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WSOP 2019: Konnikova's seven-deuce promise

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We are big fans at this publication of Jennifer Shahade’s podcast series The Grid and listened intently a few weeks ago to the episode featuring Shahade’s fellow PokerStars ambassador Maria Konnikova.

During a discussion of the surprising merits of playing supposedly trashy hands, Konnikova said: “It forces you to think creatively, it forces you to think in a non-linear way, it forces you to engage with the parts of your brain that you stop engaging when you’re working with solvers all the time.”

She chose seven-deuce offsuit to be the subject of the show and rounded off the segment by saying: “I might throw in a seven-deuce or two this summer, just to see what happens.”

Though Konnikova promised Shahade she would return for a follow-up episode to discuss this range-widening experiment, we stole a march on Shahade during a conversation with Konnikova in the second break of Day 2 of the World Series Main Event. Has she stuck to her seven-deuce word?

Spoiler: She has not.

“Although I should have,” Konnikova said. “There was one time where I had seven-deuce on the button and I was, like, I should really raise this because of Jen’s podcast. And I ended up folding it, and the flop came seven-deuce-x. So it was, ‘Dammit. I should honour my commitment.'”


MORE FROM THE 2019 WSOP
COVERAGE HUB | PHOTO GALLERY


As ever with one of contemporary poker’s pre-eminent thinkers, there was a good reason for the reticence. “This wasn’t the right spot,” Konnikova said. “They were very aggressive blinds. The big blind re-raised almost everything, so unless I was willing to run a huge bluff, it wasn’t a good spot. And I didn’t think at that point in the Main Event was the moment to do it.”

As every poker player will tell you, the WSOP Main Event is unlike any other tournament in the world, and not only because of its prestige. There are few other tournaments in which a starting stack is 300 big blinds and the levels two hours long, and there are even fewer with a five-figure buy-in yet so many inexperienced campaigners taking a shot. It creates an unusual dynamic in the early stages, during which it might be tempting to get creative. But Konnikova isn’t convinced.

“There are two competing schools of thought,” she said. “There’s the ‘tight is right’ school of thought for the Main and then there’s the ‘No one wants to bust, so take advantage of it and really be aggressive.’ And I think tight is right is probably closer to the truth if you have decent players at the table. Pick spots to be aggressive. I’m not saying never bluff, never get out of line, but why? It’s not really buying you anything and it could lose you a lot.”

Maria Konnikova, during a prosperous Day 1

There might also be a temptation with such a slow structure and deep stacks to late register at the start of Day 2, where a starting stack is still 75 big blinds. But Konnikova has first-hand experience of why that also isn’t an ideal strategy: on her Day 1, she doubled up with 45 minutes after someone made a poorly-timed shove. “I basically turned my hand face up,” she said. “I actually think that the Main is not the event that you want to late reg, because there are so many weaker players in it and it’s really helpful to be there in the early levels. I doubled up and it wasn’t because I played really well.”

Konnikova’s Day 2 table has been tougher than on the earlier flight, and her stack is back down closer to the 60,000 she started with. But over the past two years, since she began her hugely successful attempt to learn and prosper at poker from scratch, Konnikova has done battle with opponents of all abilities. During her appearance on The Grid, she discussed studying with solvers and specifically the importance of gauging whether an opponent is also looking to play a GTO approach.

“I think yesterday, I don’t think anyone used a solver except for me, but today there are definitely a few people who are definitely solver players,” she said. “You talk to them, and you do research. Before Day 2, you can look people up. You can see whether they’re pros, you see how many cashes they have. It’s basic due diligence to do some research on the players you’re playing with.”

It’s telling that during Konnikova’s poker journey the subject of conversations with her has changed so dramatically. Originally, the novelty of a writer and psychology PhD doing a deep-dive into the poker world tended to steer discussions into those directions. Now she is a go-to resource for analysis of complex strategies, having applied herself to the task with staggering commitment. However, she says she is not surprised that she’s now more likely to be talking about solvers than writing deadlines.

“I didn’t know that solvers existed when I started this, so in that sense yes, [I’m surprised]. But not in the sense that I want to use all the resources at my disposal. I think it would be stupid of me not to. I still am interested in the psychology of poker, but I’m still going to try to play the best I can.”

For the time being, that doesn’t include dropping in the seven-deuce hammer in the Main Event. But she added: “I think I can do it.”

WSOP photography by PokerPhotoArchive


WSOP 2019: All the numbers and statistics

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The numbers are in and fully crunched and here we have the complete statistical run-down of the 2019 World Series of Poker Main Event. (With thanks to Seth Palansky and the WSOP media team).

2019 World Series of Poker Main Event
Dates: July 3-16, 2019
Buy-in: $10,000
Entries: 8,569
Prize pool: $80,548,600
Places paid: 1,286
Min-cash: $15,000

Final table payouts:

1st: $10,000,000
2nd: $6,000,000
3rd: $4,000,000
4th: $3,000,000
5th: $2,200,000
6th: $1,850,000
7th: $1,525,000
8th: $1,250,000
9th: $1,000,000

Entries by day:

1A: 1,334
1B: 1,914
1C: 4,877
2A/B: 100 (late reg)
2C: 344 (late reg)

The Amazon Room is packed with the second-largest field ever

Notes:

Attendance up 9 percent since 2018
Second-biggest Main Event field of all time (behind 8,772 in 2006)
Day 1C was biggest ever single day sitting at WSOP

Other stats:

Starting stack: 60,000 value; 26 individual chips
Total value chips in play: 514.14 million
Physical chips in play: 222,794

FIELD DEMOGRAPHICS

Average player age: 41.46
Oldest player: Frank Passantino, 85 years old and 247 days, from Flushing, New York
Youngest player: Erwin Wiechers, 21 years old, 2 days, from Gouda, Netherlands
Male/Female: 8,219/350 (96%/4%)

Ages breakdown:

21-25 – Total: 332 Male: 327 Female: 5
26-30 – Total: 1,351 Male: 1,312 Female: 39
31-35 – Total: 1,894 Male: 1,828 Female: 66
36-40 – Total: 1,305 Male: 1,245 Female: 60
41-45 – Total: 891 Male: 861 Female: 30
46-50 – Total: 900 Male: 856 Female: 44
51-55 – Total: 703 Male: 666 Female: 37
>56 – Total: 1,193 Male: 1,124 Female: 69

NATIONALITIES

Countries represented: 87

Japan’s Naoya Kihara

Countries breakdown: USA 6,110; Canada 420; UK 414; France 151; China 117; Germany 105; Brazil 104; Australia 91; Russia 79; Austria 73; Japan 70; Israel 58; Italy 51; Spain 46; Ireland, Argentina 44; Bulgaria 43; India 40; Netherlands 35; Sweden 27; Lithuania 23; Hong Kong 22; Poland, Ukraine 19; Belgium, Denmark, Portugal 18; Switzerland, Norway 17; South Korea 16; Czech Republic 15; Hungary, Mexico 14; Romania 12; Singapore, Taiwan, Finland 10; Columbia, South Africa 9; Greece, Serbia 8; Bermuda, Turkey, Malaysia 7; United Aram Emirates, Slovenia, Latvia, Costa Rica 6; Philippines, Puerto Rico 5; New Zealand, Chile, Belize, Panama 4; Thailand, Haiti, Venezuela, Slovakia, Andorra, Belarus, 3; Lebanon, Cyprus, US Virgin Islands, Paraguay, Morocco, Armenia, Peru, Luxembourg 2; Aruba, Tanzania, Croatia, Kenya, Macao, Bolivia, Ghana, Saudi Arabia, Monaco, Indonesia, Mongolia, Gibraltar, Uruguay, Estonia, Qatar, Azerbaijan, Iceland, Jamaica 1.

2018 key stats:

Champion: John Cynn, Indianapolis, Indiana
Entries: 7,874
Winner’s prize: $8,800,000
Prize pool: $74,015,600

WSOP 2019 coverage hub

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PokerStars Blog has been at the Main Event of the World Series of Poker (WSOP) for the past 15 years — and we’re back again for the 2019 renewal too. Here’s where you’ll find all the key info for what’s happening here in Las Vegas.


