Archive for the ‘ Poker News ’ Category

WPT Adds South Florida Stop

Monday, August 30, 2010 posted by admin 9:59 am

The World Poker Tour is headed to South Florida.

Four-time WPT finalist and two-time winner, 2010 November Niner Michael Mizrachi will be happy to learn the WPT is headed to his hometown this spring.

Entering into a multi-year alliance with Seminole Gaming that includes rebranding the poker rooms inside Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino sites across the Sunshine State, the WPT is now planning to host several events in Florida, including a televised stop in Hollywood this coming Spring.

The $10,000 WPT Seminole Hard Rock Showdown will go off at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Hollywood from Apr.

(Read the full post about ‘WPT Adds South Florida Stop’…)

Category : Poker News

WSOP Circuit Kicks Off at Horseshoe Council Bluffs

Friday, August 27, 2010 posted by admin 3:24 pm

After a successful summer series at the Rio, Harrah’s announced a complete overhaul of their Circuit events. The message was met with a few groans, and with good reason. After all, it’s been years since past winners such as Chris Ferguson and Phil Ivey made regular appearances. But the WSOP wasn’t kidding around.

“We recognized the WSOP Circuit Events needed a shot in the arm, and we believe we’ve responded with steroids,” said WSOP Vice President Ty Stewart in a press release. &

(Read the full post about ‘WSOP Circuit Kicks Off at Horseshoe Council Bluffs’…)

Category : Poker News

Andreas Krause Wins Full Tilt Poker Merit Cyprus Classic

Wednesday, August 25, 2010 posted by admin 3:22 pm

Full Tilt Poker embarked on its annual Merit Cyprus Classic this week, and players did not hesitate to head to the beautiful Mediterranean island for some sun and poker fun. With two big tournaments on tap and plenty to do and see in between, Full Tilt was prepared for a solid turnout in Cyprus.

HIGH ROLLER FREEZE OUT

The first event on the schedule was the $25,000 buy-in High Roller Freeze-Out. A total of 36 players bought in, with some of the biggest names in the game, like Phil Ivey and David Benyamine, not to mention several November Nine members like Michael Mizrachi, Filippo Candio, and John Dolan. (Read the full post about ‘Andreas Krause Wins Full Tilt Poker Merit Cyprus Classic’…)

Category : Poker News

ESPN 2010 WSOP Coverage – 8/24/10

Monday, August 23, 2010 posted by admin 3:19 pm

ESPN’s coverage of the 2010 WSOP Main Event moved tonight to the first of the two Day 2s.  While there were nine former Main Event champions still alive and playing in the field on this night, ESPN chose to focus the vast majority of its attention on two well-known and popular professionals, Patrik Antonius, seated at Table Two, and Daniel Negreanu at the featured table.  These choices bring up a very interesting point about poker as a “sport.”  While a baseball career is limited to, at most, 20 years or so, and usually much less than that, the life of a high-level poker player can go on indefinitely, which means that we can almost expect to have ESPN, if it continues to air the WSOP, to feature Daniel Negreanu, Phil Hellmuth, et.al. for anot (Read the full post about ‘ESPN 2010 WSOP Coverage – 8/24/10′…)

Category : Poker News

Phil Collins Rocks The Bike: WPT Legends Wraps Day 2

Saturday, August 21, 2010 posted by admin 3:16 pm

After a full seven 90-minute levels on Day 2 at the Bike, things began to take shape in the 2010 WPT Legends of Poker main event.

The field was pared down from 241 to some 61 and at least one big stack has emerged as a contender for the $750k first-place prize and prestigious Legends title.

Phil “USCphildo” Collins was up all night with some kind of food poisoning but returned today to bust big stacked WPT final tablist Raymond Dolan and Justin Young on the way to a massive overnight lead.

JC Alvarado built a big stack, but it still doesn’t amount to half the clay Collins collected.

Among the notables to bust on Day 2 were Erick Lindgren, Jared Hamby, Jeff Madsen, Barry Greenstein, Chad Batista, Allen Cunningham, and Phil Hellmuth.

However, a number of big names remain in contention, including Vinny Vinh, David “Doc” Sands, Tim Phan, Marco Johnson, Darryl Fish, Erica Schoenberg, November Niner Soi Nguyen and Amit Makhija, who made runner-up here in 2008.

With three more days of play before a winner emerges, there’s still a ton of poker to be played in Los Angeles.

Click through to PokerListings’ WPT Live Updates to follow it all.

