Hedonism is whatever turns you on, and for some, that’s the hardscrabble grind of online poker multi-table tournaments (MTTs) – the very form of indulgence that Alex Foxen enjoys.

The man many would vote as the hardest working high stakes online MTT grinder in the biz spent Thursday night creating a heatwave in the High Roller Club on partypoker.

Foxen licked the 42-entrant field in the $10,300, $400k High Roller Main Event for $159,600. The triumph is Foxen’s third High Roller Club title of the week, after winning two on Tuesday night. Foxen also made the final table of the $5k (3rd) and the $530 (5th) concluding a fantastic evening.

Viktor Blom was the last man seated in Foxen’s $10k win. The Swede also made the final table of the $5k (6th) to continue his resurgence in high stakes online MTTs, and his compatriot and former PocketFives World #1 Nikas Astedt also featured in two final tables, finishing 6th in the $10k and 3rd in the $1k.

Winners on the night include Sam Greenwood taking down the 40-entrant $5k for $80,000, Ivan Gabrieli winning the 47-entrant $1k for $16,614.21, and Andrey Kotelnikov for outlasting the 51-entrant field in the $530 for – $8,345.06.

Here are the results in full.

$10,300, $400k Main Event

42-entrants

Results

  1. Alex Foxen – $159,600
  2. Viktor Blom – $105,000
  3. Alexandros Kolonias – $67,200
  4. Wiktor Malinowski – $37,800
  5. Mike Watson – $29,400
  6. Niklas Astedt – $21,000

$5,200, $150k 6-Max Second Chance

40-entrants

Results

  1. Sam Greenwood – $80,000
  2. Sami Kelopuro – $51,189
  3. Alex Foxen – $26,000
  4. Isaac Haxton – $18,000
  5. Eelis Parssinen – $14,000
  6. Viktor Blom – $10,811

$1,050, $50k Mix-Max

47-entrants

Results

  1. Ivan Gabrieli – $8,687.50+$7,926.71
  2. Andrejs Litvinenko – $1,312.50+$7,921.39
  3. Niklas Astedt – $656.25+$4,024.79
  4. Kristen Bicknell – $1,718.75+$2,786.39
  5. Preben Stokken – $2,437.50+$2,167.19
  6. Roberto Romanello – $250+$1,673.53

$530, $25k Mix-Max Turbo

51-entrants

Results

  1. Andrey Kotelnikov – $4,531.25+$3,813.81
  2. Boris Kolev – $2,656.25+$3,811.23
  3. Oleg Vasylchenko – $250+$1,936.45
  4. Valentino Sibilla – $750+$1,340.62
  5. Alex Foxen – $875+$1,042.70
  6. Alex Reard – $125+$805.19
Timothy Adams

It’s time for another 586-words of carefully choreographed syntax designed to provide you with the results of high stakes online multi-table tournament (MTT) action from the land of GGPoker.

What follows is the primary results of the weekend and the first few days of a week that has seen the world wince and whine.

The most significant prize that flew down the electronic wires of the Internet went to Robert Lipkin. The American collected $118,495.05 after getting the better of 100-entrants in the High Rollers Blade Prime $5k.

There were three other members of the six-figure club.

Chris Brewer collected $101,365.01 after beating Jake Schindler, heads-up, in the 20-entrant Bryns High Rollers $10k, ‘AAAKid’ banked $116,403.84 after subjugating the 107-entrant field in the High Rollers Blade Mulligan $5k, and ‘BrynkenneyAA’ earned $116,904.27 and a watch for capturing the flag in the 108-entrant Asian Poker Tour (APT) Super High Roller $5k.

The PocketFives World #1, Conor’ 1_conor_b_1’ Beresford took second to ‘AAAKid’ for $87,648.57, Ali Imsirovic won the 4-entrant Bryns High Rollers $25k for double his money, and Timothy Adams clobbered the 54-entrant High Rollers Blade Opener $5k for $79,845.95. The Canadian, Ami Barer, won the 50-entrant High Rollers Blade Closer $5k for $95,537.39, Artur Martirosian bested the 37-entrant field in the High Roller Blade $5k for $74,972.12, and the South American star, Farid Jattin, drubbed the 49-entrant field in the High Rollers Blade PLO $5k for $88,945.32.

Here are those results in full.

Bryns High Rollers $25k

4-entrants

Results

  1. Ali Imsirovic – $98,000

Bryns High Rollers $10k

20-entrants

Results

  1. Chris Brewer – $101,365.01
  2. Jake Schindler – $61,317.65
  3. Ali Imsirovic – $31,317.34

High Rollers Blade Prime $5k

100-entrants

Results

  1. Robert Lipkin – $118,495.05
  2. Cliffboth – $89,739.45
  3. Darren Elias – $67,962.05
  4. IAmZeCaptainNow – $51,469.45
  5. Pascal Lefrancois – $38,979.15
  6. Laurynas Levinskas – $29,519.95
  7. Preben Stokkan – $22,356.20
  8. Conor Beresford – $16,930.95

