The Tournament of Champions 3.0

Filed Under: *high society, 2 Million, 2010 WSOP, AAA, Articles, Barry Shulman, CA, CBS, CES, Daniel Negreanu, Doyle Brunson, Dr. Pauly, EPT, ESPN, Events, Final Table, Games, Harrah’s, IPL, Inter, Joe Cada, Las Vegas, Miami John Cernuto, Mike Matusow, Mike Sexton, NBC, NFL, News, Online, Other, PLO, Phil Hellmuth, Poker, Poker Hall of Fame, SEC, Scotty Nguyen, T.J. Cloutier, TUF, Tour Championship, Tournament of Champions, Twitter, UB, UNC, WSOP, WSOP Bracelet, WSOP Circuit, WSOP Circuit Event, WSOP Circuit Events, YES, ads, b, blogs, bracelet winner, burn, calendar, casino, championship, d, dates, eve, fan, freeroll, golf, google, heads-up, hot, ing, interviews, main event, new, players, poll, pool, prima, prize pool, reading, s, sponsor, summer, tao, the orleans, top 5, tour, tournament, wbo, winners, world series of poker, world-series, wsop bracelet winners, wsop main event, wsope by: admin

2010 WSOPYesterday it was announced that there will be a “Tournament of Champions” at this summer’s World Series of Poker, reviving an event that last officially took place in 2006. The new TOC will be a 27-player freeroll tournament with a $1 million prize pool, $500,000 of which will go to the champions’ champion.

The field will include 20 players voted on via an internet poll. Only “living WSOP bracelet winners” are eligible as candidates. (No dead guys!) In his article about the event, Stephen A. Murphy notes there are currently 521 living bracelet holders.

Only one vote per email address, so ballot-box stuffing will only work to the extent that a person uses multiple emails. Voting is now open and will remain so through June 15. One can track how the voting is going by checking the current “Top 50” vote-getters (presented in random order) on the WSOP site. Should be interesting to watch that list over the next three months to see which players prove most popular.

Five more spots will be filled by the TOC winners from its last incarnation (2004-2006), Annie Duke, Mike Matusow, and Mike Sexton, plus last year’s WSOP Main Event winner Joe Cada and WSOPE Main Event winner Barry Shulman. The last two seats are being reserved for “wild card exceptions” — no word as yet what that means, although Harrah’s VP Ty Stewart has said it could be that those spots will be taken by winners of online tourneys.

Sounds like the TOC, like the Main Event, will have its own delay (of sorts) insofar as the tourney is set to begin on Sunday, June 27 and then conclude on the following Sunday, July 4 (an off-day for the Main Event). This will be a televised event, too (on ESPN, natch).

I’m referring to this as TOC 3.0 because the “original” TOC — the one envisioned by Mike Sexton in the late 1990s and run from 1999-2001 at the Orleans Casino — while not specifically connected with the WSOP, not only shared the same name but had a couple of features not completely unrelated to those of the new TOC.

1999 Tournament of ChampionsThat original Tournament of Champions lasted for three years (1999-2001). There was an entry fee ($1,500 the first year, and $2,000 the next two), but it was not an open tournament. Rather, one earned the right to enter by various means, including winning a WSOP bracelet, winning a TOC-sanctioned event, winning the TOC itself, or being a member of the Poker Hall of Fame.

Reading about the original TOC online, I’ve encountered conflicting reports on those qualifications, but you get the picture. The idea was to create a “champions” event involving the best of the best — sort of like the “Tour Championship” that comes at the end of the year in golf to which only the top money winners for the year are invited.

One other nifty aspect of the original TOC — it was a mixed-game event that featured different games throughout. The first two days players rotated between limit hold’em, Omaha eight-or-better, and seven-card stud. Then on the final day, the last 27 players played no-limit hold’em.

That first year, 1999, there were 664 entrants, and David Chiu was the winner, with Louis Asmo finishing second and Doyle Brunson third. There was a somewhat famous hand between Chiu and Asmo at the final table, one in which following some preflop action Chiu folded pocket kings face up, and Asmo revealed he held pocket aces. Click here to read Lee Munzer’s description of that hand, along with an interview with Asmo.