2019 WSOP Main Event Official Numbers:

8,569 entries
$80,548,600 prize pool
1,286 places paid
Winner: $10 million
Min-Cash: $15,000

Entries breakdown:
1A: 1,334, 1B: 1,914 1C: 4,877 2AB:100 2C: 344

CLICK FOR FULL STATISTICAL BREAKDOWN


TODAY’S SCHEDULE – JULY 7

Main Event Day 2C
Start: 11am
Levels: 5 x 120-minute levels
Dinner (90 mins): 5.40pm (End Level 8)
Finish: 11:30pm (approx)

CHECK OUT OUR WSOP IMAGE GALLERY

Blinds:
Level 6: 400/800 (ante 800)
Level 7: 500/1,000 (ante 1,000)
Level 8: 600/1,200 (ante 1,200)
Level 9: 800/1,600 (ante 1,600)
Level 10: 1,000/2,000 (ante 2,000)


DAY 2AB RECAP

Around 1,087 players found a bag at the end of Day 2AB, the day on which survivors from the opening two flights combined. The biggest stack sat with Timothy Su, who crammed 791,000 into his bag, but two very familiar other faces are also near the top. One is Anton Morgenstern, who led the Main Event in 2013 while playing with a PokerStars passport, and the other is the 2017 champion Qui Nguyen, who did the ceremonial “Shuffle up and deal!” yesterday, before bagging 602,400.

Top 10 Day 2AB stacks:

Player country Chips
1 Timothy Su USA 791,000
2 Tony Blanchandin France 744,500
3 Anton Morgenstern Germany 735,000
4 Florian Duta Romania 731,500
5 Galen Hall USA 705,900
6 Gerry Claunch USA 699,600
7 Rachid Amamou Switzerland 688,000
8 Bryan Buonocore USA 668,800
9 Anthony Spinella USA 643,700
10 Brian Yoon USA 643,400

End of Day 2AB chip counts
Day 1C survivors list
Day 1B survivors list

Day 1A survivors list


POKERSTARS AMBASSADORS’ PROGRESS

Andre Akkari 467,400 (from Day 2AB)
Igor Kurganov 330,000 (from Day 2AB)
Kalidou Sow 245,000 (from Day 2AB)
Chris Moneymaker 56,000 (from Day 2AB)

Playing Day 2C:

Maria Konnikova
Aditya Agarwal

Kalidou Sow

Leo Fernandez eliminated on Day 2C
Arlie Shaban eliminated on Day 2AB
Jennifer Shahade eliminated on Day 2AB
Liv Boeree eliminated on Day 1A
Muskan Sethi eliminated on Day 1A
Ramon Colillas eliminated on Day 1C
Jason Somerville eliminated on Day 1C


RECENT FEATURE COVERAGE

Maria Konnikova’s seven-deuce promise
The Team Pro said she would experiment with widening her range this summer. Did she do it?

Yzaguirre becomes last man to register to WSOP monster
Indianapolis native said he “had a weird feeling” and late regged for the Main Event

Notable or not, Chris Moneymaker tops the WSOP bill
The man behind the poker boom gives his thoughts on Hall of Fame nominations, streaming and everything else.

From Enterprise to the WSOP in two years: How Arlie Shaban did it
Some amazing tips on building a Twitch following from one of the best in the business

In-form Aditya Agarwal back to his home-from-home
An annual WSOP catch-up with the Indian pro, inspiring a new generation of players.


RECENT WSOP CHAMPIONS

Susan Faber: Event #71: $500 SALUTE TO WARRIORS No-Limit Hold’em – $121,161


2019 WSOP Main Event Schedule:
July 3-5 – Days 1A-1C
July 6 – Day 2AB (survivors from Days 1A&1B)
July 7 – Day 2C (survivors from Day 1C)
July 8 – Day 3
July 9 – Day 4
July 10 – Day 5
July 11 – Day 6
July 12 – Day 7 (play to last 9)
July 13 – rest day
July 14 – Day 8 (play to last 6)
July 15 – Day 9 (play to last 3)
July 16 – Day 10 (play to a champion)

All days begin at 12 noon except Day 2AB (11am) and Days 8-10 (6.30pm)


Also at the WSOP today:
Event #75: $1,000+111 Little One for One Drop No-Limit Hold’em – Day 1B

Tournament table are spread across the Rio Convention Center


Previous Main Event winners/coverage

Year Winner Players Prize
2005 Joe Hachem 5,619 $7.5m BLOG REPORTS
2006 Jamie Gold 8,773 $12m BLOG REPORTS
2007 Jerry Yang 6,358 $8.25m BLOG REPORTS
2008 Peter Eastgate 6,844 $9.15m BLOG REPORTS
2009 Joe Cada 6,494 $8.55m BLOG REPORTS
2010 Jonathan Duhamel 7,319 $8.94m BLOG REPORTS
2011 Pius Heinz 6,865 $8.72m BLOG REPORTS
2012 Greg Merson 6,598 $8.53m BLOG REPORTS
2013 Ryan Riess 6,352 $8.36m BLOG REPORTS
2014 Martin Jacobson 6,683 $10m BLOG REPORTS
2015 Joe McKeehen 6,420 $7.68m BLOG REPORTS
2016 Qui Nguyen 6,737 $8m BLOG REPORTS
2017 Scott Blumstein 7,221 $8.15m BLOG REPORTS
2018 John Cynn 7,874 $8.8m BLOG REPORTS

WSOP photos by Poker Photo Archive

SCOOP champ wins the Milly ($110K); "Proudflop" claims first HRC title

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Headlines from the weekend…

  • SCOOP champion “allan shiek” wins the Milly for $110K
  • Jonathan “Proudflop” Proudfoot wins first HRC title
  • PokerStars Ambassadors reach WSOP Main Event Day 3
  • Top 5 High Roller Club results
  • Top 5 results from the weekend majors

BRAZIL’S “allan sheik” WINS SUNDAY MILLION FOR $110K

Another week, another Brazilian winner of the Sunday Million.

Yesterday’s champion and the outright winner of the $110,835 first-place prize is “allan sheik”. He outlasted a massive 10,799-player field on one $109 bullet, defeating Belgium’s “SnowmanTony” heads-up ($80,425).

Less than two months ago “allan shiek” won his first Spring Championship of Online Poker (SCOOP) title with a win in a $215 NLHE event for $77,228. The Brazilian seems to have a particular set of skills when it comes to large field NLHE tournaments, particularly the Sunday Million. In the past, he has finished 31st out of 43,975 in the 12th anniversary Sunday Million ($21,856) and 29th out of 55,059 in the 10th anniversary Milly ($21,604).

While hundreds of familiar faces who would normally play in this event are currently in Las Vegas for the World Series of Poker Main Event, there were still plenty of recognisable names in the Milly field, including several PokerStars Ambassadors. Both Lex Veldhuis and Benjamin “Spraggy” Spragg failed to cash, one of PokerStars’ new Twitch streamers Tom “MajinBoob” Hayward (known on the Twitch streets as “Pleb_Method”) cashed in 565th for $309.

Stay tuned later this week as we’ll be bringing you How the Sunday Million was won, the definitive account of the Milly with final table interviews and more.


HRC TITLE FOR JONATHAN “Proudflop” PROUDFOOT

Yesterday also saw the UK’s Jonathan “Proudflop” Proudfoot — currently ranked 31st in the world online rankings, according to PocketFives — take down his first official High Roller Club title.

Jonathan “Proudflop” Proudfoot

While Proudfoot has plenty of seconds and thirds in High Roller Club events, the 2019 SCOOP winner hadn’t clinched a win since the ‘High Roller Club’ became a thing. He took care of that on Sunday with a win in the $1,050 Sunday Warm-Up for $25,863, taking his career winnings up to $4.07M.

He was busy elsewhere too, finishing sixth in the $2,100 Sunday HR for $5,500. That event was won by Ukraine’s “Remi Lebo_10” for $36,560, defeating a final table which also included “anteen” (2nd – $25,031), Wiktor “limitless” Malinowski (3rd – $17,138), and “NastyMinder” (4th – $11,734).

Wiktor “Iimitless” Malinowski


POKERSTARS AMBASSADORS REACH WSOP ME DAY 3

The 2019 $10,000 World Series of Poker Main Event is now officially the second-largest edition in history, with a now-guaranteed $10M going to the eventual champion.

Our man Howard Swains is at the Rio for the duration bringing you the latest news and interviews, so check out his coverage here.