High Rollers Blade Opener $5k

54-entrants

Results

  1. Timothy Adams – $79,845.95*
  2. Sam Greenwood – $63,322.03*
  3. Juan Pardo Dominguez – $39,204.04
  4. Jake Schindler – $28,301.31
  5. Preben Stokkan – $20,430.66
  6. Isaac Haxton – $14,748.85
  7. Alex Foxen – $10,647.16

*Indicates a deal

APT Super High Roller $5k

108-entrants

Results

  1. BrynkenneyAA – $116,904.27
  2. Beishadezhu2 – $88,025.38
  3. Sam Greenwood – $66,280.49
  4. Daniel Dvoress – $49,907.22
  5. HansNeverLose – $37,578.63
  6. CowBaby – $28,295.55
  7. Ali Imsirovic – $21,305.71
  8. Mike Watson – $16,042.56

High Rollers Blade Mulligan $5k

21-entrants

Results

  1. David Misikowski – $52,250
  2. Jake Schindler – $31,607.04
  3. Chris Brewer – $16,142.96

High Roller Blade $5k

37-entrants

Results

  1. Artur Martirosian – $74,972.12
  2. Steve O’Dwyer – $44,297.40
  3. Rubbherducky – $27,882.73
  4. Preben Stokkan – $17,550.62
  5. TheProfessional – $11,047.13

High Rollers Blade Closer $5k

50-entrants

Results

  1. Ami Barer – $95,537.39
  2. Gr4vyB04t – $58,745
  3. David Misickowski – $39,457.47
  4. Rebuyguy – $26,502.55
  5. Michael Addamo – $17,801.07
  6. Jake Schindler – $11,956.52

High Rollers Blade PLO $5k

49-entrants

Results

  1. Farid Jattin – $88,945.32
  2. Andrew Pantling – $54,691.59
  3. Ami Barer – $36,734.90
  4. Andjelko Andrejevic – $24,673.87
  5. Sean Winter – $16,572.80
  6. George Wolff – $11,131.52

High Rollers Blade Mulligan $5k

107-entrants

Results

  1. AAAKid – $116,403.84
  2. Conor Beresford – $87,648.57
  3. Dario Sammartino – $65,996.77
  4. Ami Barer – $49,693.58
  5. Nick Schulman – $37,417.77
  6. Alex Foxen – $28,174.43
  7. Jellopy77 – $21,214.50
  8. Oiltrader – $15,973.89

As if the high stakes world didn’t have enough options on their smorgasbord of multi-table tournament (MTT) action Poker Central and partypoker cut the ribbon on the Poker Masters Pot-Limit Omaha Series on Sunday.

God’s day of rest saw 426-entrants hold amiable and crude conversations in the chat boxes of four shuttered virtual rooms, and there were a few names worthy of mention.

The biggest single purse went to Marcello Marigliano, who won the 72-entrant Event #1: $10,300 for $249,053.76. Gavin Cochrane finished runner-up in that one, and Cochrane also finished sixth in the $5k event. Norbert Szecsi also featured in two final tables, finishing third in both. Not to be outdone, Bengt Sonnert finished runner-up in two, losing out to Erik Dahlberg in the $1k, and Boris Angelov in the $530.

There was also a win for the former PocketFives World #1 Andras Nemeth. The Hungarian conquered a field of 81-entrants to win the $126,686.43 first prize in the $5k, beating the in-form, Viktor Blom, heads-up, for the title.

Here are the results in full.

Event #1: $10,300, $500k GTD

72-entrants

Results

  1. Marcello Marigliano – $249,053.76
  2. Gavin Cochrane – $162,000
  3. Norbert Szecsi – $86,400
  4. Mark Demirjian – $64,800
  5. Jesper Hougaard – $46,800
  6. Lasse Neilsen – $32,400
  7. Niklas Astedt – $26,182.08
  8. Niko Soininen – $26,182.08

Event #1: $1,050 $50k GTD Mini

124-entrants

Results

  1. Erik Dahlberg – $31,236.38
  2. Bengt Sonnert – $21,080
  3. Norbert Szecsi – $14,880
  4. Benjamin Voreland – $10,540
  5. Robert Woodcock – $7,750
  6. Federico Quevedo – $5,146
  7. Noah Boeken – $3,906
  8. Andrew Pantling – $3,906

Event #2: $5,200, $250k GTD

81-entrants

Results

  1. Andras Nemeth – $126,686.43
  2. Viktor Blom – $78,975
  3. Alexander Norden – $48,600
  4. Aku Joentausta – $35,437.50
  5. Jake Schindler – $25,312.50
  6. Gavin Cochrane – $17,212.50
  7. Isaac Haxton – $13,162.50
  8. Niko Soininen – $13,162.50

Event #2: $530, $25k GTD Mini Knockout

149-entrants

Results

  1. Boris Angelov – $10,324.24+$7,135.47
  2. Bengt Sonnert – $3,011.71+$7,127.95
  3. Daniel Westerholm – $1,929.68+$5,034.12
  4. Jeanfrancois Talbot – $1,421.87+$3,565.84
  5. Riku Santeri Piroinen – $2,312.50+$2,621.94
  6. Olli Ikonen – $125+$1,740.96
  7. Pedro Zagalo – $656.25+$1,173.37
  8. Shyngis Satubayev – $593.75+$1,173.37

As the world widens their aperture in post lockdown world, online poker players stay firmly seated with butts in chairs courtesy of some of the best high stakes action the industry has ever seen. Given the recent rise in coronavirus cases in Las Vegas casinos since the decision to reopen the pits, I guess that’s a good thing.

