37-entrants to win $4m SHRB Australia (2020) – Timothy Adams beat 16-entrants to win $1.5m
Then World Poker Tour Los Angeles Poker Classic (WPT LAPC)
The WPT LAPC is one of the longest-running live tournament series in the world. It began on 7 December, and ends on 4 March, giving high rollers the chance to have their cake and scoff it down.
There are two $25,000 NLHE puzzles on the March end of the schedule that need solving.
2 March – $25,000 NLHE PokerGO High Roller
3 March – $25,000 NLHE PokerGO High Roller
As you can tell, PokerGO will showcase both events.
The $10,000 WPT LAPC Main Event begins 29 Feb, ending on 4 Mar when the final six players suspend play until the final table on April 2 at the HyperX Esports Las Vegas Arena.
Here is the history of WPT LAPC $25k events.
2010: Scott Seiver beat 41-entrants to win $425,330
2011: Erik Seidel beat 18-entrants to win $144,570
2012: Eui Kim beat 23-entrants to win $242,970
2013: Rodger Johnson beat 24-entrants to win $182,315
2014: Kevin Jonna beat 25-entrants to win $262,640
2016: The event had the year off.
2017: A shy German beat 14-entrants to win $233,860
2018: Alex Foxen beat 50-entrants to win $424,625
2019: Maria Ho beat 28-entrants to win $276,690, and Rainer Kempe won the 27-entrant version for $270,905 (both were dating at the time).
In 2015, the $25,000 High Roller became a $50,000 NLHE Turbo, and Jason Koon defeated 31-entrants to claim the $436,344 first prize.
That’s a wrap for the high stakes action in March.
Get your butlers booked.
465-entrants sawed the legs of partypoker’s $10,3000 No-Limit Hold ’em (NLHE) MILLIONS South American Main Event at the Punta del Este Resort and Casino in Uruguay.
The final table contained five South American incumbents supplemented by three Europeans. Eventually, the Brazilians held the surgical scalpel with Pablo Silva beating his compatriot, Fabio Colonese, in heads-up competition.
It was Silva’s first live tournament win, and like a doctor doing the rounds during a hernia victim’s coughing fit, the timing was perfect as $1m now sits in Silva’s bank account.
Before this win, Silva’s biggest score came in April when he finished 4/538 in a €2,200 NLHE High Roller at the European Poker Tour (EPT) in Monte Carlo for €70,100. It’s not his first MILLIONS Main Event rodeo. He finished 56/536 in the MILLIONS Vegas Main Event in the summer.
Here is the nutshell action.
The Nutshell Action
The first person to leave the contest was Pedro Madeira. The Brazilian open-shoved from the hijack holding KJo for 18.2m and the composure of a man sat darning a sock. In the next seat sat Andres Viola, and he peeked down to see AQo. It was good enough. Viola moved all-in for 44.1m, flopped a second ace for good measure, and Madeira picked up the $100,000 8th place prize.
Then the table lost the rocking horse in this particular set of playthings.
Dzmitry Urbanovich raised to 2.5m, holding AKo in the first position, Fabian Gumz called from the small blind for Kd8d, only to see Daniel Rezaei move all-in from the big blind with a pair of nines worth 55.1m. Urbanovich also moved in, Gumz folded, and the couple flipped for a 100m pot. The Pole’s hope vanished like a china doll in a china shop containing a bull when Rezaei flopped quads, leading to Urbanovich’s exit from the competition.
Next to walk past the paintings in the hallway earlier than anticipated was Sergio Luis Di Pego. Fabio Colonese opened the cutoff for 4m holding Qc8d, Di Pego found a pair of fours on the button and moved all-in for 21m. The blinds folded, and Colonese made the call, hit Broadway on the turn, and Viola became the only hometown hope left in the competition – for a bit.
Colonese opened to 4m from the button, holding Jc9c, and then called when Viola three-bet to 15m holding Kh3c in the big blind. A flop of Ks8s5d hit the board like a trio of door stoppers, and both players tapped the felt. The 7c on the turn retained Viola’s lead but handed Colonese a gutshot, which duly arrived on the river in the form of the Ts.
Then we lost the man whose name you won’t find in The Hendon Mob. Rezaei opened to 5m from the cutoff holding AhKd and called when Fabian Gumz moved all-in from the big blind holding AdQc and 60m. The queens decided to stay in the deck, learning Latin or something, and Gumz left the competition.
The heads-up portrait of Pablo Silva and Fabio Colonese came into view after Rezaei left in the third place. Silva acted first, opening to 8m in position with pocket nines, and then called when Rezaei moved all-in for 139.5m holding the inferior pocket eights. A cooler. Rezaei’s $435,000 will at least buy him something that fits into a rather large cardboard box.
Colonese began as the short-stack during heads-up play, and with a series of all-ins. Silva kept his powder dry before limping in with pocket jacks. Colonese moved all-in for his tournament life holding 86o, and Silva called, battered him, and became our newest MILLIONS Main Event champion.
