Pub Poker goes legit in Britain

Monday, November 27, 2006

The British government is set to ease restrictions on playing card games including poker for money in bars.

Under existing antique laws (from 1968) pubs have to seek permission from licensing authorities to host poker, bingo, bridge and other so-called 'equal chance' games, and only pubs with a special permit from their local council are allowed to do so.

Under reforms to the gambling laws to be introduced next year any pub will be free to hold poker games for cash.

A safeguard of capping potential losses at about £10 a night will be included but hasn't been enough to silence critics who claim ministers are acting irresponsibly by promoting a dangerous cocktail of gaming and alcohol.

With an independent research suggesting as many as 5.8m people now gamble online and other studies estimate an average of £1,000 a year is staked on internet gambling, much of it on poker clearly there is growing interest in poker as a pastime.

Keep an eye out for Pub Poker coming to a pub near you. (As long as you are in Britain!)

Shane @ Poker.com


Posted at 7:31 PM Permalink | 3 comments | Talk on the Poker Forum


TonyG wins Asian Poker Tour

Saturday, November 18, 2006

Australia-based professional poker player, Tony G, the super-aggressive, king of the rubdown, has made history by winning the inaugural Asian Poker Tour Main Event.

The Mandarin Ballroom in the luxurious Meritus Mandarin Hotel in Singapore played host to around 400 players over three tension-filled days of poker. The final table comprised (in chipcount order):

Samuel Lehtonen - 897,500
Tony G – 717,500
Joshua (Ang Pang Leng) – 309,000
Lee Nelson – 257,000
Hans Vogl – 250,500
Jeff Kimber – 240,000
Brendan Walls – 243,000
Mark Whent – 101,000
Neil Yong – 98,500
Henrik Dahlgaard – 74,000

Included here was Irish Poker Tour Grand Final winner from June 2006, Brendan Walls from Ireland, and WPT Bay 101 Finalist, Jeff Kimber from the UK. Also lining up was Aussie Millions 2006 winner, Lee Nelson from New Zealand.

All of these players had a big deficit in chips however when compared to second placed Tony G and chip leader Samuel Lehtonen from Sweden.

Tony G took control of the final table just as he said he would do. Nor would the players enjoy a quiet session of poker! Tony G's legendary banter was soon in full flow along with his aggressive table captain style.

One by one, Lee Nelson, Samuel Lehtonen, and the others fell to the rail until it was left to local hero Joshua Ang to face the sharp tongue of Tony G by himself. He was soon to find himself all-in after the flop with Ace-Jack but this was no match for the 10-6 with a 10 on the flop that Tony G produced.

With this title came a cheque for $451,700 and an act of generosity. Tony G declared that half of the winnings shold be donated to a number of Asian and Australian charities to be nominated by Betfair.

Betfair's Head of Poker, Ben Fried said;

"His offer of a fifty per cent donation to charity is extraordinarily generous,"

For his own part, Tony G said;

"I want people to know that poker is sport. This is not a large amount compared to what people like Bill Gates give to charity but it is a gesture to show that it's not all about the money, it's about the competition as well."

In addition to this gesture, the Champion also endeared himself further to Singaporeans by giving his trophy, in the design of the Singaporean Merlion, to the runner-up, Joshua Ang, a Singaporean resident. Tony G said it would enable this symbol of Singapore to stay in the country.

The Final Table placings were as follows:

$451,700 – Tony Guoga
$233,200 – Joshua (Ang Pang Leng)
$116,600 – Lee Nelson
$102,000 – Samuel Lehtonen
$87,400 – Jeff Kimber
$72,900 – Mark Whent
$58,306 – Hans Vogl
$43,700 – Hendrik Dahlgaard
$29,200 – Brendan Walls
$17,500 – Neil Yong


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WPT has a new angle

Thursday, November 16, 2006

Just when you had seen every possible type of poker tournament on TV, the WPT has come up with something new.

Its father and son night, kinda like show and tell, but poker style.

Famous sons bring their dads along to the tables. The sons playing the hands but the dads are able to 'tag in' and show them how its really done at any point in the game. Once there is only one team left, father will go against son heads up, and the winner will walk away with a $25,000 seat at the 2007 WPT Championship.