While weekend warriors dodged COVID bullets in nightclubs, churches and casinos alike, Michael Addamo took the High Roller Club apart like a seasoned plumber with a wrench and a leaky faucet.

The awesome Australian, hailing from Old Blighty, binked victories in Sunday’s two highest buy-ins in the High Roller Club collecting more than $600,000 in loot, and moving up to #11 in the leaderboard proper.

The man standing ten rungs of the ladder higher than Addamo is Rok Gostisa. The Slovenian finished in the money (ITM) in two of Sunday’s events to surpass Luke Reeves at the top. The British star managed to eke into one final table, finishing fifth in the Warm-Up, slipping into second place.

Timothy Adams, Juan Pardo Dominguez, and Pascal Lefrancois all replicating Gostisa with two final appearances on Sunday. Adams sits fourth in the overall leaderboard with Lefrancois, seventh.

Here are Sunday’s results.

$25,500 Main Event

39-entrants

Results

  1. Michael Addamo – $407,500
  2. Rok Gostisa – $265,000
  3. Juan Pardo Dominguez – $100,000
  4. Timothy Adams – $62,500

$10,300 Mix-Max 2nd Chance

51-entrants

Results

  1. Michael Addamo – $204,000
  2. Sergi Reixach – $130,531.95
  3. Vyacheslav Buldygin – $66,300
  4. Timothy Adams – $45,900
  5. Juan Pardo Dominguez – $35,700
  6. Pascal Lefrancois – $27,568.05

$5,200 The Big Game

221-entrants

Results

  1. Jon Van Fleet – $211,552.46
  2. Bujtas Laszlo – $153,554.44
  3. Kristen Bicknell – $109,459.41
  4. Jans Arends – $80,927.34
  5. Sami Kelopuro – $57,064.15
  6. Pascal Lefrancois – $43,576.26
  7. Mark Radoja – $32,163.43
  8. Eelis Parssinen – $23,863.19

$1,050 Knockout

101-entrants

  1. Istvan Habencius – $17,289.07+$12,372.50
  2. Alexandros Theologis – $5,867.19 + $8,837.50
  3. Iurii Pasiuk – $3,234.37+$6,312.50
  4. Claas Segebrecht – $1,375+$4,418.75
  5. Sergi Denisov – $500+$3,282.50
  6. Andras Nemeth – $2,171.87+$2,525
  7. Chris Hunt – $750+$2,020
  8. Niklas Astedt – $1,781.25+$1,641.25

$1,050 Warm-Up

99-entrants

Results

  1. Sergey Konovalov – $24,500
  2. Mikitak Badziakouski – $17,500
  3. Ioannis Angelou-Konstas – $12,500
  4. Aleksejs Ponakovs – $8,750
  5. Luke Reeves – $6,500
  6. Barry Hutter – $5,000
  7. Christian Rudolph – $4,000
  8. Rok Gostisa – $3,250

High Roller Leaderboard

  1. Rok Gostisa – 940
  2. Luke Reeves – 899
  3. Thomas Muehloecker – 725
  4. Timothy Adams – 715
  5. Teun Mulder – 684
  6. Matthias Eibinger – 660
  7. Pascal Lefrancois – 617
  8. Artur Martirosian – 613
  9. Wiktor Malinowski – 601
  10. Preben Stokkan – 555

The enrollment in GGPoker’s high stakes multi-table tournaments (MTTs) has been more fish paste sandwich than full-on New York Deli, but for the sake of uniformity here are the results.

The form seems to be this: when an MTT becomes a short-handed Sit n Go, Jake Schindler wins it. The American-pro featured in the money (ITM) in three of the five $5k+ events spread over the last three days, winning the two smallest.

Schindler took down two 5-entrant Bryn’s High Rollers $5k events, beating Alex Foxen in one and Chris Brewer in the other as well as finishing 4/52 in the High Rollers Blade Prime $5k.

Juan Pardo Dominguez finished ITM in two events, including winning the highest buy-in of the lot in another short-handed scramble. The Spaniard took down the 6-entrant Bryn’s High Rollers $10k, defeating that man Jake Schindler, heads-up. Dominguez also finished 3/23 in the High Roller Blade Mulligan $5k, an event that ‘dnegking’ won for $57,083.13.

Preben Stokkan is the man who walked away from GGPoker with the biggest prize of the past three days. The Norwegian star conquered a 52-entrant field to win the High Rollers Blade Prime $5k. Stokkan beat Timother Nuter, heads-up, to claim the $94,390.95 first prize.

Here are the results in full.