Final Table Results
Pablo Silva – $1,000,000
Fabio Colonese – $640,000
Daniel Rezaei – $435,000
Fabian Gumz – $310,000
Andres Viola – $230,000
Sergio Luis Di Pego – $170,000
Dzmitry Urbanovich – $130,000
Pedro Madeira – $100,000
High rollers who went as deep as a deep-sea fisherman’s lure in this one were Rainer Kempe (16th), Chino Rheem (18th) and Ivan Luca (49th).
What
did our high roller thoroughbreds get up to during Valentines Day?
Not one
of them mentioned it.
Still,
there were other strains of stampedes to focus on.
Let’s
get to it.
We
start in the online poker realm, with Phil Galfond becoming supine in his
heads-up challenge against VeniVidi1993. The Run It Once founder, called silly
goose on the challenge after 15 sessions, in which time Galfond had lost
€900,240.17, over 9,927 hands.
Galfond
hasn’t given up, yet.
Instead,
the orchestrator of the ‘Phil Galfond Challenge,’ said he needs until March 1st
to clear his mind of ball bearings.
“I was
playing scared. I was expecting to lose. I couldn’t get my brain to work properly.”
Galfond wrote on Twitter.
The
poker community seems divided on the matter with half spewing forth their usual
splenetic, spiteful spittle at Galfond’s outward introspection. Then you have
Galfond’s love club who understands his need to rein his nostrils in for a
moment.
The
funniest response came from Luke Schwartz, roasting Galfond in a rip-roaring
reply, calling Galfond a ‘washed up nice guy.’ He even had a poke at the size
of Galfond’s chest. Eventually, Schwartz owned up to wanting to add extra hype
their will it/won’t it match, and the pair now seems to be in love again.
You can
read all about it here.
One
other collector’s item in the world of online poker, this week, was the release
of the online bracelet events for the 51st Annual World Series of Poker (WSOP).
The
WSOP has reserved a wheelbarrow containing 14-bracelets and a bucket load of
cash for the subterranean section of the most iconic poker festival in the
world, and for the first time, there is a $10,000 No-Limit Hold’em bracelet up
for grabs.
You can read up on it, right here.
Live Poker News
Forget
the Golden Globes and the Oscars; the major movie announcement comes from
Triton Towers. Triton Million: A Helping Hand For Charity may be over, but not
forgotten. Earlier this week, the Triton team released the ‘Triton Million
After Movie’, including never before seen footage as the players warmed up for
the event in Las Vegas, as well as coverage of the incredible event itself.
Check
it out right here.
Another
movie in the works that will interest the high stakes poker community covers on
the story of Phil Ivey’s edge-sorting saga. Popcorn and pastries at the ready,
as the Golden Globe winner, Awkwafina, has signed on to play the role of Cheung
Yin “Kelly” Sun, in the tentatively titled ‘The Baccarat Machine.’
Please read all about it, right here.
The
major live festival this month came from Uruguay. The Enjoy Punte del Este
Casino and Resort lay partypoker MILLIONS branded red carpets over their
pavements for nine days of action.
James
Romero won the 30-entrant $25,000 No-Limit Hold’em for $325,000, and Pablo
Silva won the 465-entrant $10,300 No-Limit Hold’em MILLIONS Main Event for $1m.
You can
check out Romero’s win, right here.
Finally,
the gossip has ended, and the truth is out.
Ok,
there was no gossip.
Poker
Central has inked a deal with Global Poker that will see the latter become the
‘Official Online Poker Partner’ at a series of live events including, but not
restricted to, The Super High Roller Bowl, The Poker Masters and the US Poker
Open.
Check
out the finer details, right here.
The Debate
With a
lull in the high stakes action, last week and nobody seemingly interested in
the night of love, discourse flew to the most apparent lands of “how famous is
Phil Hellmuth,” and “What is a dime?”
Mike
‘The Mouth’ Matusow, who is a great friend of Hellmuth, told Twitter that the
gold-rimmed spectacle reached a new height of delusion when he said to him that
he is a ‘B’ list celebrity, and would bet an undisclosed amount to prove it.
Matusow
polled his 116.7k Twitter followers, 11,465 voted, and 21.8% agreed with the
great man. Still, the vast majority felt that Hellmuth was a ‘D’ list celebrity
(32.2%).
What do
you think?
As a
man from the UK, I struggle with this one.
What is
a dime?
I know,
from recently buying a children’s book from the library on this topic that a
dime is a ten-cent coin, and ten of them makes a buck.
But
this week, I learned it’s not that simple in gambling parlance after Mike
‘Timex” McDonald had to resolve a dispute between two players.
And the
disputed amounts?
It
seems my ten cents isn’t worth ten cents.
The
player who lost the flip sent the winner $10k. The winner assumed he would
receive $1k. They asked Timex, and he said a dime is $1k, the second person
said it was $10k, so they agreed that it would be a $5k bet.
What do
you think?
Interviews
A bunch
of high stakes interviews have agitated the social media airwaves this week.
We’ll
start close at home with the latest in our ‘I am High Stakes Poker’ interviews
and a look at the life of Erik Seidel.
Catch
it right here.
Poker
Central’s Sam Simmons joined the PokerNews Facebook Live thingamajig to talk
about all things high stakes poker.
You can watch the varnished version, right here.