As the Main Event ticks on to Day 3, here’s a look at the chip stacks of the remaining PokerStars Ambassadors still in with a shot:

Andre Akkari – 467,400
Igor Kurganov – 330,000
Kalidou Sow – 245,000
Aditya Agarwal – 213,700
Maria Konnikova – 88,900
Chris Moneymaker 56,000


TOP 5 RESULTS FROM THE HIGH ROLLER CLUB

TOURNAMENT PLAYER COUNTRY PRIZE
HRC: $2,100 Sunday HR, $100K Gtd Remi Lebo_10 Ukraine $36,560.02
HRC: $530 Bounty Builder HR [Progressive KO], $375K Gtd villainr United Kingdom $35,346.69
HRC: $1,050 Sunday Warm-Up [8-Max], $115K Gtd Proudflop United Kingdom $25,863.99
HRC: $1,050 Sunday Supersonic [6-Max, Hyper-Turbo], $100K Gtd Gabrielmv96 Brazil $25,489.46
HRC: $2,100 Sunday Cooldown [8-Max, Turbo, Progressive KO], $125K Gtd edudrake1987 Brazil $20,197.09

TOP 5 RESULTS FROM THE WEEKEND MAJORS

TOURNAMENT PLAYER COUNTRY PRIZE
$109 SUNDAY MILLION, $1,000,000 Gtd allan sheik Brazil $110,835.12
$215 Sunday Supersonic [6-Max, Hyper-Turbo], $100K Gtd Platin-Kurde Germany $17,827.56
$215 Sunday Warm-Up, $100K Gtd Lamperouge_v Japan $17,417.44
$11 Sunday Storm, $185K Gtd I_M_ICM Austria $16,958.31
$22 Mini Sunday Million, $150K Gtd zhukaSS Lithuania $16,423.29

Ready to sign up for PokerStars? Click here to get an account.


PokerStars VR goes to space tomorrow

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It was 50 years ago this month that humanity first reached the surface of the moon.

On July 21, 1969, Neil Armstrong stepped down from the Apollo 11 landing module onto lunar soil and uttered some of the most famous words ever spoken: “That’s one small step for (a) man, one giant leap for mankind.

Buzz Aldrin descends to the lunar surface — without cards and chips as originally planned. (Photo: NASA)

Most of the landing went according to plan, but there was one regrettable omission. At the request of President Richard Nixon, a passionate poker player, the original mission briefing had called for Buzz Aldrin to join Armstrong on the surface for a game of cards. But while warming up the night before, the two had lost their folding table and poker chips to their fellow Apollo astronaut Michael Collins.

There was a backup deck of cards handy, but Armstrong and Aldrin felt bad asking to borrow the table and chips they’d just lost to Collins. The poor guy had to stay on the command module while they experienced the glory of walking on the moon! So the planned session was scrapped.

We can’t say with absolute certainty that this hidden gem of history was the inspiration for the Galaxy Space Station, the newest location featured in the update for PokerStars VR that goes live goes live on Tuesday, July 9th. Then again, we can’t say for sure that it wasn’t. But there’s one thing we can tell you without any doubt: if you like poker and you have a VR headset, you have to play this game.

 

 

Whether you’re looking for cash games or sit-and-go tournament action, PokerStars VR provides it all in some of the most spectacular locations imaginable. The new Galaxy Space Station joins Macau 2050, the Monte Carlo Yacht, and Showdown Saloon as locations where you can play in private games with friends or challenge players from around the world.

The new Stars Cred system allows players to buy all the props, apparel, and consumables they need to outfit their journey into the unknown. Prices start at $1.99 for 200 creds.

And the new Stash tab allows players to permanently own and spawn any item they’ve purchased in PokerStars VR. The latest update also includes all sorts of new items, from space monkeys and remote controlled rockets to new clothes, hats, and props.

“The experience of PokerStars VR is really one of a kind and its unique immersion and social poker experience has helped create a really engaged community. We’ve seen PokerStars VR go from strength to strength with these updates,” said Severin Rasset, Director of Poker Innovation and Operations at PokerStars. “PokerStars VR will continue its journey by delighting our players and providing a unique thrill and experience. In addition to the Macau Suite and the Showdown Saloon, we now have tables in the Milky Way and the ability to personalize your experience to new levels!”

PokerStars VR is available on the new all-in-one VR system, the Oculus Quest, as well as Viveport and Steam.

Allez! A French-tinged round with Sow and ElkY

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Although most online poker sites these days have teams of sponsored pros, we haven’t yet reached the point that they make transfers or trades for the millions of dollars (or euros or pounds) that it costs to “buy” sports stars. Players simply sometimes drift away at the end of their contracts, while others arrive.

Bertrand “ElkY” Grospellier was one of the earliest leading lights of Team PokerStars Pro, and we had a blast covering the Frenchman’s career: glittering in both substance and couture. He now does his work with a different patch on his sleeve, while we’re all about ElkY’s fellow Parisian Kalidou Sow, who signed for the red spade at the beginning of this year.

In one of today’s quirks at the World Series of Poker (WSOP) Main Event, ElkY and Sow have found themselves sitting directly next to one another, in seats five and six of Table 134 in the Pavilion Room. It seemed like a decent opportunity to put the pair of them under a magnifying glass and watch how they are going about their business in this Main Event, as they both chase WSOP glory.


MORE FROM THE 2019 WSOP
COVERAGE HUB | PHOTO GALLERY


Our “A Round With…” series always needs to carry a disclaimer: there’s no guarantee that anything that happens will be the kind of thing that would make a television highlights reel. In fact, it’s usually the opposite. But it also serves as perhaps the most authentic answer to the question, “What’s it like to play the World Series Main Event?” This is what it’s like. Hundreds and hundreds of orbits like this one, occasionally punctuated by high drama. This is what Sow and ElkY, and their other table-mates, did for nine hands about 30 minutes into Day 3.

At the start of the orbit, the table looked like this. Blinds were 1,200/2,400 (they’re playing with a big blind ante).

Seat 1: William Klevitz, United States 190,000
Seat 2: Angel Maria Perez Calvo, El Salvador, 42,000
Seat 3: Anselmo Villarreal, United States, 188,500
Seat 4: Robert Remi, France, 80,000
Seat 5: Bertrand “ElkY” Grospellier, France, 430,000
Seat 6: Kalidou Sow, France, 160,000
Seat 7: Justin Liberto, United States, 130,000
Seat 8: Dominick Giovanniello, 95,000
Seat 9: Hyung Sun Jung, South Korea, 250,000

Hand 1: Button in Seat 1
ElkY, sitting UTG+1, opened to 5,000. Justin Liberto three-bet to 15,600 two seats around and only ElkY called. The dealer put the 3♣4♦10♦ on the table. Grospellier, through the mirrored shades he has worn for all of his career, stared at Liberto but checked, leading Liberto to put out a near pot-sized bet. Grospellier folded.

The familiar stylings of Bertrand “ElkY” Grospellier

As a floorman wandered past the table, he was stopped by another player clutching a tournament buy-in ticket.

“Where’s late reg?” the player said.
“What tournament?” the floorman said. “This is the Main Event. Late reg does not exist.”

Duly put in his place, the player scuttled off.

Hand 2: Button in Seat 2
Liberto got this one started too, with a raise to 4,800 from mid-position. The only call came from Robert Remi in the big blind, and the two of them saw the 2♣Q♠10♦ flop. Remi is a third Frenchman at the table, and is sitting beside his two other countrymen. None of them are talking to one another however, preferring the distractions of their phones when not in hands. Remi checked the flop, Liberto bet 3,700 and Remi folded.

Hand 3: Button in Seat 3
Angel Maria Perez Calvo had fewer chips than he had letters in his full name, and open-pushed from the cutoff. Everyone else folded.

Hand 4: Button in Seat 4
Liberto, the most active player at the table so far, opened to 4,800 again, this time from UTG, and he picked up two callers. The first was William Klevitz, in mid position, and the second was Sow in the big blind. They were three-way to the 10♥Q♠A♠ flop. Sow checked, and Liberto bet 5,800. Klevitz stuck around, but Sow departed.

The turn was the 5♦ and Liberto’s check brought a bet of 11,200 from Klevitz. Liberto called.

The 7♠ completed the board and, after Liberto’s check, Klevitz’s bet of 18,300 completed the meaningful action. Liberto folded.

Hand 5: Button in Seat 5
As the dealer prepared the deck, the only conversation in the vicinity came from the neighbouring table 135, where Warwick Mirzikinian was busting out some classics. “I’m good at reading cards when they turn them over,” he said. “I go, ‘Oh that’s an ace. And that’s another one.’ When they turn them over, I’m very good.” Everyone at Sow’s table buried themselves deep into Instagram.

Klevitz opened the next pot, making it 5,000 to play. Calvo still had a short stack and pushed it in, earning folds from around the table.

A friend of Dominick Giovanniello arrived to the table but was quickly assigned an errand. “Can you get me a banana and a Gatorade,” Giovanniello asked, and off scooted the new waiter.

Hand 6: Button in Seat 6
ElkY opened to 5,000 from the cutoff and met with no resistance.

Kalidou Sow: Struggling to make progress

Hand 7: Button in Seat 7
Sow opened to 5,100 from the cutoff, but he couldn’t get it through. Hyung Sun Jung called in the big blind, and the pair saw a dangerous A♥4♥8♥ flop. Jung checked and Sow bet 4,000. Jung called for the 7♣ turn. Both players checked that, but after the dealer placed the 5♣ on the river, Jung’s bet of 11,000 persuaded Sow to leave it.