In 2000, 440 players entered the event, with a computer programmer named Spencer Sun taking the title. The great poker reporter Andy Glazer participated that year (as he did in ’99, I believe), and finished a respectable 35th. Glazer reported on the event for PokerPages, and you can read what he had to say here: Day 1, Day 2, Day 3.

In 2001, there were 402 entries, and Brian Saltus won, defeating T.J. Cloutier heads up. Scotty Nguyen finished third, and Miami John Cernuto fourth. Lee Munzer wrote up the first day of action for PokerPages here (giving Andy Glazer a chance to concentrate on playing), then Glazer wrote up Day 2 and Day 3.

2004 Tournament of ChampionsThe TOC was discontinued, then the name was used again for that one-table, ten-player event won by Annie Duke in 2004. I mentioned this one last week — no entry fee, $2 million prize pool, winner-take-all. Harrah’s had recently acquired the WSOP, and as they donated the prize pool, the TOC became associated with the WSOP.

In 2005, 111 players earned their way into the event by winning either WSOP bracelets or WSOP Circuit events. A bit of a hubbub that year also as three additional players — Phil Hellmuth, Doyle Brunson, and Johnny Chan — were allowed to play as “sponsor exemptions,” and in fact all three did well, finishing 13th (Chan), 10th (Brunson), and third (Hellmuth). Mike Matusow won the event and the $1,000,000 first prize. The rest of the prize pool — another $1 million — was divided among the other eight players who made the final table.

In 2006, the TOC was reduced to a 27-player invitational tourney, with the nine WSOP Main Event final tablists and 11 WSOP Circuit event winners all playing along with seven other “exemptions.” Mike Sexton won that year, defeating Daniel Negreanu heads-up. Again, the prize pool — donated by Harrah’s — totaled $2 million, with half of that going to Sexton for winning.

Now, after a four-year hiatus, the TOC is back. Already seeing debates on Twitter and in the forums about the new format. Kind of a popularity contest, really, as far as who will primarily make up the field. But it should prove interesting nonetheless — another good buzz-creator.

I see Dr. Pauly has already shared his voting guide. Who is getting my vote? Billy Baxter FTW!

Travel Report, NAPT Venetian: Day 4

Filed Under: *high society, AAA, APT, Ask, CA, Casinos, Cork, Events, F-Train, Final Table, Fox, Fox Sports, Fox Sports Network, GQ, HBO, Inter, Jennifer Tilly, Matt Hawrilenko, NAPT, NAPT Venetian, Other, PLO, Peter Eastgate, Poker, PokerStars, Quest, SEC, Sports, TV, Television, Tournaments, WPT, WSOP, WSOP Bracelet, YES, ads, affairs, b, bellagio, blogs, bracelet winner, burn, casino, d, eve, google, hero, ing, ka, main event, players, poker room, s, sportsbook, tour, tournament, vegas, venetian by: admin

To the Bellini Room“So, have you found the meaning, yet?”

Asked of me by F-Train a couple of days ago as we criss-crossed between the tables at the North American Poker Tour Venetian Main Event. Don’t ask me which day it was. I’ve now reentered that familiar, what-day-is-this-what-does-the-sun-look-like-again zone one gets to know when reporting on these multi-day affairs.

F-Train’s question alluded back to some half-joking, half-serious something I’d said to him before about the need to find meaning. I thought a moment, then came up with a reply.

“I have,” I said with a grin. “But it’s private and no one would really understand it.”

F-Train got the joke contained in my non-answer, and with a chuckle we moved on in our separate searches for hands. And whatever else.

Yesterday I was pulled off the Main Event to go cover the first round of the $25,000 Bounty Shootout, an interesting change of pace. Day began early with some morning prep followed by the walk down to the Bellini Room where the event was to take place.