Fedor Holz made an appearance on the London Leadership Podcast, and you can watch this razor-sharp mind unfurling, right here.
Triton
Poker Ambassador, Jason Koon, partook in what Remko Rinkema called the best
podcast he’s ever done. If you’ve turned up at the beach, and the tide is in,
then get back in the car, and watch this.
This
week marked the end of Andrew Yang’s presidential run, and that left the poker
community looking for another stand to rest their hats on. Daniel Negreanu has
gotten involved more than most, and this week, he appeared on the ‘Nerds for
Yang’ podcast, and ‘The Vegas Take,’ to talk about the Yang Gang.
Finally,
have we seen the end of Doug Polk’s highly successful poker YouTube channel?
Polk managed to persuade 286k people to subscribe to his poker channel before
broadening his horizons, moving into light entertainment and crypto.
This
week, Polk polled his fans on the future of the poker channel, and the response
was in favour of ditching it.
What do
you think Polk should do?
The Poll of the Week
Derek
Wolters wanted to know if there was any correlation between initial temperament
and eventual success as a poker player. Should players start playing tight or
aggressive?
Alex
Livingston, Dan Smith and Bryn Kenney had their say.
You can
trace the poll via this blue line.
The Tweet of the Week
There
were so many gems this week.
These
two were epic.
Jason
Mercier’s nipper explaining what daddy does for a living.
Nick
Schulman exposing Phil Ivey’s love of skittles.
Still,
I don’t think anyone will ever beat this one.
Rob
Yong is so committed to growing partypoker he didn’t even notice that his house
had flooded.
While
the Chinese continue to draw killer glances from random people waiting to board
aircraft the world over, one citizen from the great red nation is used to it.
Awkwafina
has drawn stares like a baby mermaid in a specimen jar since she starred in
2018’s Warner Bros’ ‘Crazy Rich Asians,’ and the poker community is soon to join
the trend.
The
Chinese-star will star in a forthcoming flick based on Phil Ivey’s edge-sorting
debacle. The movie carries the tentative title of “The Baccarat
Machine,” named after an article of the same name penned by Michael Kaplan
for Cigar Aficionado.
Ever
since, Phil Ivey and Cheung Yin “Kelly” Sun fleeced the casinos for
millions playing baccarat (before being caught, and forced to return or renege
on those millions), the focus has been on the former king of poker.
Not
anymore.
Like
the new steak bake vegan option in Greggs bakery, the public is about to get an
entirely different taste.
The
movie will focus on the cunning and skills of Cheung Yin “Kelly” Sun,
the mastermind behind the edge-sorting tactics that earned her the reputation
as one of the most accomplished and feared gamblers in the world.
SK
Global, the production company behind Crazy Rich Asians, will finance and
produce the new movie, and joint CEO’s John Penotti and Charlie Corwin spoke of
their delight at casting Awkwafina in the role of Sun.
“We
can’t think of a better way to start this project than by announcing that our
friend Awkwafina has come on board,” SK Global co-CEO John Penotti said,
“she is uniquely equipped to bring Kelly to life onscreen and will infuse
the role with genuine humour and humanity. Along with our partners at Sharp,
we’re thrilled to bring this unbelievable story to the screen.”
The
“Sharp” that Penotti refers to is the sharp in ‘Sharp Independent
Pictures.’ Lovelace scriptwriter, Andy Bellin, is also going to pen this one.
Awkwafina is the only confirmed cast member.
Awkwafina
Since
becoming a crazy rich Asian, Awkwafina has starred in the woeful but widespread
Jumanji: The Next Level alongside poker fan Kevin Hart, and recently won a
Golden Globe for Best Lead Actress in a Musical or Comedy for ‘The Farewell.’
She also stars in Comedy Central’s ‘Awkwafina is Nora From Queens.’
The Baccarat Machine in a Nutshell
You’ve
heard it all before, so a recap is as useful as a dessert wine, but here’s the
nutshell version in case someone new is tuning in.
Cheung
Yin “Kelly” Sun learned that she could gain an edge at the Baccarat
tables by noticing slight imperfections in the top design of Gemaco
cards.
As it
got harder and harder for Sun to get action, she befriended Phil Ivey, and the
pair took Crockford Casino in Mayfair, London, and the Borgata Hotel Casino
& Spa in Atlantic City, New Jersey for millions of dollars.
Crockfords
were the first to smell a rat, refusing to wire him his frozen £7.7m winnings.
When the story began circulating the associated press, representatives from the
Borgata perked up an ear and eyeball. A lawsuit slipped into the equation with
Ivey and the Borgata going at it tooth and nail, the upshot of which is Ivey
has to return $10.1m in Baccarat winnings.
The
Borgata trial is somewhere in the court appeal process.
So far,
Ivey has lost every round.
Phil Galfond is one of the most magnificent men ever to play high stakes No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) and Pot-Limit Omaha (PLO) cash games in the online realm.
The 3-time World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet winner is currently locked in a series of heads-up challenges that have grabbed the attention of the poker industry.
Galfond challenged 7.5 billion people, and so that doesn’t inspire a caricature of a wide-socketed expression of fear. Galfond isn’t a man who hides in the back alleys and shadows. He is a man who stands on the stage, front and centre.