Hand 8: Button in Seat 8
“Raise,” Sow said after watching the rest of the table fold to him. He put a single orange 5,000-denomination chip forward. Jung called again from the small blind and Klevitz also called from the big, and so three players went to the 8♦9♥2♥ flop.

Jung led at it, putting 6,500 forward, but Klevitz then bumped it up quickly to 15,500. Sow flicked his cards away again and Jung called.

They both checked the 4♦ flop, just as the banana and Gatorade arrived (see earlier). The 5♣ appeared on the river, but all eyes were on the banana. Giovanniello quickly opened it, nibbled it down to nothing, and handed the skin back to his friend.

The players both checked and Jung showed A♥4♥ for a missed flush draw, but a turned pair of fours. It was good as Klevitz folded.

Hand 9: Button in Seat 9
With an orbit of almost painful nothingness drawing to its conclusion, everyone folded around to Klevitz in the small blind. A walk would be the perfect end to this kind of tedium. But Klevitz actually decided to raise to 6,100, attacking the big blind of Calvo. Calvo was having none of it, and pushed all in. Klevitz decided to let him have it, as this one fizzled out too.

So there we have it. I’ll confess we didn’t learn much there about the relative prospects of either Sow or Grospellier in this Main Event. Both still have decent stacks, however, and will hope to stick it out through the rest of the day at least.

WSOP photography by PokerPhotoArchive

Patience is key for Akkari, as UFC has to wait

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Andre Akkari has a bad beat from Day 2 of the World Series of Poker Main Event. Playing Day 2AB with only 45,000 chips, as players around him began accumulating high six figures, Akkari accepted an offer of tickets to UFC 239 in the T-Mobile arena that night. “Probably I’m going to be out,” Akkari reasoned. What better way to relax than by seeing Jon Jones and Thiago Santos batter one another?

Flash forward about two hours, with the undercard well underway, and Akkari realised he wasn’t going to make it. There was the small matter of about 460,000 chips blocking his path, the result of one of those surges that poker players get when they know how to play the field at the WSOP. “I gave the tickets to my family,” Akkari said. “I had a lot of chips.”

Akkari has been playing the Main Event for about a decade now, and seems well set this year to record his third in-the-money finish. At time of writing (the Day 3 dinner break) he has about 560,000, going into 1,500/3,000, with about 2,250 players left. The min-cash kicks in when 1,286 remain, which will likely be either late tonight or early tomorrow.

Though he had made contingency plans for Saturday night, he also actually wasn’t totally surprised that he was able to cling on. He is well aware of the mindset adjustments necessary to play this particular tournament, and the necessity to place discipline high on the list of relevant skills.

“You have to be patient,” Akkari said. “First you have to consider the maths. You always see some people on your table, on the other tables, with huge stacks. You have 40 big blinds and you consider yourself a short stack, and you’re not a short stack. But the mind works against you. There’s a guy with 300 big blinds, 200 big blinds. I try to forget all these mind tricks and focus on my 40 big blinds. I have a lot of things I can do with 40 big blinds.”


MORE FROM THE 2019 WSOP
COVERAGE HUB | PHOTO GALLERY


As others have noticed, many tournament truisms go out of the window in this one. “I’m playing this Main Event like I always play the Main Event of the World Series, completely different than any other Main Event,” Akkari said. “I’m trying to pot control all the hands that I play and not overplaying ace king, stuff like that. Since there are so many amateurs and people who don’t know how to play perfectly, you have to take advantage of them. That’s the edge you have. If you are putting all your chips all-in pre, trusting in jacks or tens, I think you’re throwing your edge away. I don’t want to do that.”

Fascinating as it is to hear Akkari’s strategy tips, it’s always more important to hear what he has to say about life away from the tables — and it doesn’t take too long for the overlaps to become clear. Discussing his calm and steady approach to the WSOP, he likens it to some of the lessons he has learned growing up and prospering in Sao Paulo.

“You can make a connection with life,” he says. “Sometimes you have some problems, maybe you’re in a bad moment in your life, but really it’s not too bad. If you keep comparing yourself against rich people or people who have avoided trouble, you’re going to feel that you’re in terrible shape, you have to do something about it. But it’s just the way your mind works…It’s all about your mindset and poker is exactly the same. People sometimes get desperate. They want 80 big blinds, 40 is not enough, because someone has 100. Then come the mistakes.

“Poker is about opportunity. Not opportunity that you’re going to create yourself, but an opportunity that shows up and you have to do something about that. You cannot always invent opportunities, but they’re going to show up, so you have to wait, you have to be there, and then take it.”

Akkari is happy also to help provide that opportunity for others. He has a team of around 80 Brazilian players with whom he studies and for whom he provides coaching and staking deals. “Team Akkari” has had a high level of collective success, and he doesn’t have to think too long to bring stories to mind of people who have made the best of the opportunities afforded them.

“The best example I have is Pedro Padilha,” Akkari says. “Six, seven years ago this guy shows up at my door trying to sell Nextel cellphones. He was in terrible shape financially, but we invited him in, at our team HQ. He said, ‘Man, what are you guys doing?’ We said: ‘We’re playing online poker.’ ‘Oh man, please teach me. I need it.'”

Pedro Padilha

Flash forward a few years, and Akkari was on the rail when Padilha was closing in on the final table of the PokerStars Players Championship (PSPC) in the Bahamas, finishing tenth for $328,500. “Now he’s one of the best poker players in Brazil, in Latin America,” Akkari says. “He’s a great guy and we love him, and it’s all about poker. Poker saved him. Now he is doing what he wants to do, what gives him pleasure. He wakes up every day happy and he has money, he’s looking after his family.”

Akkari is happy to give Padilha full credit for his turn around. “It’s not chance,” Akkari says. “What he has is a focus. He loves poker in a way that gives him pleasure to study it. He studies hands every day, he puts in time with the solvers. He likes that. After you find yourself in a position that you’re doing something you like and you are committed to study, to do whatever it takes to get there, I don’t see any way that it doesn’t work. In all the cases I know where people study and focus a lot, and have committed everything that they have, every case that I saw was successful.”

Padilha too is sitting with a decent stack at the WSOP today, closing in perhaps on his first Main Event cash. Though Akkari insists that the trophy has his own name on it (“I’m going to win. You can write that.”) one gets the sense that he’d be equally happy railing his friend and protege towards the bracelet.

WSOP photography by PokerPhotoArchive

The WSOP bubble in focus

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Through 15 years coming to Las Vegas, PokerStars Blog has written what must be several hundred thousand words at the World Series of Poker (WSOP) Main Event. It would be enough to fill a couple of books–ably illustrated through the lens of our long-time colleague Joe Giron.

More than perhaps any other period of play–the eventual crowning of a champion included–the bubble has fascinated our writers down the years. There’s a separate bubble post for every single WSOP renewal we’ve attended, the most recent nine of which are easily accessible on our current blog platform.

The wonders of internet archiving therefore gives us the chance to review bubbles past and offer a comprehensive guide to how it’s gone down year-on-year. Today, at the 2019 WSOP, it could be bubble day once more. To whet your appetite, why not take a look back at how it used to be.

There are some familiar motifs: the dealers stood in long sentry-lines; the slow countdown; Jack Effel corralling his troops; and the eventual bursting followed by presentations and applause.

Dealers stand on the 2010 bubble

But there’s also characters large and small who suffered the ultimate indignity, united only by the fact that nobody seems to celebrate them. Here’s our tribute to those who fell at the very last. Click the headlines to read the full stories…


2018: Tournament break before Hopkins is broken

Matthew Hopkins looked to the sky, but found no help

The bursting of the bubble usually brings cheers, but in 2018 they were preceded by boos. That’s because Tournament Director Jack Effel sent 1,182 players on a 20-minute tournament break when only 1,181 of them would be paid. The standard drama was therefore extended as a colour up took place and organisers made sure their ducks were all in line. After coming back, it took one hand for two players to be all-in and called. One, Ross Mallor, survived. The other, Matthew Hopkins, did not. His A♣5♥ didn’t beat Bryce McVay’s A♦5♠ and Hopkins secured next year’s buy-in, but not the $15,000 min-cash.

Quan Zhou bluffs it off

2017: Quan Zhou bluffs his way to bubble

If you’re going to go out of the Main Event, you might as well do it in style, and bubbling was never done with such elan as when China’s Quan Zhou bluffed his way home last year. Dressed to impress in a smart dinner suit, Zhou wasn’t even a short stack when he entered bubble play.