Arriving at the Bellini RoomThere I would find a stark contrast to the clamorous din of the first three days of the Main Event, mostly staged in an area sandwiched between the poker room, casino, and sportsbook. None of that traffic and noise for me yesterday, as I settled into the relatively tranquil conference room, here transformed into a television set, with cameras, boom mics, and the lot.

The first table was done in something like two-and-a-half hours, with Scott Seiver managing to knock out all six of his opponents, including two on one hand. The one-time WSOP bracelet winner (2008, $5,000 NLHE) earned $5,000 for each of the bounties, and another $75,000 for moving on to Thursday’s final.

At the neighboring table, Jennifer Tilly took a sizable lead early on, but would end up slipping and ultimately succumbing to Faraz Jaka who went on to defeat Annie Duke heads up. I covered Jaka in that Event No. 56 at last year’s WSOP, the $5,000 NLHE short-handed event won by Matt Hawrilenko in which Jaka finished third. A couple of weeks after that, Jaka made runner-up at the WPT Bellagio Cup which has been airing on the Fox Sports Network a lot here lately. I’ll take him as a favorite in the final.

The third afternoon table lasted about twice as long as the other two, with heads up between Hoyt Corkins and John Duthie extending for more than two hours. Corkins led most of the way, but Duthie had the advantage when Corkins sucked out a runner-runner flush to retake most of the chips, finishing off Duthie shortly thereafter.

NAPT Venetian $25K Bounty Shootout trophyTook about seven hours altogether to get through that first flight, leaving less than an hour break before the second group of four tables got underway. None of those saw a Seiver-like massacre, with each extending deep into the night. Finally, about six-and-a-half hours after they’d begun, the last winner — Brett Richey — moved through to the final to join Seiver, Jaka, Joe Cassidy, Ashton Griffin, and Peter Eastgate.

Had another hour or more of scribblin’ to take care of before I got out of there, interrupted somewhat from time to time by a friendly security guard asking all about the event. Was pretty tuckered when all was said and done, but got some rest and am once again looking forward to rejoining the Main Event coverage for today’s final table.

We’ll find out tonight which of the 872 players who entered the NAPT Venetian Main Event will leave the hero of the story, the one whom, in a way, it will have been all about. And everyone else will find his or her meaning in the sucker as well.

Dunno how long things will go tonight and I fly in the morning, so I’ll check back in here when I can. Meanwhile, you can see how it all turns out over at the PokerStars blog.

Party Poker Premier League IV final table set

Filed Under: Articles, CA, Daniel Negreanu, David Benyamine, Final Table, Hotels, Las Vegas, M Resort and Casino, M resort, News, Online, Other, PLO, Palermo, Party Poker, PartyPoker, PartyPoker.com, Phil Hellmuth, Phil Laak, Poker, Poker News, Poker Players, PokerStars, Premier League IV, Roland de Wolfe, SEC, Safina, Tony G, Tournaments, WSOP, WSOP Bracelet, YES, absolut, ads, b, bracelet winner, casino, coupons, d, facebook, heads-up, hot, information, ing, investing, italy, las vegas coupon, new, players, pokerstars.com, pool, prize pool, results, reviews, s, spa, standings, vegas, wedoitallvegas by: admin

The sixth and final heat of the Party Poker Premier League IV at the M Resort and Casino in Las Vegas finished yesterday afternoon with a stunning victory for poker pro Daniel Negreanu, who scored 16 points, and the chance to play in a heads up match for a spot in the final table. Four players go directly to the final table, while four others will take part in heads-up matches today in the afternoon to define who will take the final two spots in the six seat table.

Players already qualified for the final table are Phil Laak, David Benyamine, Luke Schwartz and Party Poker online qualifier Giovanni Safina from Palermo, Italy, who now has the chance to walk away with at least $108,000 of the $1.5 million prize pool after investing a little over $100 in an online satellite.

PokerStars.com Pro and WSOP Bracelet winner Daniel Negreanu will face last year’s winner Tran in a best-of-three heads-up match to determine the fifth spot in the final table, while Ian Frazer and Roland De Wolfe will play the second Heads Up Match for the sixth spot. The heads-up matches and the final table will all take place today beginning at 11:30am (PT).