Still, during an interview with The Chip Race mobsters Dave Lappin and Dara O’Kearney, Galfond spoke candidly of his fear of failure admitting that he believes he questions his ability and standing in the high stakes strata more than anyone else in that seam.
There wasn’t a hint of bloated admiration for his ability. Instead, in a show of humility rare in a game heavily saturated in status posturing, Galfond told the Irishmen that he tends to give up on things for the wrong reasons.
It’s a part of Galfond’s makeup that stems from his childhood.
“In school, I wouldn’t do any of my work,” said Galfond. “I was used to doing things without trying. Then, when the work got harder, I refused to try. I was afraid to try. I had this image in my mind that I was smart, and I didn’t want to spoil it by failing.
“It’s the same with solvers in poker. What if I study them, and I’m unable to apply any of the concepts to my game? I don’t want to find out that if I can’t learn these things, I won’t be at the top of my game.”
How does this happen to a man battling the best players in the world for millions of dollars?
Post-mortem points to Galfond’s belief system.
Two Worlds
Each of us, from the poker player to the painter to the overweight potato peeler, exist in two worlds.
The first is our external world.
Our bedroom. Our home. Our street. Our neighbourhood. Our county. Our country. Our continent. Our world. Our universe or our dimension or our patch of megabytes in the game of life.
The second is our inner world.
It’s the place where we recite books without moving our lips. The place where arguments take place between good and evil. The home of our thoughts, our feelings, our emotions – our beliefs.
Childhood
Research suggests that our core identity, personality, character, call it what you will, forms early in our childhood. Our nerve-based learning system howls from the suffocating darkness of our minds, desperate to delve into the glory and glamour of cause and effect.
The external world shapes our inner world through advertising, marketing and brainwashing. The most impressive of these mass marketers are the walking, talking billboards we call “mum” and “dad”, and this most malleable of moments becomes even more entombed in our psyche when we join the school.
Yesterday, I picked my 3-year-old daughter, Zia, up from pre-school. Sad, and melancholy, Zia stood on the periphery of the after school playtime period. Later, in the car, I asked how she felt.
“Sad.”
“Did something make you feel sad in school?”
“Yes.”
“Did someone make you feel sad?”
“Yes.”
“Who?”
“Michelle.”
“How did Michelle make you feel sad?”
“She said that I was too small to play with her.”
As innocent as that sounds, if my wife and I, or her teachers, don’t help her navigate these feelings – and if this feedback continues as she develops – then she will create a belief that being small equates to a lack of acceptance.
Zia wants approval from her friend. We have to teach her that this isn’t the way to receive love and acceptance.
This conditioning exists in all of us, even world-class poker players.
The Action Ladder
Imagine you’re in a juicy cash game, and everything is going wrong. It’s one of those sessions that leave too many strands of hair in the bathtub after a shower.
After losing hand after hand, you lose control. You’re no longer making decisions based on logic. Your feelings have garrotted them. The whole experience has turned into a macabre melody, and you’re its composer.
It’s natural to blame the crime on your external world. Maybe the environment, the deck or the people in and around the game. All of these things affect your moment of temporary madness. Because of this, and the nature of Resistance, you’ll conveniently overlook the more pressing matter – the impact of your inner world.
If at the end of the game we scan a page of emotions, looking for descriptives of our current state of feeling, we may cut and paste words such as anger, frustration, inadequacy, and emasculation.
While there’s no doubt that you have these feelings, it’s critical to understand that your external world is not responsible for the emergence of them – your inner world is.
The dealer can’t make you angry.
The deck can’t cause frustration.
Your opponents can’t make you feel inadequate.
Poker can’t emasculate you.
Most of us want to live a fulfilled and joyful life. It’s the biological goal for the vast majority of humans. Yet, the poker world is a minefield, because the very fabric of existence rests on disappointment after disappointment interrupted by the occasional moment of magic.
If you want fulfilment and joy, then you can choose more accessible routes than bursting through the poker bubble. Still, if you’re going to take the red pill, and see how far poker’s rabbit hole goes, then you have to address the internal cause of your unhappiness.
The Divorce
A decade ago, I took the brave step of leaving my 19-year career on the railway to become a professional poker player. A few months, after my early retirement, my wife of 15-years asked for a divorce.
The split became amicable.
We both left with vats of love for each other and gallons of respect.
Over the years, as we both moved on, we reacted and behaved differently when it came to the management of the pain, suffering and grief traced to the parenting of our only child.
The bloodiest battles lasted a good six years, and there are still battles to this day, a decade after the split.
If external factors were the cause of our disharmonious separation, then we both would have behaved similarly. Instead, we acted directly opposite each other because our perception of the events surrounding the divorce came from two different internal worlds.
When my ex-wife became angry at me for missing ‘my weekend’ with my son because I was in Barcelona working at a poker tour, and texted to tell me that ‘I was the worst father in the world’. That action came from a feeling, that emerged from a thought stuck on the hook belonging to a line called ‘beliefs.’