Category : Poker News

Texas Poker in Taiwan from Zynga

Tuesday, August 17, 2010 posted by admin 3:10 pm

The game company Zynga will launch as Poker in Taiwan and Hong Kong. This means that poker will be the first Zynga game in Asia. While the game will be available in Taiwan and Hong Kong it will not be available in mainland China. There are more than 28 million people who play the play Zynga Texas Poker game monthly, in about 100 countries. The game will be played with traditional Chinese language. As 8 is a lucky number in China, the launch date was chosen 8/18 and players compete for a grand prize of $880,000 Taiwanese dollars.

Category : Poker News

Poker After Dark Lonesome Shark Week – Week of 8/9/10

Sunday, August 15, 2010 posted by admin 3:07 pm

After two months of re-runs, Poker After Dark presented a new week of programming, with “Lonesome Shark” week.  The concept for the tournament was to get six successful players together who were all bachelors, and have the table talk revolve more around their personal lives and loves rather than poker.  The players, in order of seat position, were Erick Lindgren, James Akenhead, Antonio Esfandiari, Mike Matusow, David Williams, and Brad Booth.

Aside from the poker, played in the normal Poker After Dark format of a winner-take-all $120,000 tourney, there was an opportunity to hear about the ups and downs of living as a single, somewhat wealthy young man in a city such as Las Vegas, where all of the players other than Akenhead and Booth reside.  Lindgren commented that he keeps telling his mother that he’s “just waiting for the right stripper.”  Esfandiari pointed out that not only are 85% of the women that you meet from out of town, but also that they are behaving differently than they would at home, simply because they are in Vegas.  Interestingly, the players, who usually seem so dynamic at the table, came across about as socially adept as your average Revenge of the Nerds character, and as Lindgren pointed out, you could see why they were all still single.

On the poker side of things, Williams raised an early hand under the gun to 600 with pocket aces, and Esfandiari three-bet to 1,700 in the small blind with queens.  Williams chose just to call so as not to sound the alarm bells for Esfandiari.  The flop brought 5-8-8 and Esfandiari bet 2,600, eliciting just a smooth call from Williams.  Unfortunately for Williams, the turn card was the K♠, and Esfandiari slowed down because of the overcard, checking over to Williams, who bet 4,200.  Esfandiari called, but when a third spade, the 10, came on the river, Esfandiari folded to Williams’ attempt at a value bet of 5,000, saving a decent portion of his stack.

Lindgren has had a very bad history on Poker After Dark, and this week was no exception.  Under the gun, he raised to 800 with pocket jacks, only to have Booth call in the big blind with K-5 offsuit.  The flop was 10-5-2, and Booth made a small donk bet of 300, which Lindgren raised to 1,500.  Booth called, and then hit the jackpot when the K♥ came on the turn.  He checked, and Lindgren pushed for his last 6,550, which Booth insta-called.  The river was the 8♦ and Lindgren was eliminated in 6th place.

The next critical hand began with Esfandiari raising to 800 with A-J.  Matusow, who was almost completely card dead all week, finally had a decent hand to play and called on the button with A-Q, and Williams made a somewhat loose call in the small blind with J♣-7♣.  The flop brought J-9-3, with one club.  Williams decided to check and see what transpired.  Esfandiari bet 1,600 and Matusow folded.  Williams, not wanting to see the pot get too big yet, just called.  The turn was the 8♣, adding lots of drawing outs for Williams.  He checked once again, and Esfandiari bet 3,700.  Williams, feeling that the river would be difficult for him to play whether or not he hit his hand, decided to utilize some fold equity by pushing all-in, which would force Esfandiari to make a decision for his tournament life.  Esfandiari asked Williams what he wanted him to do, and Williams said he didn’t care.  Esfandiari read that response as weakness, and made the call, however Williams hit the 7♠ on the river to make two pair, take the chip lead and knock Esfandiari out in 5th place.

Booth had been cruising along in either first or second place for much of the early part of the week, until tangling with Akenhead in a hand that Booth admitted he played poorly.  Akenhead raised to 1,100 with pocket deuces, and Booth made a somewhat odd min-raise to 1,800 in the big blind with 9♠-8♠.  Akenhead called, and a huge action flop came down, with the board reading K-2-8, with two spades!  Booth bet 1,200 and Akenhead smooth-called.  The 7♦ was the turn card, and Booth made a minimum bet of 400.  Akenhead now raised to 3,700, but Booth didn’t slow down at all, re-raising to 17,400 and putting Akenhead all-in.  Naturally, Akenhead called, and the A♥ on the river gave Akenhead the 41,000 chip pot.

Things went quickly downhill for Brad Booth after that.  He limped under the gun with 10♣-8♣ and Akenhead raised to 2,600 with K-J.  The flop of 3-K-10 brought a check from Booth, an all-in bet from Akenhead and a call.  The 9♥ and the A♣ on the turn and river brought no additional help for Booth and he was gone back to the Yukon in 4th place.