Bryn’s High Rollers $5k

5-entrants

Results

  1. Jake Schindler – $23,750

High Roller Blade Mulligan $5k

23-entrants

Results

  1. Dnegking – $57,083.13
  2. Sergi Reixach – $34,530.69
  3. Juan Pardo Dominguez – $17,636.18

Bryn’s High Rollers $10k

6-entrants

Results

  1. Juan Pardo Dominguez – $58,200

High Rollers Blade Prime $5k

52-entrants

Results

  1. Preben Stokkan – $94,390.95
  2. Timother Nuter – $58,040.06
  3. Chris Brewer – $38,983.98
  4. Jake Schindler – $26,184.51
  5. George Wolff – $17,587.46
  6. Ali Imsirovic – $11,813.04

Bryn’s High Rollers $5k

5-entrants

Results

  1. Jake Schindler – $23,750

The kaleidoscope of high stakes poker continues unabated on partypoker with the High Roller Club. The flunky free home of those seeking fame, fortunate and flow saw Luke Reeves replace Thomas Muehloecker at the top of the leaderboard after six events on Tuesday night.

Reeves finished in the money (ITM) in 50% of the night’s events, winning two of them. The UK star was a revelation in the 60-entrant $1,050 High Roller Mix-Max, beating Atanas Malinov to secure the $20,754.48 first prize. Reeves then went on to win the 39-entrant $2,600 High Roller Club Mix-Max, defeating George Wolff, heads-up for $39,000.01.

Chad Eveslage also bagged a brace. The man from Indiana crushed the 99-entrant field in the $530 High Roller 6-Max Bounty Hunter for $11,923.93, before besting a field of 44-entrants in the $2,100 High Roller Club 6-Max Knockout for $40,157.02.

Other winners on the night include Teun Muelder who won the $5,200 High Roller Club Main Event, overthrowing 51-entrants including Sam Greenwood, heads-up, to claim the $90,525 first prize. Jans Arends won the $1,050 High Roller Club 6-Max Turbo Knockout, circumventing 44 landmines to collect $16,391.03.

Matthias Eibinger led the close but no cigar brigade with three ITM finishes. Andras Nemeth, Kristen Bicknell, Mark Davis and the Arends as mentioned above, earned two.

Here is the leaderboard.

The action continues until 16 July.

Tuesday Night Results

$5,200 High Roller Club Main Event

51-entrants

Results

  1. Teun Mulder – $90,525
  2. Sam Greenwood – $60,562.50
  3. Rok Gostica – $38,887.50
  4. Matthias Eibinger – $24,862.50
  5. Mark Davis – $16,575
  6. Jon Van Fleet – $12,750
  7. Ludovic Geilich – $10,837.50

$1,050 High Roller Mix-Max

60-entrants

Results

  1. Luke Reeves – $20,754.48
  2. Atanas Malinov – $13,500
  3. Preben Stokkan – $7,200
  4. Matthias Eibinger – $5,400
  5. Aleksejs Ponakovs – $3,900
  6. Andras Nemeth – $2,700
  7. Pim Gieles – $2,181.84
  8. Stefan Huber – $2,181.84

$530 High Roller 6-Max Bounty Hunter

99-entrants

Results

  1. Chad Eveslage – $6,171.89+$5,752.04
  2. Tomas Paiva – $2,132.981+$5,746.91
  3. Alex Reard – $2,289.06+$3,538.11
  4. Matthias Eibinger – $1,640.62+$2,579.87
  5. Nikita Kupchin – $1,703.12+$1,842.76
  6. Ricardo Arraino – $500+$1,253.08
  7. Thomas Muehloecker – $2,281.25+$820,62
  8. Alexandr Razinkov – $125+$820.62

$2,100 High Roller Club 6-Max Knockout

44-entrants

Results

  1. Chad Evelsage – $23,406.25+$16,750.77
  2. Giuseppe Iadisernia – $500+$16,739.54
  3. Pascal Hartmann – $5,625+$8,805.21
  4. Kristen Bicknell – $500+$5,888.22
  5. Artur Martirosian – $3,250+$4,579.73
  6. Max Diender – $2,031.25+$3,536.53

$2,600 High Roller Club Mix-Max

39-entrants

Results

  1. Luke Reeves – $39,000.01
  2. George Wolff – $24,954.63
  3. Mark Davis – $12,675
  4. Andras Nemeth – $8,775
  5. Kristen Bicknell – $6,825
  6. Jans Arends – $5,270.36

$1,050 High Roller Club 6-Max Turbo Knockout

44-entrants

Results

  1. Jans Arends – $8,015.63+$8,375.40
  2. Aleksejs Ponakovs – $1,250+$8,369.77
  3. Roberto Romanello – $3,015.62+$4,252.60
  4. Alex Foxen – $2,906.25+$2,944.11
  5. Luke Reeves – $625+$2,289.86
  6. Emrah Yildiz – $1,768.25

High Roller Leaderboard

  1. Luke Reeves – 811 points
  2. Thomas Muehloecker – 725
  3. Matthias Eibinger – 660
  4. Rok Gostica – 601
  5. Wiktor Malinowski – 541
  6. Giuseppe Iadisernia – 494
  7. Artur Martirosian – 483
  8. George Wolff – 473
  9. Teun Mulder – 459
  10. Preben Stokkan – 449
Isaac Haxton

Isaac Haxton ravaged the High Roller Club games on partypoker on Sunday. The partypoker ambassador made two final tables, winning the biggest one of the lot and bubbling the Mix-Max.