Her belief that fathers should drop everything, and put their children first, drove the thought that I was a terrible father, that drove the feelings of anger that led to the text. I had a belief that a father should take care of himself so he can become a better parent.
Beliefs – Thoughts – Feelings – Actions.
Validation
If we get caught in the mandible of external factor blame, then we ignore the internal belief system that creates the foundation of our experience.
For some, shining the light on our belief systems is a painful business. Each ray results in a parlay of pike and piranha pricks, and so our Resistance (our ego), emphasises external factors, thus preventing the lantern from ever entering the cave.
Resistance has many tactics that allow us to continue biting the lip instead of figuring things out. One of them is to seek validation from others, accentuating our justifications for continuing the behaviour and pushing the thought of dealing with our beliefs further and further away from the thorough examination it needs.
So we ask our mother, “What do you think of Lee! Travelling around the world, leaving his son at home.”
And the mother responds, “That’s terrible. What a horrible man. I never thought he would become ‘one of them.’ Poor you. Poor boy.”
Friends and family, act as authorities, validating our beliefs through best buddy bias. The same happens in poker with people validating plays, behaviours and actions. It takes a person of a particular awareness to notice the inconsistency between internal and external worlds, and a lot of courage to speak up. Often, when you find a world-class poker player, they are surrounded by these types of people.
The Never-Ending Story
Many people never get over painful experiences like divorces or suffering more bad beats than Ace of Base. Many people never manage to control their emotions effectively. Instead, preferring to believe the Poker Gods have it in for them and refusing to do the work necessary to dissolve these delusions.
Still, with awareness and practice, people can learn to recognise when an unhealthy belief system is producing thoughts, emotions and actions that are ending in a logjam of pain and misery.
Mindworks author, Gary van Warmerdam, calls this learning – mastery of our emotions, and I aim to touch upon some of his ideas and principles throughout this series.
Henry Ford once said, “Coming together is a beginning. Keeping together is progress, and working together is a success.”
Poker Central, the juggernaut of poker content, and the social online poker room, Global Poker, are coming together. We will find out whether there will be progress or success.
Global Poker is unveiled as the ‘Official Online Poker Room’ for an array of Poker Central’s live events, including the Super High Roller Bowl, Poker Masters, US Poker Open and Poker After Dark.
Poker Central’s newest buddies call themselves the ‘fastest growing online poker room in the world,’ and they will hope that those with steaming teapots, slippers and vapes, who have a PokerGO account will feel persuaded to open an account with them.
The deal will see the Global Poker brand integrated into the live stream, and of course, people like me will include their brand name when writing about events covered in the sponsorship deal.
The partnership allows Global Poker to provide their players with opportunities to win free prizes such as meeting some of the stars of Poker Central events, merchandise, and who knows, maybe the odd qualifier will slap on the red lip rouge and take a seat in one of their televised live cash games.
There are also plans to create the Global Poker Lounge inside the PokerGO Studios at ARIA Resort & Casino in Las Vegas, providing fans with a new immersive viewing experience.
“Kicking off this partnership with Global Poker has been a dream come true for our team,” said Sampson Simmons, president of Poker Central. “Our two companies share a common goal of making poker accessible to fans worldwide, and this partnership will allow both to advance that mission through live events and once-in-a-lifetime experiences.”
“Given the prestige of Poker Central’s events, bringing our brands together feels like the next step in taking both partners to the next level,” said David Lyons, GM of Global Poker, “This partnership will not only promote the events but offer countless opportunities to bring poker players and enthusiasts from all over the world into the action.”
The U.S Poker Open
Global Poker will step onto Poker Central’s pavement for the first time 19-31 March when wheelbarrows full of cash gets distributed between the best in the business at the US Poker Open.
Here is the schedule in full.
Mar 19 – Event #1: $10k No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) Mar 20 – Event #2: $10k Pot-Limit Omaha (PLO) Mar 21 – Event #3: $10k NLHE Mar 22 – Event #4: $10k Big Bet Mix Mar 23 – Event #5: $10k NLHE Mar 24 – Event #6: $10k 8-Game Mix Mar 25 – Event #7: $10k PLO Mar 26 – Event #8: $10k PLO Mar 27 – Event #9: $10k NLHE Mar 28 – Event #10: $10k Short-Deck Mar 29 – Event #11: $25k NLHE Mar 30 – Event #12: $50k NLHE.
The winner receives the accolades, trophy and $50,000 in cash.
As the US Poker Open is part of the Poker Central Triple Crown, the series will premiere on NBC Sports Network (NBCSN) as well as stream live on PokerGO.
The 2020 iteration is the third instalment of the US Poker Open. Stephen Chidwick won the inaugural series in 2018. Last year, David Peters won the title in 2019, after taking down the $100,000 buy-in NLHE Main Event right at the death.
There are more than 800 breeds of pigeon.
There are the rats of the skies that hobble, one-legged, hoping for a crisp, and then you have racing pigeons like Armando, sold to a Chinese bidder for $1.4m in March.
Before the creation of the telegram in 1844, the fastest way to get messages to people was via homing pigeon, because they could fly a 1,000 miles, and reach speeds of up to 90 miles p/h.
Today, we have Twitter.