He wasn’t anywhere close to being in trouble.

But then he got involved in a pot against Davidi Kitai that quickly got out of hand, and Zhou became the most spectacular bubble boy of the modern era.

(Note: Roger Campbell also bubbled on the same hand.) Read the full story.


2016: Adam Furgatch, ‘bubble boy of the century’ hits the rail

Adam Furgatch: Bubble boy of the century

The bubble of 2016 was remarkable for one very particular reason: there was no hand-for-hand play. As tournament officials prepared to set the last 1,015-ish through the gruelling process, it became clear that there had been some miscounting going on. That meant that as Adam Furgatch, from Marina del Rey, Calif, watched his last chips shipped elsewhere, he was among those who didn’t know that was the end of that. “I’m the bubble boy of the century!” Furgatch declared. Read the full story.


2015: Doud leaves as attention falls on the ‘other’ bubble boy

Charlie Ciresi: The ‘other’ bubble boy

In an intriguing break from convention, Roy Doud became the official WSOP bubble boy but we turned our attention to a man named Charlie Ciresi, whose role was arguably even more significant. Armed only with a CB radio and the sharp suit of the tournament organisers, Ciresi’s job was to verify that everything was in order at this most chaotic time. Read the full story.


2014: John Dwyer: The dead samaritan on the bubble

John Dwyer: The eyes tell the sorry tale

“Life is hell. Nobody loves us. Time is a flat circle. We’re all going to die. Don’t bother calling your mom, because she doesn’t care.” So wrote poker’s Brad Willis, a man occasionally prone to melodrama, but also a keen observer of the human condition. Moreover, he can find the words to describe it. Looking at John Dwyer’s face as he became 2014’s bubble boy, there was no other one other conclusion that could be drawn. Well, maybe one. “Last time I saw an empty glazed hopeless stare like that, Jesse Pinkman was chained up in a pole barn,” wrote Julius Goat on Twitter. Read the full story.


2013: Bonyadi beats empty chair to bubble

Farzad Bonyadi: Get these cameras off me

Farzad Bonyadi has won three World Series of Poker bracelets, but a glittering reputation did not protect him from the menace of the 2013 bubble–and the unwanted attention it can bring. “Get the cameras off me,” Bonyadi was heard to whisper after hitting the rail. If only the empty chair, which was also a contender, had never been filled… Read the full story.


2012: Bubble bursts for hostages of a fortune

Bubble Boys class of 2012

The saying says there’s safety in numbers. But for the four players who were knocked out simultaneously on 2012’s bubble, it was hollow consolation. Indeed, as Stephen Bartley wrote at the time, Dylan Schwartz, Desmond Portano, Dane Lomas and Steve Rosen “looked more like hostages being paraded in front of state television” than anyone enjoying the thrills and spills of poker’s most celebrated tournament. All poker’s most celebrated tournament means is poker’s most celebrated bubble. And that sucks. Read the full story.


2011: Welcome to the drawn-out world of the pre-bubble

Reza Kashani: Bubble boy (eventually)

Phil Hellmuth got knocked out three from the money, and the room started buzzing at the certain approach of the bubble. But more than an hour later, reporters in the press box “started to discuss how a cocktail of Zofran and Vicodin would treat the human body,” according to Brad Willis, who was among them. This bubble featured the first open threat to players of a one-round penalty should they leave their seat and rush the table where the all-in players could be found. It didn’t work then and it doesn’t work now. Everyone was desperate to see Reza Kashani hit the rail one from the money. Read the full story.


Tim McDonald: Queens cracked for heartbreak

2010: Boudreau dodges but McDonald takes the fall

It might have been Kevin Boudreau. It might have been Angel Guillen. (The Mexico Team Pro actually bubbled the bubble, which is far worse than being on the stone.)

And then, as it turned out, Tim McDonald, from Lexington, Kentucky, got dealt pocket queens, got his money in good, but was soon heading out the door.

“McDonald stood there like the loneliest man at a bachelor auction,” Willis observed. Very soon after, the queue at the payouts cage was like Disney World. “Your wait from here is two hours.” Read the full story.


WSOP photos by PokerPhotoArchive.com.


Pochedly bursts WSOP bubble ending late-night grind

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Bubbles at the WSOP come in many anxious styles, but I can’t remember a previous one so squeezed by other external forces.

All calculations at the start of this near record event predicted the bubble would burst early on Day 4, when player 1,287 of 8,569 entries went home empty handed. But as Level 15 began on Day 3 at the 2019 renewal here at the Rio Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas, they were already 50 off the money and losing players at more than 100 per level. WSOP stats guru Kevin Mathers told the world: “Looks very likely we reach the $ tonight.”

Quickly the volume went up, the winces grew more pronounced, formerly standard decisions were rendered agonising, and the $15,000 min-cash metamorphosed into something life changing. Temporarily at least, the $10 million up top was rendered far too distant to think about.

Team PokerStars Pro Aditya Agarwal, whose tweets from the Main Event have been blunt and to the fact, but somehow also increasingly desperate, ordered himself a massage. “I know, man,” he said when someone observed that it had been a grind for him all day.

In the Amazon Room, Chris Moneymaker was also having his flesh kneaded, but was in far more comfortable shape. He started the day with only about 56,000 but had more than 650,000 having enjoyed one of those days. (Not one of those days, one of the other type.)

Chris Moneymaker: Back in the Main Event money

Kalidou Sow was also still in the field, making it three red spade representatives. They had outlasted even Igor Kurganov and Andre Akkari, whose big stacks disintegrated in the late Day 3 running.

As the clock ticked through Level 15, one player by the media rail got his stack in with A♥A♦ and was up against J♣J♠. A jack turned, the beaten man wound his headphones cord around his phone and prepared to leave, pretending not to hear a table-mate say: “You wait all day and that’s what you get it in with!” It was meant to be a joke, but he’s not getting many bookings this guy.

Plenty of late-night hijinks in the Main Event

Players in the Little One for One Drop filtered through on a tournament break, and though it was past midnight on a Monday night/Tuesday morning, the corridors through the Amazon Room were busier than at any other point this week. A couple of other players started protesting at the stalling happening on their table, prompting a brusque floorman to state as a solution: “We’ll just get to the end of this level, bag up and come back tomorrow.”

“That’s not going to happen, is it?” one of the inquisitors asked.

“It is if y’all take long enough.”

He wandered off, headed towards the latest shout of “Clock!” Players on most table were now allowed only 10 additional seconds per decision, while on at least one, they were down to three seconds. Finally an official announcement came over the microphone, with a quarter of an hour left until the scheduled close: “Players all that’s going to happen in 16 minutes is we’re putting the blinds up. We’re going to play to the money tonight.”

The tortuous process of hand-for-hand play thereby got under way, with players in two rooms (the Pavilion and the Amazon) and on three TV stages. “Dealers please stand up when you are done. Players please sit down, we need to see the dealers.” About 10 minutes went by, then: “Dealers please take your seats.”

This was all Charlie Ciresi, a man who has done this many times. He also done the next bit on a fair few occasions too. All of a sudden he announced, “Congratulations Main Event players, you are all in the money.” There had been zero hands of hand-for-hand play.

Charlie Ciresi marshalls his troops

Those who had hedged their bets on the final pre-money bustout happening in the Amazon Room had miscalculated. Over there, on the handful of tables still playing in the Pavilion Room, a man named Ryan Pochedly, from Lakewood, OH, was being knocked out.

According to tournament reporters, Pochedly had around 300,000 behind and was looking at a board of 7♥8♦3♠K♦7♣ and called an all-in shove with ace-king. But Julian Pineda had 6♠7♦ and had made trips, in a three-bet pre-flop pot. Ouch.

With more than $500,000 in tournament career earnings, Pochedly didn’t react quite so dramatically as some of his predecessors, for whom the Main Event is the be all and end all. Pochedly picked up a “celebratory” belt as the bubble boy, and his buy-in for next year’s event.

Moneymaker made it, with 681,000. Sow made it with 250,000. And Agarwal too could finally relax.

That’s $15K locked up, but it’s only going to get tougher from here.

WSOP photography by PokerPhotoArchive

LEX LIVE 2: Your guide to London

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At the end of September, PokerStars Ambassador Lex Veldhuis will be hosting the second edition of Lex Live at the Aspers Casino in Westfield Stratford City.

That’s in London, baby.

Whether it’s recalling all of the hotels that you wanted to buy on Mayfair and Park Lane in your earlier years playing Monopoly, watching scenes of the Royal Family at Buckingham Palace, cheering one of the city’s football teams or laughing to episodes of Fleabag, we’ve all had a piece of London in our lives at some point.

If you haven’t had the chance to visit this metropolis yet, then there’s no better time than for Lex Live 2.