Haxton took down the 46-entrant, $25,500 High Roller Club Main Event beating Sergi Reixach, heads-up, to win the first prize of $437,000, before finishing 7/229 in the $5,200 Big Game.

Wiktor Malinowski, Viktor Blom and Sergi Reixach also made two final tables in the three events. Malinowski finished fourth in the $25k, and eighth in the Big Game; Blom finished sixth in the $25k and seventh in the $10k Mix-Max; Reixach added an eighth-place finish in the Mix-Max to the runner-up finish in the $25k.

Haxton wasn’t the only partypoker pro heralded in the poker news columns this week. Patrick’ pleno1′ Leonard excelled in May leading PocketFives to award him with the monthly PLB title.

Amongst Leonard’s highlights were two Spring Championships of Online Poker (SCOOP) titles, and a runner-up in GGPoker’s massive $25k event during the World Series of Poker Super Circuit. The WSOPC win earned him a whopping $1.6m to sail past the $11m mark in all-time online multi-table tournament (MTT) earnings.

It’s Leonard’s first PLB title since October 2014, and he currently sits third in the PocketFives World Rankings.

Here are the High Roller Club Results for Sunday.

High Roller Club: $25,500 Main Event

46-entrants

Results

  1. Isaac Haxton – $437,000
  2. Sergi Reixach – $287,500
  3. Pascal Lefrancois – $184,000
  4. Wiktor Malinowski – $103,500
  5. George Wolff – $80,500
  6. Viktor Blom – $57,500

High Roller Club: $5,200 The Big Game

229-entrants

Results

  1. Pablo Brito Silva – $216,635.69
  2. Andrew Pantling – $157,244.08
  3. Nick Schulman – $112,089.53
  4. Chad Eveslage – $82,871.88
  5. Dzmitry Urbanovich – $58,435.30
  6. Mark Davis – $44,623.32
  7. Isaac Haxton – $32,936.26
  8. Wiktor Malinowski – $24,436.58

High Roller Club: $10,300 Mix-Max Second Chance

65-entrants

Results

  1. Thomas Muehloecker – $224,840.20
  2. Mikita Badziakouski – $146.250
  3. Dan Shak – $78,000
  4. Christoph Vogelsang – $58,500
  5. Daniel Dvoress – $42,250
  6. Dario Sammartino – $29,250
  7. Viktor Blom – $23,636.60
  8. Sergi Reixach – $23,636.60

When it comes to the World Series of Poker (WSOP), Daniel Negreanu is the Lord of the Manor, forcing everyone else into servitude. 

Since his first in the money finish (ITM) in 1998 (winning a $2,000 Pot-Limit Hold’em title) Negreanu has gone on to win five more bracelets (including events in Australia, France and Las Vegas). He has also finished ITM on 133 occasions and is the only player to win the WSOP Player of the Year accolade twice.

So when ‘Kid Poker’ offers bracelet bets, you had better have a profound moment of serenity before getting involved. 

A couple of days ago, Negreanu shook up the poker world like a 12-bore shotgun sticking its barrel into a bouquet of pheasants, offering two big money bracelet bets. 

The first is a 2.5 to 1 bet that Negreanu will win a 2020 bracelet. On June 8, the WSOP revealed plans to schedule 31 bracelet events on WSOP.com, and a further 54 with their online partner GGPoker (of whom Negreanu represents). 

Here is the tweet.

Negreanu plans to compete in every WSOP.com event from his pad in Las Vegas, before jetting off to Mexico to compete in the GGPoker events. 

There is a $1m ceiling on that bet, and during a phone call with Negreanu, this morning, he told me that there are very few takers on that bet, as it stands. 

Should the WSOP reschedule the WSOP live event in the Fall or Winter, and surprise us all with an impromptu World Series of Poker Europe (WSOPE) or World Series of Poker Asia-Pacific (WSOP-APAC), those both count towards the bet. 

The Wizard Bet

In the other bet, Negreanu is willing to take on anyone in a “versus Negreanu” style bracelet race. 

Here is the tweet.

There is a $100k ceiling per player, and at the time of writing Negreanu confirms that both Ali Imsirovic and Connor Drinan have taken up that offer. 

Both Imsirovic and Drinan are online beasts, so Negreanu has his hands full. Imsirovic is a reg in the high stakes tournaments on GGPoker, and Drinan became a record-breaker after winning five titles during the 2020 PokerStars Spring Championship of Online Poker (SCOOP). Negreanu also confirmed to me that ‘many others’ are interested in backing both Imsirovic and Drinan in the bet against Negreanu. 

Another player who has expressed an interest in taking on Negreanu is Laurynas Levinskas. Negreanu confirmed that he’s received a lot of interest in GGPoker or WSOP.com only action, and will consider changing the rules of the agreement to meet demand, but hasn’t made a decision, yet. The other logjam in this one is the unavailability of a GGPoker schedule, so people know what games are on the menu. 

One plus for his opposition – Negreanu won’t arrive in Mexico to play in the GGPoker bracelet events until August 1, and the series starts on July 19. 