The last time we reported on the ‘Phil Galfond Challenge’ it was going as well as a weasel picking a fight with a pride of lions. After 15 sessions and 9,927 hands, ‘VeniVidi1993’ had won €900,240.17. Or, Galfond had lost €900,240.17, depending on your point of view.
With gossip rife and a day of R&R in the bag, Galfond took the unusual step of pressing the pause button.
Writing on Twitter Galfond stated:
“Until a few days ago, I was very proud of the way I’d handled a very unfortunate run. I think that I played well and remained as level-headed as can be expected.”
Galfond then continued to state that his €88k win made him feel “great about his play,” and that he “got a taste of the downswing ending, and was excited about the future.”
As we now know, the following day, Galfond’s cape ended up in the fireplace when VeniVidi1993 pocketed €268k from him.
“I felt tilt during that session, but managed to play my B game,” Galfond wrote on Twitter. “Again, I was proud of myself considering the circumstances.”
Cue The Problems
Since that razor to the carotid loss, Galfond has gone on to lose a further two sessions, and approx. €150,000, and it’s these two sessions that have gotten Galfond all agitated.
“I could tell that I’d abandoned my gameplan for plays that felt better (emotionally), and I couldn’t seem to gather my thoughts coherently, or to make reads like I normally do.”
“I was playing scared. I was expecting to lose. I simply couldn’t get my brain to work properly.”
Galfond went on to state that he had experienced €900k losses before – that wasn’t the problem. It was the crushing ‘loss of hope.’
“I lost that hope, and it was replaced by depression,” wrote Galfond. “I have found my mind’s limit.”
Downswings of this nature are not uncommon to a man who has been plying his trade for a decade-plus. Still, it’s rare to lose so much, so swiftly at the start of the most talked-about heads-up, high stakes challenge since Tom Dwan’s infamous tongue wavering.
With Galfond admittedly ‘unable to play my A or B game,’ and with realism kicking in that he needed time to heal, the Run It Once founder has decided to pay the €3k day penalty losses until he either throws in the towel or feels confident enough to resume on March 1.
Throw a Bomb on The Man When He’s Down
Back to those pigeons.
Never shy of controversy, Luke Schwartz, penned a hilarious and cutting, assessment of Galfond’s decision, his play during the challenge, his decision to face ‘a human-robot in the first challenge,’ and his post-match meanderings on Twitter.
Here is the tweet in full.
And the cliff-notes.
Schwartz called Galfond a ‘washed up nice guy,’ and a ‘spent force’ whose ‘time has passed,’ and that the smart thing to do is to ‘wave the white flag.’
The tirade continued with Schwartz stating that Galfond either has too much ego or is ‘too stupid to quit,’ because he’s no ‘LeBron James. He’s a nerdy little guy who was trying to extend his poker money-making by getting some traction on his failing site.”
There was also time to give Galfond’s fans some advice – “It’s time to get some new poker heroes lads.”
The man from the UK also offered Galfond some business advice suggesting that it was a ‘horrible business decision’ to choose an ‘unknown solver who is five years and 14 advanced solvers better than him, as his first challenger.’
And Schwartz isn’t without empathy.
“Listen up, save your site. Come and play me.” Wrote Schwartz. “We are the same age and have similar egos. I’ve never studied a hand of poker in my life. Let’s level out the playing field, and give the fanboys a proper rail.”
The Hendon Mobster, Barny Boatman, believes that Schwartz should get off the fence, and tell us what he really thinks.
With no VeniVidi1993 to think about for a few days, Galfond was able to spend a few moments on Twitter when he came across the pigeon killer’s dig.
Schwartz responded immediately, writing to Galfond to assure him that he was merely ‘hyping it.’
“Rest up, go and get some Perkins money and avoid ActionFreak. Be well, Phil x” Wrote Schwartz.
“Ok, cool, just fact-checking. I am happy with you talking shit about my posts and my play. Carry on.” Replied Galfond, ending the tweet with a thumbs-up emoji; evidence that Phil Galfond is not one of those 800 breeds of pigeons because none of them has thumbs.
The library of the 51st World Series of Poker (WSOP) nears completion after the organisers included the spines of the online bracelet events.
14-online bracelet events bookended between a $400 No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) taking place on May 31, and the $500 NLHE Summer Saver penned in for Jul 12, makes the presence of WSOP.com more prevalent than ever.
WSOP officials have been brushing re-entry events from the front step since Dec 2019, and that habit continues with the announcement that three of the 14 games will be freezeout, and ten of them single re-entry. Only the $777 buy-in Pot-Limit Omaha (PLO) scheduled for June 7 is a multiple re-entry event with a 3x re-entry stipulation.
The impervious $1,500 price point makes the leap from the live realm for the first time. The $1,500 NLHE (single re-entry) event takes place on Jun 30. The other standout debutant pricepoint is the $10,000 NLHE Super High Roller on July 2, and it’s a freezeout.
How do You Get Involved?
If you find the atmos in the Rio a tad noxious, then you can compete in these online bracelets from a spoke location as long as it’s within the borders of Nevada and New Jersey. You don’t have to be a resident of those two great states. Park a van, set up a tent, sleep in a bus stop – the WSOP doesn’t care as long as you don’t cross the border.