Party Poker Premier League IV Final League Standings:

1. Phil Laak – 48 points
2. David Benyamine - 38 points
3. Giovanni Safina - 29 points
4. Luke Schwartz – 29 points
5. Daniel Negreanu – 26 points
6. Ian Frazer – 26 points
7. Roland De Wolfe – 22 points
8. JC Tran – 20 points
9. Phil Hellmuth - 19 points
10. Yevgeniy Timoshenko – 16 points
11. Vanessa Rousso – 16 points
12. Tony G - 11 points

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PartyPoker.com Premier League IV to kick off at the M Resort on February 12

Filed Under: Articles, Bonus, CA, Daniel Negreanu, David Benyamine, Doyle Brunson, Entertainment, Gambling, Hotels, Las Vegas, Las Vegas News, M Resort Spa Casino, M Resort and Casino, M resort, News, Online, PLO, Party Poker, PartyPoker, PartyPoker.com, Phil Hellmuth, Phil Laak, Poker, Poker News, Poker events, Premier League IV, Roland de Wolfe, Team Party, Tony G, Tournaments, UNC, WAG, World Open V, ads, b, bracelet winner, casino, d, eve, facebook, gaming, hot, ing, las vegas boulevard, las vegas hotels, line up, main event, new, players, poker information, poker room, poker tournaments, reviews, s, spa, the m resort, tour, tournament, vegas, wedoitallvegas, winnings by: admin

Party Poker and Matchroom Sport are delighted to announce that the PartyPoker.com Premier League IV will take place at the M Resort Spa Casino in Las Vegas, with the main event running from  February  12th – 18th, 2010.

The player line up for the PartyPoker.com World Open V is comprised by champion Phil ‘The Unabomber’ Laak, who will replace Doyle Brunson, World Open defending champion JC Tran, Yevgeniy Timoshenko, Roland de Wolfe, Luke Schwartz, 11 Time World Series of Poker bracelet winner Phil Hellmuth, Daniel Negreanu, Vanessa Rousso, David Benyamine and Team Party member Tony G.  The last two spots in the event will be filled though an online qualifier and through a special Team Party heat.

“This is the most money I have ever wagered against the toughest field I have ever faced. Collectively my opponents have over $45 million in tournament winnings. This will be the best ride ever. Full stop.” commented Phil Laak.

This year, the M Resort and Casino will be the home of the main event. The resort located on just 10 minutes from the Strip, on over 90 acres on the south-east corner of St. Rose Parkway and Las Vegas Boulevard, boasts over 92,000 square feet of gaming and an intimate 14 table poker room.

“When we decided to take the Premier League to Las Vegas we needed a venue to match this prestigious event. The M Resort is a stunning location and the perfect place for the players to relax whilst they are amongst the heat of battle in what has become the world’s biggest televised poker spectacle.” said Eddie Hearn, Director of Matchroom Sport.

PartyPoker.com

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High Stakes of Poker Season Six to launch on GSN on February 14th

Filed Under: Articles, Barry Greenstein, CA, CES, Daniel Negreanu, David Benyamine, Dennis Phillips, Doyle Brunson, EPT, Entertainment, FullTilt, FullTiltPoker, GSN, Golden Nugget Hotel, High Stakes of Poker, Hotels, IPL, Inter, Kara Scott, LIPS, Las Vegas, Mike Matusow, News, Online, Online Poker, PLO, Patrik Antonius, Phil Hellmuth, Phil Ivey, Poker, Poker News, Poker Players, Poker Tips, PokerStars, Season Six, Tom Dwan, Tournaments, UB, UB.com, UltimateBet, UltimateBet.com, WSOP, ads, b, bracelet winner, casino, d, episodes, eve, fan, full tilt, fulltiltpoker.com, golden nugget, hot, information, ing, ka, line up, november, players, poker shows, poker strategy, pokerstars.com, purple lounge, reviews, s, schedule, spa, sponsor, tilt, vegas, wedoitallvegas, world series of poker by: admin