Why do this?

“It’s just fun really,” said Negreanu. “I’m a gambler at heart, and this is just an extension of that really. Figured since I’m going to do the full grind I might as well have some action on it!”

And is there anyone out there that has Negreanu quaking in his boots?

“Absolutely not. I really don’t care who comes at me for a bet!”

It’s time to catch up on the results from the GGPoker High Roller action, and the biggest winner earned his crust taking down the lowest buy-in event I will cover.

Lester “mon$terDad’ Edoc conquered a field of 687-entrants in the $500 buy-in, $2m GTD High Roller MILLION$ event. Edoc beat ‘Lucky_Luke1’ in heads-up action to take the title and top prize of $285,646. Featuring on the final table were recognised high stakes regs such as Simon Higgins (5th) and Ivan “Negriin’ Luca (6th).

Results

  1. Lester “mon$terDad’ Edoc – $285,646.
  2. Lucky_Luke1 – $203,618
  3. Supermoustache – $145,146
  4. 00COEL – $103,465
  5. Simon Higgins – $73,753
  6. Ivan “Negriin’ Luca – $52,573
  7. ExoticJoe – $37,476
  8. THEfaryboy – $26,714
  9. Luis “ CurrihoMaluko” Faria – $19,042

Bryn High Rollers

Timothy Adams had a good week, taking down the 19-entrant $25,000 event for $240,741.89, while also taking the most significant prize ($84,022.91) in one of the two $10,000 games that played out. Ali Imsirovic took the top prize of $55,059.38 after cutting a deal with Schindler in the other $10k buy-in event.

Schindler had an outstanding week concerning in the money (ITM) finishes. The American finished ITM eight times and won four of them. Another player who featured heavily is Chris Brewer with six ITM finishes and two wins.

Here are the results.

Bryn’s High Roller $25,000 No Limit Hold’em

19-entrants

Results

  1. Timothy Adams – $240,741.89
  2. Laurynas Levinskas – $145,629.43
  3. Mikita Badziakouski – $74,378.68

Bryn’s High Roller $10,000 No Limit Hold’em

20-entrants

Results

  1. Jake Schindler – $78,659.75*
  2. Timothy Adams – $84,022.91*
  3. Chris Brewer – $31,317.34

*Indicates a heads-up deal

Bryn’s High Roller $10,000 No Limit Hold’em

10-entrants

Results

  1. Ali Imsirovic – $55,059.38*
  2. Jake Schindler – $41,940.62*

*Indicates a heads-up deal

Bryn’s High Roller $5,000 No Limit Hold’em

17-entrants

Results

  1. Chris Brewer – $52,487.50
  2. Alex Foxen – $28,262.50

Bryn’s High Roller $5,000 No Limit Hold’em

15-entrants

Results

  1. Allinbox905 – $46,312.50
  2. Jake Schindler – $24,937.50

Bryn’s High Roller $5,000 No Limit Hold’em

4-entrants

Results

  1. Chris Brewer – $19,000

Beat Ali Imsirovic heads-up.

Bryn’s High Roller $5,000 No Limit Hold’em

14-entrants

Results

  1. Jake Schindler – $43,225
  2. Chris Brewer – $23,275

Bryn’s High Roller $5,000 No Limit Hold’em

29-entrants

Results

  1. Golden snitch – $64,294.41
  2. David Peters – $38,058.71
  3. Alex Foxen – $23,390.87
  4. Andras Nemeth – $14,376.01

Bryn’s High Roller $5,000 No Limit Hold’em

3-entrants

Results

  1. Jake Schindler – $14,250

Beat Alex Foxen, heads-up.

Bryn’s High Roller $5,000 No Limit Hold’em

11-entrants

Results

  1. Allinbox905 – $33,962.50
  2. Chris Brewer – $18,287.50

Bryn’s High Roller $5,000 No Limit Hold’em

18-entrants

Results

  1. Jake Schindler – $33,495.48*
  2. Ali Imsirovic – $52,004.52*

*Indicates a heads-up deal

Bryn’s High Roller $5,000 No Limit Hold’em

13-entrants

Results

  1. Ali Imsirovic – $40,137.50
  2. Allinbox905 – $21,612.50

The Blade Results

The former PocketFives World #1, Andras Nemeth, faired well in the Blade action winning the 111-entrant Blade Mulligan for $120,755.41 and finishing runner-up to Viacheslav Buldygin in the Closer. Buldygin had an excellent run in the Blade events, making the final table of all three of them, finishing eighth in the Prime, second in the Mulligan and winning the Closer.

Here are the results.