The 10-day festival runs from September 27 through October 6, 2019, and here’s a guide to England’s capital if you’re planning to visit for the first time.


HOW DO I GET TO LONDON?

If you’re flying into Heathrow Airport, keep in mind that it is the third busiest in the world, so give yourself plenty of time to get through it. Gatwick airport is smaller and less busy, but it’s still a London airport, so expect some hustle and bustle.

Both airports are linked to London via express train services, with Heathrow taking you to London Paddington station, and Gatwick taking you to London Victoria station.

If you’re arriving via the Eurostar, you’ll be pulling into London at St Pancras International.

From there, the most efficient and budget way to get around in London is using The Tube. It’s the city’s version of the subway or metro and connects most of metropolitan London, turning it into an underground maze of exceptional transport throughout central London Town. Wherever you need to go, you can be sure there’s a line on The Tube to get you there.


WHERE IS LEX LIVE 2 TAKING PLACE?

As mentioned, Lex Live 2 will be held at the Aspers Casino in Westfield Stratford City.

The casino is located on level 3 at Westfield Stratford City, easily accessible from The Street, Car Park B & the World Food Court. Here’s how to get there:

BY TUBE AND TRAIN

Stratford Station

Take one of the following services to Stratford Station and then follow the signs to Westfield Stratford City:

Docklands Light Railway (DLR)
Jubilee and Central lines
National Rail services operated by Greater Anglia and c2c
London Overground services

Stratford International Station

Take one of the following services to Stratford International Station and then follow the signs to Westfield Stratford City:

Docklands Light Railway (DLR)
SouthEastern High Speed 1 services

BY BUS

Take one of the following services to Stratford and then follow the signs to Westfield Stratford City:

25 IIford – Oxford Circus
69 Canning Town – Walthamstow
86 Romford
97 Chingford – Walthamstow
104 Manor Park
108 Lewisham
158 Chingford Mount
238 Barking
241 Prince Regent
257 Walthamstow
262 East Beckton
276 Newham General Hospital – Stoke Newington
308 Clapton Park – Wanstead
339 Shadwell – Leytonstone
388 Blackfriars
425 Clapton
473 North Woolwich
D8 Crossharbour

BY CAR

If you’re travelling by car, head to Car Park B of Westfield Stratford City and use the lifts to access the casino. If you’re using a sat nav, you can use the postcode, E20 1EJ.

The shopping centre is easily accessible via the A11, A12, A13, A102, A406, M11 and M25.

Remember that parking charges apply at Westfield Stratford City. For more details, click here.https://uk.westfield.com/stratfordcity/centre-info/getting-here#CAR

BY TAXI AND UBER

Drop Off

When using a taxi, your driver will drop you at taxi rank near Stratford station. Once you’ve been dropped off follow the signs to Westfield Stratford City.

Your Uber driver will drop you off outside Waitrose on the Lower Ground Floor near Car Park A. The quickest way to the casino from here, is via The Street.

Pick Up

When leaving Westfield Stratford City, taxis are available from the taxi rank in Montfichet Road, outside the Ticket Hall at Stratford station (near Starbucks and M&S Food Hall on the Lower Ground Floor). There is also a taxi rank on Westfield Avenue near Chestnut Plaza.

For Uber pick ups, request a ride in the app from Westfield Stratford City and meet your driver outside Waitrose on the Lower Ground Floor near Car Park A.

Licensed Taxi Numbers:

Stratford City Cars’ – 020 8555 5555
Radio Taxis – 020 7272 0272
One-Number Taxi – 0871 871 8710
Computer Cab – 020 7908 0207
Dial-a-Cab – 020 7253 5000
Call-A-Cab – 020 8901 4444
London Black Taxis – 07779 336 612


HOW DO I SEE THE SIGHTS?

The easiest way to squeeze in the major sights in town is to jump on one of the many tour buses, including the infamous double-decker buses, but it’s actually possible to see the sights in one day while on foot (with the occasional ride on The Tube).

Being such a huge city, the main attractions are surprisingly closer to each other than you may think, and if not, there will be an underground station nearby.

Keep in mind that England is certainly not known for its sunshine and when Lex Live 2 takes place winter will be creeping closer. The average temperature at that time will be between 60-65°F (15-17°C), so be sure to bring some warm clothes.

Here’s a list of just some of the many things to see and do while in town during Lex Live 2:

Leicester Square — a taste of the West End’s cinema and entertainment capital, described as one big, youthful party.

Piccadilly Circus — Connected to Leicester Square, this is London’s version of New York’s Times Square, a busy thoroughfare of London’s West End.

Buckingham Palace — a jaw-dropping dose of gargantuan royal residency. There’s never a time during the day when there aren’t groups of people outside of the gates snapping pictures. For £17.50 you can get a tour inside the property, but be sure to go before Oct. 3 since that’s when they close for the season.

St James’s Park — a peaceful escape from the city buzz as you walk through from Buckingham Palace at one end of the park, to The Ritz at the other.

River Thames — the mammoth sights continue with the waterside such as Big Ben, the London Eye, Houses of Parliament, and Tower Bridge a little further down.


WHERE IS GOOD FOR SHOPPING IN LONDON?

Harrods — situated in the fancy Knightsbridge area, Harrods is the most extravagant department store you will probably ever seen. It’s unlikely you will open your wallet, but it’s definitely worth a look.

Oxford Street — The world-famous shopping district that’s much more affordable for the average person than Harrods. Here is where you’ll find all of the mainstream brands.

Carnaby London — A dainty, boutique shopping and nightlife district close to Leicester Square that is a refreshing contrast from the grandness of the surrounding areas.

Portobello Road — this street is filled with one of the many markets around London. This one is in the heart of Notting Hill and is considered the most popular for vintage items.

Camden Market — Another world-famous market in London, this is for those after something more alternative.


ARE THERE ANY SPECIAL EVENTS ON IN LONDON DURING LEX LIVE 2?

NFL London Games 2019 — Oct. 6 through Nov. 3: There are four NFL games in London just after Lex Live 2, including the Oakland Raiders vs Chicago Bears at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on October 6.

London Restaurant Festival — Oct. 1 through 31: A citywide celebration of eating out, from Michelin-starred restaurants to neighbourhood bistros, this festival is all about lifting the lid on London’s finest cooking.

London Film Festival — Oct. 2 through 13: if you have some free time during Lex Live 2, you could catch the UK’s biggest celebration of international cinema.

Totally Thames — Sept. 1 through 30: celebrate the Thames and its culture with a programme of river-inspired art, pop-up live performances and boat races.

Japan Matsuri 2019 — Sunday 29 September: London’s very own festival of Japanese culture – Japan Matsuri – returns on Sunday, 29 September 2019 in Trafalgar Square in the centre of the city. A regular fixture now in the London calendar, this free annual festival brings people together to enjoy Japanese food, music, dance, and activities for all the family.

Frieze art fairs — Oct. 2 through 6: explore two of the most influential events on the art scene in one place with the world-renowned Frieze London and Frieze Masters art fairs.

Clear your Path to the Sunday Million

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The Sunday Million has been one of the most coveted titles in online poker for more than 13 years. Thousands of players turn out every week and the winner regularly walks away with a six-figure prize.

Never played it before? Or maybe played once and want another shot? PokerStars School is ready to give you the chance at Milly glory this summer.

This week:

• PS School clears your Path to the Sunday Million
• Learning poker through social interaction
• Inside the mind of a poker pro


Path to the Sunday Million

PokerStars School’s latest promotion will award $109 Sunday Million tickets to seven players — and it’s completely free

If you’ve ever wanted to play the Sunday Million but haven’t had the bankroll to buy your seat, you’re in luck. PokerStars School is going all-in on our flagship weekly tournament with the Path to the Sunday Million promotion, and it’s aimed squarely at players like you.

In early August, the top seven finishers in a special PokerStars School tournament will win a $109 ticket to the Milly. Another 23 players will win $11 tickets to the Sunday Storm.

The only catch is you have to have a Path to the Sunday Million ticket in order to play. The good news is there are lots of ways to get your hands on one — and they won’t cost you a single cent. A total of 160 free tickets will be handed out to players in the July Masters and Initiation leagues, members who post on the forums, viewers who watch School content on Twitch, and more.

Click through here for the full rundown on all the ways you can win a ticket to the Path to the Sunday Million tourney. And then check out all these Sunday Million-specific strategy guides so you’ll be fully prepared after you’ve won your ticket and the big day finally arrives:

How to play satellites into the Sunday Million
Sunday Million Early Game Strategy
Sunday Million Mid Game Strategy
Sunday Million Bubble Stage Strategy
Sunday Million Final Table Strategy
Interviews with previous Sunday Million winners

You can also read up on past installments of the Sunday Million, including interviews with winners, by exploring our Sunday Million archives.