The sixth season of  High Stakes of Poker will make its premiere next Sunday, February 14th on GSN. Featuring a minimum cash buy-in of $200,000, HSP season six features the toughest line-up of professional poker players ever, comprised by online poker specialist Patrik Antonius, David Benyamine, multiple World Series of Poker bracelet winner Doyle Brunson , Full Tilt promise Tom Dwan , Eli Elezra , Antonio Esfandiari, Barry Greenstein, UB.com sponsored pro and 11 time WSOP champ Phil Hellmuth, 2007 EPT Dortmund winner Andreas Hoivold, Full Tilt pros Phil Ivey and Mike Matusow, Team PokerStars players Daniel Negreanu, Dennis Phillips and Lex Veldhuis.

The show recorded in November, 2009 at the Golden Nugget Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, will be co-hosted by Gabe Kaplan and  Kara Scott, who will interview poker players and comment about poker strategy and table dynamics, giving viewers first-hand feedback from the players after the most significant hands.

Previous to sixth season of High Stakes of Poker, GSN will air a special eight-hour “I Love Poker” marathon presenting the best episodes from seasons one through five. The marathon will begin at 12:00 PM (ET) on Sunday, February 14th and continue until the sixth-season premiere at 8:00 PM (ET). Season 6 of High Stakes of Poker will air every Sunday at 11:00 PM (2:00 AM ET) on GSN.

Purple Lounge Poker

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Groundhog Day & Other Rituals

Filed Under: *the rumble, AAA, ACC, Ask, Betting, CA, CES, Events, Games, General, Groundhog Day, Inter, Las Vegas, Other, PLO, PPA, Poker, Poker Rooms, Quest, Tom Schneider, Twitter, UB, YES, ads, b, basketball, blogs, bracelet winner, burn, calendar, casino, cast, cities, d, eve, fan, google, ing, loaded, main event, new, players, rules, s, summer, winter, world series of poker by: admin

Today is Groundhog DayToday is Groundhog Day, that day when folks gather in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania to watch a groundhog emerge from its burrow to deliver a weather prediction for the next six weeks. Actually it looks like such gatherings are occurring in dozens of cities this morning, as apparently “Punxsutawney Phil” is no longer the sole authority when it comes to rodent meteorologists these days.

If the groundhog does not see his shadow, he’ll scurry on out of the burrow, an action that is taken to signify that winter will be ending soon. If he does see his shadow, he’ll turn tail and run back down the hole, meaning we are to expect six more weeks of winter (as the calendar had already indicated).

I always thought that seemed a little counterintuitive, in that seeing a shadow would mean the sun is out, which would perhaps suggest in a more direct way that winter weather might be giving way to spring. Then again, we’re getting our weather forecasts from an animal that allegedly gets frightened at the sight of his own shadow, so perhaps it is best not to be so fussy about such things.

The real value of such rituals lies elsewhere, I suppose. Groundhog Day has origins that date back well into the 19th century, but it doesn’t appear that anyone ever really planned his or her life according to the prediction. Rather, the event is an occasion for an annual social gathering, perhaps some PR for the hosting city (which explains why other places than Punxsutawney are getting into the act), and other more tangible benefits than can possibly be derived from the capricious behavior of what is essentially a big squirrel.

It is fun sometimes to agree — or pretend to agree — with others that something that is not verifiably true somehow is. Such is the value of fictions, those made up stories the pleasure of which comes from our willingness not to insist on factual truth. And even if fictions dispense with facts, they can reveal deeper “truths” sometimes — that is, ideas about our lives’ significance that also give us pleasure, or perhaps edify us in other ways, too.

Poker involves many rituals. Many are connected to the rules of play, almost all of which have been introduced with good reason. Tapping the felt before dealing the community cards signals to players that betting has concluded. Burning cards reduces the likelihood of dodgy dealing. Capping one’s cards with a protector prevents them from being mistakenly dragged into the muck. And so forth.