Leading the list of competitors will be the "First Family" of poker, Doyle and Todd Brunson, as they square off against Barry Greenstein and Joe Sebok, Barry and Jeff Shulman, WPT champion John Stolzmann and his father Steve, and WPT winner Mike Simon and his father Romeo. Marking the first time that he has stepped to the tables for a WPT event, Vince Van Patten will put his headset aside as he and his father, actor Dick Van Patten, complete the lineup.

The tournament will be taped after the wrap-up of the WPT's World Poker Finals at Foxwoods Casino in Connecticut this week and will be show on Fathers' Day in 2007 (June 17th).

If only my dad could play poker!

Shane @ Poker.com


Posted at 7:33 PM Permalink | 1 comments | Talk on the Poker Forum


Poker.com WPT Seat Winner Results!

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Poker.com player, 2Fast443, recently returned home after a commendable performance at the WPT North American Poker Championship.

This year's main event attracted 497 competitors and provided a total prizepool of nearly $5 million, with first place taking home a cool $1,352,224 for their troubles.

The first day of play didn't start as perfectly as perhaps 2Fast443 had hoped. When after receiving his seat allocation realised his first session ever in a live tournament would be spent playing cards next to poker pro's John Juanda & Isabelle Mercier.

Despite the quality of players at the table, 2Fast443 didn't let this rattle his nerves and stuck to his game and fought his way through the 15 hour day to finish with a chip count of 42,200 (Ave Chip Count: 33,286).

This was no easy task and to survive the first day with eventual chip leader, John Juanda, at his table was an outstanding performance.

Day 2 of play proved to be a bit more of a battle for 2Fast443 with the blinds steadily increasing and after striking an ice cold deck, was unfortunately outdrawn and busted out just short of making Day 3 and the money.

This year's eventual winner and now millionaire, Soren Turkewitsch, is a native to Ontario and won his seat through a $90 Sit n Go at Fallsview Casino.

On behalf of all the staff at Poker.com I would like to congratulate you on an outstanding effort and I know this isn't the last time we will see you representing the Home of online poker!

WPT Bust Out Hand:
- 1st & 2nd to act fold
- Mid position calls BB
- 2Fast443 is dealer & raises 4 x BB
- BB & Mid-position call
Flop: 10h Qs 6h
- BB checks
- Mid position bets
- 2Fast443 calls & BB folds
Turn: Kc
- Mid position bets
- 2Fast443 pushes all-in over the top
- Opponent calls
Showdown: 2Fast443 - Kh Qh Vs 10c 10s - Opponent
River: 4d
With no hearts, King or Queen coming on the river, 2Fast443 was unable to improve his top 2 pair and was sadly eliminated by his opponents sneaky set of 10's.

Day 1 Chip Counts
John Juanda 171,600
Jason Sagle 170,000
Peter Valente 145,600
Steve Paul-Ambrose 144,600
Kevin Monaghan 115,800
Stewart Chantler 111,000
Cory Carroll 111,000
John Athanasiou 105,700
Stefano Cassullo 105,000
Mark Newhouse 105,000
..........
2Fast443 42,200
Average Chip Count: 33,286

Notable Day 1 Bust Outs:
Paul Wasicka
Mark Seif
John Phan
Eric Froelich
Michael Mizarachi
Daniel Negreanu
Joe Sebok

Final Results:
1. Soren Turkewitsch - $1,352,224
2. Jason Sagle - $676,107
3. John Lam - $352,541
4. Jim Worth AKA "KrazyKanuck" - $289,760
5. John Juanda - $217,320
6. Marc Karam - $169,027
7. Adam Dunkle - $120,733
8. John D'Agostino - $96,587
9. Steven Black - $77,269
10. Erik Cajelais - $62,781

Best of luck at the tables!

Liam@poker.com


Posted at 11:37 PM Permalink | 0 comments | Talk on the Poker Forum


Bond Baddie Good at the Tables

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

New Bond baddie Mags Mikkelsen has become a shark at the poker table, and has his new role to thank.

To play villain Le Cheffre in the new Bond movie, Casino Royale, the actor had to portray a top card shark. To achieve this Mikkelsen spent hours perfecting his poker with an expert.