Improving your poker game socially

Poker is all about the long run. So outside of preparing for any single game or tournament — even one as big as the Sunday Million — the surest path to long-term profits is to invest time in studying.

Twitch streams by players like Arlie Shaban (seen here at the 2019 WSOP Main Event) can be great social resources to improve your game

“When I was first coming up the ranks, I was fortunate enough to be part of a thriving community back in the days of free information,” writes PokerStars School’s resident free-information-giver, Pete Clarke. “Before training sites started charging subscriptions, some top players were handing out golden information for free. Today, the number of elite players teaching at reasonable prices is dwindling, but there are still many effective ways of boosting your poker development through social learning.”

No need to muck around trying to discover those boosters on your own, though. Clarke works through the menu of options — including study groups, hand reviews, forums and more — in Working Socially on Your Poker Game.

And when you’re done there, check out the PokerStars School forum to connect with others like you.


Get inside the mind of a pro

Pros like Gus Hansen (seen here at the 2019 WSOP Main Event) consider the imperfect nature of poker information as they make decisions.

“It is tempting to think we are omniscient about the meaning of our opponent’s behaviour at the tables,” writes Pete Clarke. “To think that we can put players on very accurate ranges or even guess their hand is a deeply rooted instinct that comes from usually knowing exactly what facts mean in real life. We are often very well aware of why people do certain things outside of poker and this creates the illusion that we know more than we do in game – where information is very imperfect.”

In this week’s article, Clarke looks back over a hand history where his opponent shows up with a hand wildly different than the one he expected. Check out A Surprising Showdown and learn how important it is to keep some unexpected hands in your opponent’s range when you’re making a decision.

And when you finish that piece, check out more poker mindset articles and learn more about what goes on inside the mind of a poker pro.


Other PokerStars School content you might enjoy

• Question of the Week: What are your top 3 tips to prep for the Sunday Million?
• Course: Multi-Table Tournaments course
• Twitch: ZOOM Cash Games with Pete Clarke
• Interview: The King’s been crowned champion


WSOP photography by pokerphotoarchive.com


Open a PokerStars account today and start learning from PokerStars School. Click here to get started, and then click here to register for PokerStars School.

WSOP 2019: Before and after gallery

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The World Series of Poker (WSOP) Main Event is the one that nobody wants to miss, and it often serves as a reunion for players who have been on the circuit for many years. That actually also applies to reporters, who often spend time staring at the faces of players and thinking “I know I’ve seen you before” before the penny finally drops and you remember a tournament back in Mohegan Sun in 2010 or something like that.

Here on Day 4, the field has slimmed dramatically and only about 675 players now remain. But among them are a whole host of players we’ve seen and photographed before–and now they sometimes don’t look the same.


MORE FROM THE 2019 WSOP
COVERAGE HUB | PHOTO GALLERY


Welcome to our gallery of before/after shots of poker players, which may well just be called: “Aging”. This is what poker (and life) can do to you, folks.

All these players are still in on Day 4 of the 2019 Main Event.


Andrey Pateychuck won EPT Sanremo in 2011


Galen Hall was PCA champion in January 2011


Leif Force bounded on to the scene in 2006, here pictured at 2007 PCA


Bart Lybaert won the Eureka Rozvadov Main Event in 2013


Barny Boatman was a familiar face in European poker even before we snapped him at EPT Dublin Season 2


Max Lykov won the only EPT Kyiv main event in 2009


Mark Teltscher was EPT London champion in 2005

Max Silver won UKIPT Dublin in 2010


We met Chris Hunichen at the NAPT Los Angeles stop eight years ago


Long-time US grinder Olivier Busquet played the NAPT too


Recent WSOP photography by PokerPhotoArchive. The rest, the terrible rest, probably taken by one of us on a Polaroid

Owen rallies poker world to offer crucial relief aid

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On occasion, reading the Twitter feed of British pro Adam Owen is like flicking through an airline magazine. One moment he’s in Madrid, the next in Mexico, then Vegas, London or Amsterdam. It’s sometimes for poker, and sometimes for sports. This year, for example, he followed his beloved Tottenham Hotspur to the final of the Champions League. The team lost but he says, “I wouldn’t have missed it for the world.”

It’s important, however, not to dismiss Owen as just another baller, devil-may-care, thoughtless globetrotter. Nothing on his travels has affected him more, he says, than visiting a migrant camp in Mexico City housing around 1,500 people making the arduous and perilous journey from Central America towards the United States.


MORE FROM THE 2019 WSOP
COVERAGE HUB | PHOTO GALLERY


The plight of these migrants has been in the headlines frequently this year, even if the actual human element has often been overlooked amid political posturing. The people Owen met had been travelling for more than three weeks, and still had two more before they might reach the border. Although his original visit to the camp was to bring food and supplies to a specific friend of a friend, named Junior, he quickly realised he needed to broaden his efforts.

“These people, these are the best conditions they’re going to have possibly on their journey to the border,” Owen says. “They’re just tucked in there, in the most basic accommodation…You can’t tell them not to go to the border. Imagine how bad things are back home for them for them to want to go out and do that.”

Nick Maimone takes regular trips to deliver much-needed supplies to Honduras

Inspired by the work of two other poker-playing friends — Nick Maimone and Kami Dawn, who take clothes and supplies to people enduring hardship in Honduras — Owen then did what any popular, well-connected poker player would do: he rallied his friends and contacts to the cause.

“Having seen it with my own eyes, I posted a bit about Junior on Twitter, and there was a great interest from the poker community. I decided to raise some money, distribute it direct with some supplies and food and stuff. It was great. We raised about $12,000, distributed just about half of that in the city and the rest to a charity, Sin Fronteras. They look to give families basic supplies on their journey.”

As has been well documented, even migrants who reach the border relatively unscathed have not exactly been welcomed with open arms–and Owen is forthright in his criticisms of the current policies from Washington.

“It’s a political issue more than it’s a human rights issue for a lot of people, and I think that’s pretty disgusting,” Owen says. “The conditions immigrants are facing at the borders at the moment, where they’re not getting basic human rights at all, and a child died actually in what is basically a concentration camp. No matter what side of the spectrum you fall on, kids dying in concentration camps is not something that should happen.”

Adam Owen makes his plea on Twitter

He praised the efforts of David “Bakes” Baker, who has recently been protesting outside the offices of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and pointed to other people in poker who regularly give their time and money to charitable causes.

“There are some really good people in poker,” Owen says. “You won’t necessarily hear a lot about them, they go about their business. They don’t necessarily make headlines. But there are a lot of people in poker who put a lot of money into charity, doing direct things.”

At the time we spoke, Owen was still in the Main Event, having been chip leader from Day 1B and then cashing for the first time in this tournament. His run ended shortly before dinner on Day 4, with a bustout in 570th place and a $24,560 cash, but his efforts back in Mexico City are far from complete. He said that he’s planning on taking two suitcases of clothes back to Latin America after the World Series, and will, of course, accept any further donations.

“I am really proud and happy with my friends that they wanted to get involved, and thankful for them trusting me, and getting behind what we were doing,” he says.

WSOP photography by PokerPhotoArchive

How the Sunday Million was won (July 7)

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The definitive account of last week’s Sunday Million (July 7).

Think back to your largest ever poker score, and the joy it undoubtedly brought you.

It isn’t in the suck-outs. It isn’t in the flips. The joy is in the feeling of accomplishment we get having surpassed all our own expectations, and maybe even those of others. Oh, and the money, of course.

Last Sunday (July 7), Brazil’s “allan sheik” surpassed everything he’d accomplished in poker before he sat down to grind that day, and that’s no easy feat considering he’s a 2019 Spring Championship of Online Poker (SCOOP) champion who won a $215 event for $77K just a couple of months ago.

But last week the Brazilian locked up his first ever six-figure score in online poker’s largest weekly tournament, outlasting 10,799 total entries to win the Sunday Million and $110,835.

He even refused a deal heads-up, something which the runner-up told us all about (we’ll hear from him later).

So, here’s how the Sunday Million played out on July 7, with help from some of the final table players.


Thousands are vying once more for poker’s most prestigious prize

With the World Series of Poker (WSOP) playing out over in Las Vegas, you’d think the Sunday Million numbers would dwindle somewhat. However, when late registration came to a close three hours in, the July 7 $109 Sunday Million had received 7,857 unique entries, plus 2,942 re-entries. That created a $1,079,000 prize pool, comfortably topping the $1M guarantee.