But many other rituals are superfluous, introduced into the game by players for reasons that aren’t necessarily logical. Rubbing one’s cards on the felt before looking at them. Stacking chips in a particular way. Standing up when all in. These actions have no particular, concrete significance, really, other than perhaps contributing to the player’s comfort level. Yet players perform them. Again and again.

Then there is that card protector. Needful, yes. But often loaded with extra, illogically-assigned meaning, too.

Noticed a tweet about card protectors yesterday from “DonkeyBomber,” a.k.a. Tom Schneider, the two-time World Series of Poker bracelet winner who finished 52nd in last summer’s Main Event. (If you enjoy funny, poker-related tweets, check him out.) Speculates Schneider, “What if the only thing keeping a person from winning the main event is that he was using the wrong lucky card protector for the last 20 yrs.[?]”

Like most of Schneider’s tweets, he’s kidding us. The question nevertheless made me think of an old friend from school, a huge basketball fan with whom I’d sometimes watch games on TV. When his favorite team played, he insisted on a number of rituals, including assigning particular seats to his guests, turning certain lamps on or off, and forbidding the utterance of certain words and phrases at certain times (e.g., never say “miss” when the opposing team shoots a free throw).

Occasionally some new person — already suspect because his or her very presence introduced a new element into the game-watching — would challenge the need, say, to refrain from laying one’s jacket over a particular armrest. To which my friend always had a ready response: “You can’t prove it doesn’t have an effect.”

Good enough. Same goes for Punxsutawney Phil, I guess. Or Queen Charlotte. Or Buckeye Chuck. Or General Beauregard Lee. I guess in terms of causality we’re talking about something slightly different here, but there remains the difficulty of trying to prove the lack of a connection between two events.

Groundhog Day does help prove one thing, though. Humans can be cute, silly creatures sometimes.

UB.com to hold special 100 Seat Super Satellite for $1 Million Guaranteed UBOC Championship Event

Filed Under: Articles, CA, CES, Events, IPL, News, Online, Online Poker, Other, PLO, Phil Hellmuth, Poker, Poker News, Poker Tips, Team UB, Tournaments, UB, UB Poker, UB.com, UBOC, UltimateBet, UltimateBet.com, Visit, ads, b, bracelet winner, casino, championship, d, eve, giveaway, guaranteed, guaranteed tournament, guaranteed tournaments, information, ing, january, online poker rooms, players, poker tournaments, pool, prize pool, promotions, reviews, s, satellites, schedule, spa, super-satellite, tour, vegas, wedoitallvegas, world series of poker by: admin

UB.com‘ UBOC 2010 continues this week with a line-up of tournaments offering players a range of buy-ins and events, including a $1 Million Guaranteed UBOC Championship No Limit Hold ‘em event scheduled on Sunday, January 31st at 16:00 ET.

Players have the opportunity to enter the stellar event for a fraction of the buy in $100+ $9 buy in UBOC Championship Super Satellite 100 Seat Guaranteed scheduled on January 31st at 12:30 ET. UB members also have the chance to play their way into the big seat giveaway though the daily satellites available on the site from as little as $5+ $0.50. The top 100 places in the UBOC Championship Super Satellite will earn automatic entry to the $1,000+ $50 buy-in UBOC 18 event later in the day.

Players can participate in the $100+9 UBOC Championship Satellite 5 Seat Guaranteed tournaments running daily at 21:50 ET  and awarding five $1,000+ $50 seat at the UBOC Championship No Limit Hold ‘em event. UB Poker is also offering 1 Seat Guaranteed Satellites about six times per day and even more on the day of the UBOC Championship event.

UBOC 2010 $1 Million Guaranteed tournament prize pool will be hosted by 11-time World Series of Poker bracelet winner Phil Hellmuth and is also expected to attract the best online poker players from across the globe.

“This has got to be not only my favorite UBOC so far, but my favorite online tournament series ever. There’s another $1 million event coming up on Sunday with plenty of satellites to get you into it, and if it’s anything like last Sunday’s big $1 million Guarantee that ended up having a $1.5 million prize pool, it’s going to be huge.” said Team UB Pro Phil Hellmuth.