High Rollers Blade Prime $5k

121-entrants

Results

  1. ButtonSmashingMonkey – $125,977.09
  2. Jake Schindler – $95,829.04
  3. Dan Smith – $72,895.88
  4. DanBiz – $55,450.90
  5. KeijoKonvehti – $42,180.73
  6. Timothy Nuter – $32,086.33
  7. Sergi Reixach – $24,407.62
  8. Viacheslav Buldygin – $18,565.55

High Rollers Blade Mulligan $5k

111-entrants

Results

  1. Andras Nemeth – $120,755.41
  2. Viacheslav Buldygin – $90,925.15
  3. Ali Imsirovic – $68,463.93
  4. Mikita Badziakouski – $51,551.28
  5. Jake Schindler – $38,816.56
  6. Dnegking – $29,227.68
  7. Dan Smith – $22,007.57
  8. George Wolff – $16,571.04

High Rollers Blade Closer $5k

50-entrants

Results

  1. Viacheslav Buldygin – $95,537.39
  2. Andras Nemeth – $58,745
  3. Oasis – $39,457.47
  4. Chris Brewer – $26,502.55
  5. Isaac Haxton – $17,801.07
  6. Chad Eveslage – $11,956.52

On April 7, Jack Dorsey, the CEO of Twitter, tweeted his intention to move $1bn of his equity in his mobile payments company, Square, into a new LLC called ‘Start Small,’ with the aim of funding research into the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. To put his generosity into perspective, $1bn represents 28% of his wealth. 

Under the leadership of Dorsey, Twitter has turned into one of the most iconic companies and culture changes of modern times. On the flipside. Twitter is arguably a vast multifarious dichotomy. It’s been the bridge between cultures, genders and classes, and the destruction of them. It’s arable land for anything goes, and even the President of the United States of America fiddles with it while on the loo. 

Dorsey’s tweet went out to 4.7m followers, received 13.9k comments, 88.1k Retweets and 311.3k likes. Big numbers. But what if your figures aren’t so impressive? The use of Twitter and other social media sites affect the mental health of millions of people, if not billions, worldwide – including poker.

Twitter and Mental Health

Therapists the world over are confronted with an army of people who don’t feel good enough, leading to the diagnosis ‘toxic self-judgment.’

Researchers have dove deep into the facts and figures to determine whether ‘likes’ and ‘shares’ contribute to feelings of negative self-worth, and there is ample evidence that it does if used in a certain way. 

Social Media: Cultural Not Individual

Our feelings of low self-judgment are so rampant within society that therapists have begun extending their research beyond the borders of individuals, to culture, and social media is an integral part of this system. 

Social media is compelling, while at the same time, very selective in its focus. It allows people to shield vulnerability by sharing the best bits of their lives with others. On the face of it, you could say that the motive is to feel good, but when social media reflects the noise, it can have devastated consequences for your self-esteem. 

Facebook, Twitter, Instagram – they all show slithers of wonderment when, in reality, we are all bobbing aimlessly like a cork in an ocean of doubt. Rather than us all bob together, social comparison kicks in, and off we go, below the railway arches for a sneaky cigarette, and the search for a few more ‘likes’ begins.

“My life is not good enough”.

“I am not good enough”.

It’s a feeling shared by the high stakes star, Charlie Carrel. 

Carrel has more than 38.1k subscribers on YouTube, but only 92 followers on Twitter.

What gives?

“I quit Twitter because it was negatively impacting my mental health,” says Carrel. “There is a huge lack of accountability in a public space that, mixed with the anonymity, allows people to express the cruellest parts of themselves with no repercussions. I thought I could bring warmth to the people I interacted with, and eventually, people would react well, but I was wrong.

“I think a lot of people convince themselves that they are doing good in the world by ‘calling people out’ or by ‘arguing for the good side.’ But, I think people would do much better for themselves and the world if they saved the arguments for human-human interactions.”

If Twitter is more cultural than individualistic, is there a toxic element to the poker community that comes to the fore, is it a reflection of the human condition, or is Twitter’s design the problem? Phil Galfond thinks the latter carries a lot of weight.

With 108,000 Twitter followers, Galfond is the tenth most followed high stakes poker player in the world. 

But he’s not a fan.

“I think Twitter, on the whole, is a very negative place, and definitely detrimental to my mental health, although the effect isn’t large, and I wouldn’t say it impacts my game much at all.,” says Galfond. “For me, the worst part of Twitter is the certainty with which people state their opinions. This is part of human nature but also influenced by the character limit, which doesn’t allow room for disclaimers and softer language. It’s designed perfectly to enhance arguing.”

With more than $56.4m in live tournament earnings, Bryn Kenney is the #1 in the All-Time Money List, but he doesn’t feature in the top Twitter rankings. There’s a reason for that. Despite having a Twitter account, and a following of 16.7k followers, he rarely uses it, and his ideas follow the logic of both Carrel and Galfond.

“Social media is a bunch of trolls talking nonsense for the most part, and I don’t involve myself in random noise. I think it’s mostly a waste of time.” – Bryn Kenney.

Both Kenney and Carrel are incredibly popular poker players whose Twitter accounts are sitting in a wheelchair in some hospital corridor. But at least they have an account. One of the top dogs in the high stakes circuit that doesn’t have an account is the multiple time Global Poker Index (GPI) World #1, Stephen Chidwick.

Here’s why.

“I don’t use Twitter simply because I don’t think the potential benefits outweigh the potential costs for me,” says Chidwick. “My long term goals require a lot of dedication, and I think it would be more of a distraction than anything. I also tend to prefer social interaction with small groups or single people, and Twitter is the opposite. I rarely feel like I have something I want to say to everyone I know.”