The end result was he looked like the real deal in the film, and now, in real life, he's perfected his poker.

"I am a card player and have been playing for many years. This time I had the opportunity to get a coach and that was a big help. I knew the game but the tricks he gave me and the discipline he supplied me with made the difference when I went home and played with my friends."

Mikkelsen learned fast and quickly became the best poker player on the Casino Royale set.

"I did get a royal straight flush playing with the cast once and I won all their per diem (spending money). I was ready for people to applaud but they were p**sed they lost their money."

Keep an eye out for Mikkelsen at your local casino, and of course keep an eye out for the new movie.

Shane @ Poker.com


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Just in case you aren't excited about the Aussie Millions yet....

Tuesday, November 07, 2006





For those players that have already won a seat, or for those who are still trying, this is a sneak peek at what you have ahead of you!

Shane @ Poker.com


Posted at 10:50 PM Permalink | 0 comments | Talk on the Poker Forum


Gold admits to the $6m agreement, but but still isn't paying up.

Monday, November 06, 2006

Forget about that message on the answering machine.

World Series of Poker champion Jamie Gold says he has no intention of sharing half of his $12 million winnings with a man he met during the recent poker tournament.

Bruce Crispin Leyser, described at times as a television development executive, claims Gold, a Hollywood talent agent, promised him half of his top prize in the famed tournament because of a role he played in Gold's appearance. Leyser even has a voice-mail tape of the promise.

After Gold didn't pay up, Leyser filed a lawsuit in Clark County District Court.

Last week , Gold filed a court brief weighing in with his side of the story: that the agreement was "nothing more than a promise to make a gift."

Leyser's attorney, Richard Schonfeld, said Gold's position is "absurd." That Gold admitted to the deal further affirms that Leyser is entitled to the $6 million, Schonfeld said in an interview. "We're glad they finally took a position," he said. "Even though we were extremely confident in our case, we are more confident now that we will prevail."

At issue is whether the verbal agreement is binding.

Leyser claims Gold had a contract with Internet casino Bodog.com, in which it agreed to pay Gold's $10,000 entry fee if he found celebrities to wear clothing featuring the Bodog logo during the tournament.

According to the suit, Gold asked Leyser to help him find those celebrities and in return, "share" the seat and any potential winnings. Leyser says he held up his end of the bargain by finding two actors to play in the tournament and wear the Bodog logo.

In his brief, Gold claims that Bodog paid for his seat at the tournament because of his success winning previous poker tournaments and that his contract only required that he wear the company's logo and participate in media events.

But Gold said he felt so sorry that Leyser wouldn't be playing in the tournament , since he had neither a sponsor nor the cash to buy a seat, that he agreed to share his winnings with Leyser.

Gold said that as he moved to the front in the tournament, Leyser and his wife began calling and text-messaging him "every hour" and also spread word that Gold owed Leyser half of any winnings.

On the final day of the tournament, after "incessant badgering and continuous phone calls" from Leyser, Gold left Leyser a voice mail message confirming his promise to share half of the winnings "after taxes," Gold acknowledged in his court filing.

Leyser maintains that the voice mail and other facts show an "acknowledged agreement" between the two men. But Gold argues the agreement isn't enforceable because there were no terms or conditions attached. He wants the Rio, the casino hosting the tournament, to release to him the other $6 million.

In his filing, Gold says he didn't intend to give Leyser, who he said had "serious financial problems" and was looking for a job, literally half of the winnings, but rather some money. Gold says he broke his promise because Leyser "unnecessarily" filed suit and tarnished Gold's reputation.

Leyser "acted unreasonably" and didn't take such factors into account such as taxes, Gold said. Instead of continuing good faith negotiations, (Leyser) sued and drew unfavorable media attention to the dispute, Gold said.

In August, Chief District Judge Kathy Hardcastle signed a temporary restraining order freezing the funds based on Leyser's argument that the money, in Gold's hands, might disappear before the matter is resolved. Attorneys expect her to rule before the end of the year.

Shane @ Poker.com


Posted at 10:35 PM Permalink | 9 comments | Talk on the Poker Forum

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