UBOC 2010, which kicked off on January 20th, is UB’s biggest online poker tournament series yet. The 12-day series Features 18 guaranteed events, 16 Mini-UBOC events, and over $4 million in prize money. For more information, please visit UB.com.

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Full Tilt Poker sponsored Pro Phil Ivey becomes the Highest earner in poker history

Filed Under: ACC, All-Time Money List, Andy Bloch, Articles, Aussie Millions, Bluff Magazine, Bonus, CA, Challenge Tour, Daniel Negreanu, Erick Lindgren, Erik Seidel, Events, Final Table, Full Tilt Pros, FullTilt, FullTiltPoker, IPL, John Juanda, Mike Matusow, News, Online, Other, PLO, Patrik Antonius, Phil Gordon, Phil Ivey, Poker, Poker News, Poker Players, SEC, WPT, WSOP, World Poker Tour, ads, allen cunningham, b, bracelet winner, casino, championship, d, durrrr, eve, full tilt, full tilt poker, fulltiltpoker.com, gaming, gus hansen, information, ing, january, legend, main event, money list, players, pot-limit Omaha, reviews, s, spa, sponsor, team full tilt, tilt, tour, vegas, wedoitallvegas, winnings, world series of poker by: admin

Full Tilt Poker sponsored pro and WSOP multiple bracelet winner, Phil Ivey,  has moved into first position on poker’s All-Time Money List, which is based on tournament winnings in live events.

One of the most revered poker professionals of all time, Ivey has earned his reputation as a formidable opponent on the tournament circuit. Since his first Championship title in the $2,500 Pot-Limit Omaha event in 2000, Ivey has dominated the World Series of Poker, taking three gold bracelets in 2002, and winning two more events in 2009,  before making it to the WSOP Main Event final table, where he added another $1.4 million to his career earnings. Ivey also shares a record with legendary player Johnny Moss, for accumulating seven bracelets in only nine years.

In addition to his WSOP winnings, Ivey has made seven World Poker Tour Final Tables and earned one WPT title. In January 2006, he was named Player of the Year by the UK Gaming awards, “Bluff Magazine” and “All In Magazine”.

More recently, Ivey cashed $600,000 for his second-place finish at the 2010 Aussie Millions $100K Challenge tournament, boosting his career tournament earnings to $12,802,783 and surpassing previous All-Time Money List leader Daniel Negreanu, by approximately  $400K.

Ivey is a member of Full Tilt Poker’s Team Full Tilt, an elite group of the world’s best poker professionals comprised by Howard Lederer, Chris Ferguson, John Juanda, Jennifer Harman, Phil Gordon, Erick Lindgren, Erik Seidel, Andy Bloch, Mike Matusow, Gus Hansen, Allen Cunningham, Patrik Antonius and Tom ‘durrrr’ Dwan.

Full Tilt Poker

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Full Tilt Poker sponsored Pro Phil Ivey becomes the Highest earner in poker history

Filed Under: ACC, All-Time Money List, Andy Bloch, Articles, Aussie Millions, Betting, Bluff Magazine, Bonus, CA, Challenge Tour, Daniel Negreanu, Erick Lindgren, Erik Seidel, Events, Final Table, Full Tilt Pros, FullTilt, FullTiltPoker, IPL, John Juanda, Mike Matusow, News, Online, Other, PLO, Patrik Antonius, Phil Gordon, Phil Ivey, Poker, Poker News, Poker Players, SEC, WPT, WSOP, World Poker Tour, ads, allen cunningham, b, bracelet winner, casino, championship, d, durrrr, eve, full tilt, full tilt poker, fulltiltpoker.com, gaming, gus hansen, information, ing, january, legend, main event, money list, players, pot-limit Omaha, reviews, s, spa, sponsor, team full tilt, tilt, tour, vegas, wedoitallvegas, winnings, world series of poker by: admin

Full Tilt Poker sponsored pro and WSOP multiple bracelet winner, Phil Ivey,  has moved into first position on poker’s All-Time Money List, which is based on tournament winnings in live events.