You don’t have to wait for the WSOP to begin to get set up. The press release that arrived on my mahogany desktop said you could create an account, deposit and with withdraw from anywhere in the world. If you would rather wait until the big day, then the WSOP has your back with deposits and withdrawals available at the WSOP cage, and WSOP.com assistants present, warts and all, in the Lambada Room throughout the series.
Sculleries are no longer a thing, but multi-tabling online and live bracelet events at the WSOP is. If you have the money and the bandwidth, then go for it. 99.9% of online bracelet events are available across the desktop, mobile and tablet options. The unig blentyn in this room of twins is the $777 PLO, which is only playable via desktop. If I knew why I wouldn’t be writing this, I would be a coder or something else special-like.
“We believe the 2020 offering of online gold bracelet events features our best schedule yet,” said WSOP.com’s Director of Online Poker Danielle Barille. “This year we offer a consistent schedule of Sunday events every week of the WSOP, plus a special selection of eight events from June 28 to July 5 to coincide with the biggest week of the live WSOP when most players are in town to play.”
Here is the online bracelet schedule in full.
The Schedule
May 31 – $400 NLHE (single re-entry) Jun 7 – $777 PLO 7-Handed (3x re-entry) Jun 9 – $800 NLHE Knockout DeepStack (freezeout) Jun 14 – $500 NLHE Turbo DeepStack (single re-entry) Jun 21 – $500 NLHE (freezeout) Jun 28 – $1000 NLHE Championship (single re-entry) Jun 29 – $500 NLHE (single re-entry) Jun 30 – $1,500 NLHE (single re-entry) Jul 1 – $3,200 NLHE High Roller (single re-entry) Jul 2 – $10,000 NLHE Super High Roller (freezeout) Jul 3 – $400 NLHE (single re-entry) Jul 4 – $500 NLHE Turbo DeepStack (single re-entry) Jul 5 – $600 NLHE (single re-entry) Jul 12 – $500 NLHE Summer Saver (single re-entry)
All events start at 18:30 (ET), with the lone exception the $10,000 Super High Roller, beginning at 15:00 (ET).
The History of WSOP Bracelet Events
Anthony ‘casedismissed’ Spinella won the first online bracelet when in 2015 he beat a field of 905-entrants to win the $197,743 first prize in the $1,000 NLHE Championship event. In 2016, the attendance blossomed as Clayton ’SLARDUCK’ Maguire topped a 1,247-entrant field to win the $210,279 in the $1,000 NLHE Championship.
WSOP.com expanded its bracelet events in 2017 with three. Tom “FLOATZ’ Cannuli beat 424-entrants to win the $3,333 NLHE High Roller for $323k. Joseph “ul_gg” Mitchell conquered a 2,509 entrant field in the $333 NLHE event for $122,314. And Nipun “Javatinii” Java won the 1,312 entrant $1,000 NLHE Championship for $237,688.
PLO bracelets became a thing in 2018 when there were four events in total. William Reymond beat 2,972 entrants in the $365 NLHE for $154,996. Matthew Mendez beat 1,223 entrants in the $565 PLO 6-Handed for $135,078. Chance Kornuth won the $3,200 High Roller beating 480-entrants to win $341,599. And Ryan Tosoc beat 1,635 entrants to win the $238,779 first prize in the $1,000 NLHE Championship.
The WSOP applied more varnish last year with nine online bracelet events, and here is the roll of honour:
Yong Keun Kwon beat 2,825 entrants in the $400 NLHE for $165,263.
Josh Pollock beat 1,216 entrants in the $600 PLO 6-Handed for $139,470.
Upeshka De Silva beat 1,224 entrants in the $600 NLHE Knockout Bounty for $98,263.
Daniel Lupo beat 1,767 entrants in the $500 NLHE Turbo DeepStack for $145,274.
Jason Gooch beat 1,333 entrants in the $1,000 NLHE Double Stack for $241,493.
Nicholas Baris beat 1,750 entrants in the $1,000 Championship for $303,739.
Brandon Adams beat 593 entrants in the $3,200 NLHE High Roller for $41,561.
Shawn Buchanan beat 1,560 entrants in the $800 NLHE 6-Max for $223,119.
Taylor Paur beat 1,859 entrants in the $500 NLHE Summer Saver or $149,241.
Two of the stars of 2019 partypoker MILLIONS South America stepped from the wings to feature on the centre stage of the $25,500 No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) Super High Roller.
The richest buy-in of the Enjoy Punta del Este Resort & Casino hosted series saw 35-entrants create the first prize of $350,000, with James Romero and Marty Mathis trying to avoid the crypt-cold feel of bridesmaid linen.
Romero finished 9th in the $10,300 High Roller at the MILLIONS South America in Brazil last year and recently finished third in the MILLIONS UK Main Event at Dusk till Dawn (DTD) for $420,000.
Mathis is the reigning MILLIONS South America Champion having been the shampoo that doused 439 lice on his way to an $837,700 first prize in Brazil.
Let’s see how the pair made it to the endgame.