With things down to the final three players, Matusow was becoming increasingly short-stacked, and with Akenhead literally raising every single button, Matusow’s K-10 in the small blind looked like it should be strong enough to be a favorite, and he shoved his last 8,600 into the pot.  However, this time, Akenhead had A-8, and after a flop of 2-6-4, an ace on the turn finished Matusow off in 3rd place.  As has been the case with almost all of Matusow’s televised appearances as of late, he really doesn’t seem to be into playing the matches very much, lamenting his perceived bad luck and just not having any fire for the game whatsoever.  He seems to have become merely a shell of a once very dynamic poker player, and it is somewhat sad to watch.

Akenhead and Williams now engaged in the longest heads-up match in Poker After Dark history, over three hours.  Williams felt he had picked up a tell on Akenhead, and exploited it early on in their confrontation.  He raised to 1,600 with 10♠-9♠, and when Akenhead three-bet to 4,800 with K-7, Williams saw what he thought was that tell indicating a less than premium hand from Akenhead.  He popped it once again to 14,100, and Akenhead folded.

Williams’ aggression, coupled with Akenhead’s lack of cards, caused Williams’ chip lead to grow to a little over 3:1, when the critical hand of the week occurred.  Williams raised to 3,600 with J♥-J♦, and Akenhead shoved his remaining 29,100 into the pot with A♦-2♦.  Williams called, and seemed to be safe when the flop brought 10-3-K, with two hearts.  But the A♥ on the turn gave Akenhead the lead, and when the river didn’t bring a heart, jack or queen (it was the 8♣), Akenhead had gotten back to even in one fell swoop.

From there, Akenhead continued his pattern of never calling or folding on the button, and David Williams went completely card dead, basically folding down from about 50,000 in chips to 25,000.  With the blinds all the way up to 2,000-4,000, Williams was forced to push with K♥-5♥, the first face card he had seen in quite a while.  Akenhead decided to call with K-6.  While those two hands would lead to a chop more than 1/3 of the time, the flop of 10-3-4 made it much more likely that the six would play, and the ace on the turn and eight on the river meant that James Akenhead, in his first appearance on Poker After Dark, was this week’s champion.

See you next week!

Category : Poker News

Weekly Freerolls: $2k on bwin Poker

Friday, August 13, 2010 posted by admin 3:02 pm

PokerListings players will benefit from a stack of new freerolls during the third week of August.

This week players will want to note of the monthly bwin $2,000 freeroll which goes off today.

The tournament offers $2,000 in free cash and is open to any PokerListings players who signed up or generated 50 player points this month.

UB Poker’s monthly $5,000 freeroll for PokerListings players who played at least 100 raked hands in the previous month will also be going down on Sunday.

The following freerolls are open to all PokerListings.com players.

(Read the full post about ‘Weekly Freerolls: $2k on bwin Poker’…)

Category : Poker News

Matusow Teaches a Win at Florida Championship

Tuesday, August 10, 2010 posted by admin 8:47 pm

Mike “The Mouth” Matusow took down the 2010 Florida State Poker Championships in Pompano Beach this week.

The $1,100 buy-in event drew more than 400 players, outpacing the $250,000 guaranteed prize pool.

Matusow was in town to host a DeepStacks Live clinic at the Isle Casino and Racing in Pompano and decided to stick around to play the event.

He wasn’t the only big name to get in on the action, as 2010 November Niner Michael “The Grinder” Mizrachi turned up, as did 2008 November Niner David “Chino” Rheem.

However, Matusow outlasted the entire field to claim the $103,000 first-place prize.

“Early on in the day 1 there were a lot of weak players but as the day moved on and the field dwindled and the players got better and I had to play my A game to beat a lot of good players,” Matusow told the local Sun-Sentinel Newspaper.

“I would say on a scale from 1-10 I played 9.5.

(Read the full post about ‘Matusow Teaches a Win at Florida Championship’…)

Category : Poker News

2010 WCOOP Guarantees Record $50 Million

Sunday, August 8, 2010 posted by admin 8:44 pm

The ninth annual PokerStars World Championship of Online Poker is set to begin Sept. 5 with $50 million in guaranteed cash.

Easily the richest online poker tournament series in the world, WCOOP’s $50 million in guaranteed prize pools marks the most that PokerStars has ever guaranteed for an online tournament series.

The series will consist of 62 events in every poker discipline imaginable, running over 23 days from September 5-27.

Things will kick off with a $215 6-Max No-Limit Hold’em tournament, culminate with a $10,300 High Roller 8-Game event and conclude with the traditional two-day $5,200 buy-in $10 Million guaranteed No-Limit Hold’em main event, starting Sept.

(Read the full post about ’2010 WCOOP Guarantees Record $50 Million’…)

Category : Poker News