One of the most revered poker professionals of all time, Ivey has earned his reputation as a formidable opponent on the tournament circuit. Since his first Championship title in the $2,500 Pot-Limit Omaha event in 2000, Ivey has dominated the World Series of Poker, taking three gold bracelets in 2002, and winning two more events in 2009,  before making it to the WSOP Main Event final table, where he added another $1.4 million to his career earnings. Ivey also shares a record with legendary player Johnny Moss, for accumulating seven bracelets in only nine years.

In addition to his WSOP winnings, Ivey has made seven World Poker Tour Final Tables and earned one WPT title. In January 2006, he was named Player of the Year by the UK Gaming awards, “Bluff Magazine” and “All In Magazine”.

More recently, Ivey cashed $600,000 for his second-place finish at the 2010 Aussie Millions $100K Challenge tournament, boosting his career tournament earnings to $12,802,783 and surpassing previous All-Time Money List leader Daniel Negreanu, by approximately  $400K.

Ivey is a member of Full Tilt Poker’s Team Full Tilt, an elite group of the world’s best poker professionals comprised by Howard Lederer, Chris Ferguson, John Juanda, Jennifer Harman, Phil Gordon, Erick Lindgren, Erik Seidel, Andy Bloch, Mike Matusow, Gus Hansen, Allen Cunningham, Patrik Antonius and Tom ‘durrrr’ Dwan.

Full Tilt Poker

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Full Tilt Poker sponsored Pro Phil Ivey becomes the Highest earner in poker history

Filed Under: ACC, All-Time Money List, Andy Bloch, Articles, Aussie Millions, Bluff Magazine, Bonus, CA, Challenge Tour, Daniel Negreanu, Erick Lindgren, Erik Seidel, Events, Final Table, Full Tilt Pros, FullTilt, FullTiltPoker, IPL, John Juanda, Mike Matusow, News, Online, Other, PLO, Patrik Antonius, Phil Gordon, Phil Ivey, Poker, Poker News, Poker Players, Poker Tips, SEC, WPT, WSOP, World Poker Tour, ads, allen cunningham, b, bracelet winner, casino, championship, d, durrrr, eve, full tilt, full tilt poker, fulltiltpoker.com, gaming, gus hansen, information, ing, january, legend, main event, money list, players, pot-limit Omaha, reviews, s, spa, sponsor, team full tilt, tilt, tour, vegas, wedoitallvegas, winnings, world series of poker by: admin

Full Tilt Poker sponsored pro and WSOP multiple bracelet winner, Phil Ivey,  has moved into first position on poker’s All-Time Money List, which is based on tournament winnings in live events.

One of the most revered poker professionals of all time, Ivey has earned his reputation as a formidable opponent on the tournament circuit. Since his first Championship title in the $2,500 Pot-Limit Omaha event in 2000, Ivey has dominated the World Series of Poker, taking three gold bracelets in 2002, and winning two more events in 2009,  before making it to the WSOP Main Event final table, where he added another $1.4 million to his career earnings. Ivey also shares a record with legendary player Johnny Moss, for accumulating seven bracelets in only nine years.

In addition to his WSOP winnings, Ivey has made seven World Poker Tour Final Tables and earned one WPT title. In January 2006, he was named Player of the Year by the UK Gaming awards, “Bluff Magazine” and “All In Magazine”.

More recently, Ivey cashed $600,000 for his second-place finish at the 2010 Aussie Millions $100K Challenge tournament, boosting his career tournament earnings to $12,802,783 and surpassing previous All-Time Money List leader Daniel Negreanu, by approximately  $400K.

Ivey is a member of Full Tilt Poker’s Team Full Tilt, an elite group of the world’s best poker professionals comprised by Howard Lederer, Chris Ferguson, John Juanda, Jennifer Harman, Phil Gordon, Erick Lindgren, Erik Seidel, Andy Bloch, Mike Matusow, Gus Hansen, Allen Cunningham, Patrik Antonius and Tom ‘durrrr’ Dwan.

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