The Nutshell Action
Only five from 35 people would leave the final table without enmity, and the person who ended in position six was Niall Farrel. The Triple Crown winner, opened to 1,925,000 from the cutoff holding pocket eights (leaving only 25,000 behind), Jacob Daniels made the call from the small blind, holding QdTd, and Francisco Benitez made the call from the big blind holding pocket jacks. To say that Farrell was in a tannery minus a set of nose plugs was an understatement. The Ah6d4h flop maintained Benitez’s hold on the hand. Everyone checked. The Qc on the turn gave Daniels the lead with one card remaining. He locked the gate and threw away the key by moving all-in, Benitez found the fold button, but Farrell flicked his final 25,000 into the pot before leaving with nothing but a stale onion ring once the 5d had hit the river.
Benitez may have dodged that hand, but he didn’t evade the next one.
When the action folded to Daniels in the small blind, he moved all-in holding AhTh, and Benitez called for his tournament life with Td8c from the next pew. The board whiffed for Benitez, and the ace-high of Daniels sent him to the rail in the sixth place.
Marty Mathis sent seeds of resentment into the soul of Daniels, twice doubling through the MILLIONS Champion when aces beat jacks, and when jacks beat treys. And then we lost Ivan Luca.
The action folded to Luca in the small blind holding As6s, and he moved the last of his chips into the middle. James Romero called from the big blind holding Kd9h, flopped a king, and ended Luca’s hopes of a title in his continent.
Romero continued his ascent when he doubled through Daniels. The hand was an aberration for the latter, when Romero set a trap, limping with pocket aces. Daniels moved all-in holding Qs9d, and Romero was already locked and loaded.
After that hand, Daniels moved all-in for 6,775,000, holding pocket threes on the button, and Romero finished the job with pocket eights from the big blind.
The heads-up encounter saw both players take the chip lead before Romero opened to 1,600,000 from the button holding AdTh, and then called when Mathis moved all-in for 7,875,000 holding QdJh. An ace on the flop settling affairs.
Here are the final ITM finishes.
ITM results
James Romero – $350,000
Marty Mathis – $213,750
Jacob Daniels – $150,000
Ivan Luca – $100,000
Francisco Benitez – $60,000
Welcome to another episode of the Pinnacle; a round-up of high stakes poker news that’s nothing like the Roundup used by Monsanto, a company that’s believed to have set aside $10 billion for potential lawsuits from people who think they contracted cancer from the herbicide.
From one alleged killer to a proven killer.
The virus with sediment rising from the Chinese city of Wuhan in the Hubei province has so far afflicted more than 42,000 people, killing over 1,000 in China alone, and it’s for that reason that Triton Poker postponed the Triton Poker Super High Roller Series in Jeju.
There’s still no word on whether Triton’s Jeju event will go ahead, but we do know that there is zero chance of playing any high stakes poker in Macau throughout the next fortnight.
The World Poker Tour (WPT) announced the dates and the venue for the Season 18 Tournament of Champions (TOC). Season 18 Main Event winners and WPT Champions Club members willing to pay the $15,000 buy-in will creak the floorboards of The HyperX Esports Arena Las Vegas at the Luxor Hotel May 31 – June 2, and the decision is an unpopular one throughout the high stakes community.
After scrutinising the dates, players realised the event clashed with the $25,000 buy-in No-Limit Heads-Up contest at the World Series of Poker (WSOP). Dan Smith was one of the first players to question the logic of the WPT to clash with the WSOP on this one. Daniel Negreanu went one step further, suggesting, for him, WSOP’s competitors should not schedule an event during the WSOP, period. WPT commentator Tony Dunst took the alternative view, questioning why the WSOP would plan their $25k event “with the best value and (only?) added-money high stakes MTT of the year.”
Two more snippets of live tournament news for you, and we start with some love for the Super High Roller Bowl Australia winner, Timothy Adams.
And Daniel Negreanu is preparing to compete in his first live event of 2020. The figurehead of GGPoker is going to make a splash at the US Poker Open and is considering selling action without markup and recording his entire experience on the vlog.
Online Poker
The eyes of the poker community are congealed on the high stakes online action rather than the goings-on in the live arena, and Phil Galfond, in particular.
The Run It Once Poker (RIO Poker) founder has played 15 sessions in Match #1 of ‘The Phil Galfond Challenge,’ and it’s been a disastrous start for the three-time WSOP bracelet winner.
With the poker world scrutinising Galfond’s every movement, the poker Titan has fallen into a hole, €900,240.17 deep in his €100/€200 Pot-Limit Omaha (PLO) heads-up match against VeniVidi1993. Galfond has only won two of the fifteen meetings, and if these results continue, he could lose close to €2.5m.
PokerStars has announced plans to host a High Roller Series in March, but it’s walnuts compared to December’s Brazil nuts. The series runs between 23-30 March, containing 19-events with buy-ins ranging between $215 and $10,300 (30% lighter than Dec). The guarantees have also dropped from $11m to $6m.
Here is the schedule in full.
Interviews
In a rare cross-pollination exercise, partypoker’s Jaime Staples welcomed GGPoker’s Daniel Negreanu onto his podcast for a chinwag about all things poker.