Other high stakes poker players who leave Twitter well alone include Mikita Badziakouski, Timofey Kuznetsov, Cary Katz, Linus Loeliger, Christoph Vogelsang, Talal Shakerchi, and Wiktor Malinowski.

I asked Malinowski why he doesn’t use Twitter, and again, while a small aspect of his response, the element of conflict rears its ugly head. 

“I never put any thought into it,” says Malinowski. “I didn’t feel like I had anything to say. I don’t feel like it provides any value. To be more popular, for example, UFC fighters they need Twitter. I like just playing poker. I don’t feel like I need to be in dispute.”

What We Share is Important

How you interact with Twitter is essential to your mental health, and one element often overlooked when dissecting this issue is what you share.

Therapists have reported that people who regularly delve into articles that carry headlines like “10-Ways to Create The Perfect Bikini Body” or “5 Routes to the Most Amazing Relationship,” begin to feel that these things are easy. When they can’t fit into their bikini or their relationship goes to pot, it perpetuates self-blame and low self-esteem. 

The search for meaning, purpose and a tribe is a genuine human struggle, and social media exacerbates that quest in an attempt to be helpful that can go awry because of the selective and biased view of the content delivered. 

Many therapists believe that one way of squeezing the goodness from social media is to link what you share to your values and to block or disconnect from people who share material with you that don’t align. If you can do this effectively, then your digital representation of whom you are more accurately reflects your ideal self, and this may lead to a higher appreciation of self-worth, and fewer social comparison evils. 

Values

If we can identify what matters to us, find meaning and purpose. Then you find a new anchor from which your self-worth can grip to like a barnacle. Social media allows us to quickly find our value in other people’s opinions, a fixed mindset trait. Leading from your sense of importance, and cultivating a twitter feed that’s more aligned to what’s important to you becomes very centred – a growth mindset trait.

Passive v Active Social Media Use

Studies coming out of Belgium, the Netherlands and the USA have shown that there are +EV ways of using Twitter, namely the difference between passive and active use. 

1. Passive Use

Passive use of social media can be detrimental to your mental health. It’s when you find yourself mindlessly scrolling through people’s photos while someone trims your beard. Using social media in this way promotes social comparison, envy, and other negative consequences for subjective wellbeing. 

2. Active Use

Active and targeted use of social media creates positive wellbeing, builds social capital and stimulates social connectedness. Ways of being ‘active’ include sharing content that aligns with your values, commenting on other people’s posts generously and positively, and sharing other people’s content when you find it valuable.

If you find yourself scrolling through Twitter aimlessly, then it’s time to unplug and think on how you can positively engage with others, and numerous people within the poker world can do this effectively.

With close to half a million Twitter followers, Daniel Negreanu is the most popular poker player on Dorsey’s platform. If Negreanu felt that Twitter was detrimental to his mental health, he wouldn’t be on there. So how does he manage to be so interactive and on so many controversial topics?

“Twitter is a valuable tool when it comes to marketing and connecting with people, but it also requires a thick skin to deal with the constant negativity,” says Negreanu. “One of the things I’ve learned from some gracious posters is that if you play poker, you are only allowed to discuss poker. “Stick to Poker” is a common theme.”

Phil Galfond echoes the ‘poker specific’ aspect when he says, “For poker-specific discussion, I think twitter is largely positive, especially when compared to alternatives (most poker forums). Lots of good ideas are shared. Kind words, motivation, and congratulations are common within the poker community.”

Antonio Esfandiari is another player who doesn’t allow Twitter to mess with his mental state, but he is proactive in managing that side of things.

“Twitter doesn’t affect my mental game,” says Esfandiari. “I don’t check my twitter on my phone, and notifications are off. I check Twitter on my time and not twitter time.”

Phil Hellmuth has close to 300,000 Twitter followers, and for him, it’s been a love-hate relationship, erring more on the love side of things. 

“I like using twitter!” Said Hellmuth. “I have had my ups-and-downs on Twitter, and let it affect me way too much at times. When folks attack me unfairly, I block them. When I receive too much praise, I try not to let it go to my head. My account is meant to be aspirational and to spread positivity.”

On Summary

The poker community’s use of Twitter is a microcosm of its global use. There are good eggs and rotten eggs. Some people use Twitter passively and aggressively, and those that use it actively and positively. 

Maybe the core problem is the clash between our love for poker, and the emergence of core values from the stars that we admire and choose to follow. We love the game, and the way someone plays it, so we follow them, only to find out that we share little in common with their values and the way they view the world, and the 280-word clashes begin.

What do you think about poker Twitter?

Is it a valuable experience for you, negative or somewhere in between, and why?

The Most Followed High Stakes Players (Twitter)

  1. Daniel Negreanu – 485,200
  2. Phil Ivey – 441,400
  3. Doyle Brunson – 397,600
  4. Phil Hellmuth – 284,700
  5. Antonio Esfandiari – 192,700
  6. Tom Dwan – 165,200
  7. Haralabos Voulgaris – 145,900
  8. Jason Mercier – 135,500
  9. Doug Polk – 128,500
  10. Phil Galfond – 108,500