This week we had 1,126 players qualify for the Milly via satellites. The best ROI was attained by Russian player “HitmanVRN” who finished 13th for $6,186 after qualifying for just $11, earning 542x his original buy in.

There were still plenty of recognisable names in the Milly field, including several PokerStars Ambassadors. Both Lex Veldhuis and Benjamin “Spraggy” Spragg failed to cash, while one of PokerStars’ new Twitch streamers Tom “MajinBoob” Hayward (known on the Twitch streets as “Pleb_Method”) cashed in 565th for $309.

Spraggy and Lex Veldhuis

Things went much better for the eventual runner-up, Belgium’s “SnowmanTony”.

I busted my first bullet fairly quick,” he told PokerStars Blog. “But my second bullet went very smooth and I was able to build a big stack and maintain it until I reached the last 100 players.”

SnowmanTony” was introduced to poker during his college years, and now 12 years on since he began playing freerolls on PokerStars, he considers poker to be his main source of income. His usual schedule consists of tournaments ranging from $11-$200, and he plays the Sunday Million every week he can, his previous deepest run being a 12th-place finish.

I remember that one like it was yesterday, because I went out in a brutal way,” he reminisces. “On a board of [Ax][tx][7x] all the chips went in the middle with [7x][7x] against the villain’s [Ax][Jx], and they rivered a straight for a top-three stack.”

But like we said, things went much better for him this week.

Explaining how he got through it, SnowmanTony” shared a particular hand with us that took place with 20 players left.

One of the key hands I remember was a fold that I maybe couldn’t make in the past,” he says. “This was last 20 players. I just think he doesn’t shove anything worse than the nuts there, especially against my sizing.”

You can watch his big fold here: https://www.boomplayer.com/31176626_71FD253BE0

Whether he was right or wrong, the chips he held on to would see him on his way towards heads-up action.


This week’s Milly also proved fruitful for Vietnam’s Hoang “Hoangga84” Nguyen, who would eventually fall in seventh place. As a player who usually only plays $11 events, Nguyen decided to take a shot last week and play his first ever Sunday Million.

That proved to be a good shot to take, as his seventh-place finish earned him $16,187 for by far his largest career score.

At one point he was chip leader, getting paid off big by [ax][jx] after triple-barrelling with [AX][QX] on an ace-high flop, blank turn, and ace river. Nguyen managed to keep the chip lead well into the money, but by the time the final table rolled around, he was short-stacked and card-dead.

I didn’t have enough strong hands in the final table bubble period, so I lost a lot of chips when the blinds got bigger,” he tells us. “I only had 15 big blinds to start the FT, so my plan was to wait for pay jumps and choose strong hands to shove.”

Luxembourg’s “JIM_BALLAS” was the first to fall in ninth ($8,525), followed by Russia’s “DimaRu777” in eighth ($11,747).

Then it was Nguyen’s turn.

In my last hand, a player min-opened, the small blind called, and I had [9x][8x] offsuit in the big blind,” he recalls. “I had good odds to call, and the flop came [ax][9x][6x] rainbow. The opener continued, the small blind folded, and my plan was to check raise. If the villain called my 3-bet, I was going to give up. He tanked, then called.

At this point I thought he had an underpair or a weak ace and might fold after a blank hit the turn. I jammed my last five big blinds, but sadly he quickly called with [ax][qx]. I think it came down to my lack of experience.”

Although disappointed to bust in seventh, Nguyen was very happy with his prize money.

$16K is still really good for me. I’m also very happy that I can play with many good players on PokerStars.”

With six left the money jumps began to get bigger, something that “SnowmanTony” – an experienced player with years of good results under his belt – was well aware of.

“Like most Final tables in a big field like the Sunday million, there were some good players, but also some recreational players,” he explains. “Obviously there are huge ICM implications at such a big final table and I saw some plays that weren’t really according to ICM in my opinion, which made me ladder up nicely.”

China’s “yu yi ping” would fall next (6th – $22,306), followed by Brazil’s “Arlem9-” (5th – $30,737), Lebanon’s “moe.s5” (4th – $42,355), and Malta’s “Ronaldnld” (3rd – 58,364).

That left “SnowmanTony” heads-up with “allan shiek”.

I proposed a deal, but my opponent didn’t even bother responding, which I thought was a little rude, but oh well, that’s his right,” he says. “But I don’t like to play a huge variance heads-up for $30k. I didn’t make many hands heads-up, and eventually I lost.”

The heads-up battle looked like it could have gone on for quite some time. Already 14 hours in, the two players had virtually even stacks, with around 50 big blinds a piece at the 500K/1M level.

allan sheik” began to pull away though, winning pot after pot (like “SnowmanTony” told us, he didn’t make many hands) and by the time the final hand came, “allan shiek” held a 3:1 chip advantage.

He opened the button to 2M, and “SnowmanTony” jammed for around 25M with [ax][jx]. It turned out to be a cooler, with “allan shiek” snap-calling with [ax][qx] and holding to win the title.

Not one to bemoan his bad fortune, “SnowmanTony” is very happy with his $80,425 consolation prize.

“It was a very satisfying feeling for sure,” he says, thinking back to Sunday night. “My last big score was $42k and that was some years ago. So to bink such a big one after all that grinding feels pretty sweet. Certainly in the Sunday million, probably the most known online tournament.

After the final table I went out and drank something with a friend. But not for too long because I was exhausted. The day after I had a barbecue with friends and we cracked a bottle of champagne to celebrate the big score.”

We’re sure that somewhere over in Brazil, “allan shiek” did something similar. Congratulations to him, and all of the 1,934 players who cashed in the July 7 Sunday Million.

The $109 Milly will be back again this Sunday (July 14), at the usual time of 1pm ET.

Do you want to be in with a shot of becoming the Sunday Million champion, or at least making the final table in your first attempt like “Hoangga84” did? Then find out how you could get in through PokerStars School.


Opening a PokerStars account is easy. Click here to get an account in minutes.


What Andrew Brokos is thinking

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Having @thinkingpoker as a Twitter name — and tweeting lots of thoughtful stuff about poker — might be one way to tip off your opponents that you aren’t just over there “clicking buttons” (as they say).

I mean when that’s your handle and suddenly you check-raise the turn, players can rightly assume it’s hardly a random action. You’ve thought about it first.

That’s what Andrew Brokos does. He thinks about poker. He gives those who play against him a lot to think about as well. Just ask anyone whose played at any of his WSOP Main Event tables during the first four days, the last three of which Brokos has ended near the top of the chip counts.

After two days Brokos was third overall among the 2,880 players advancing, then at the end of Day 3 he was second of 1,286. Day 4 was another good one for Brokos, as he ended the night just inside the top 10 with 354 players left, having bagged just over 3.5 million or close to two-and-a-half times the average stack.

Mounting another Main Event run

Brokos has been in this position before. Multiple times, in fact. Prior to this year he’d cashed in five previous Main Events and has made the top 100 on three different occasions, his best showing coming in 2008 when he finished 35th.

It seems like having had that experience before might be valuable. What does Brokos think?

“I think we’re just now getting to the point where it really matters,” says Brokos. “I remember the first time that I was deep. I was jittery, I didn’t sleep well…. I think a lot of people this time around are going to be feeling that.”

“Not to say that I’m not nervous and excited also, but I think I’m going to be in a position to hold it together a little better.”

We can all relate to some extent. Experience matters a lot in poker, and having tried something before always adds to our resolve when trying it again. As Brokos well knows, coming back to play Day 5 of the Main Event presents a challenge that is altogether unique, even for experienced players.

“I’ve seen how people, including myself, have responded to that kind of pressure before. Even if you’ve been deep in other tournaments, there’s nothing like being deep in the Main Event. I think it’s really one of a kind.”

Andrew Brokos

Brokos lists increased tightness (“the hands that they’re willing to stack off with… the threshold is going to be much higher than it would in other tournaments”) and the potential for mistakes (“at some point the pressure can get to people and they’ll do something really boneheaded that they wouldn’t do in another tournament”) as possibilities at this juncture.

Interestingly, he also mentions how in a weird way some players making it this far might even welcome the moment when they fail to fade that last all-in.

“I think sometimes they’re eager for it to be over,” he laughs. “The stress will be off once they bust. Not that people will want to bust, exactly, but in some ways it is a relief… [after] doing this for four or five or six days straight.”

Explaining how to Play Optimal Poker

The “Thinking Poker” brand (so to speak) dates back even before Brokos joined Twitter. He started a blog back in 2006 with that title, where he has continued to write about strategy and other aspects of the game ever since. Then in 2012 he and Nate Meyvis began The Thinking Poker Podcast where the pair have had as guests some of the most interesting poker thinkers around approximately once a week ever since, including recently having David Sklansky on for their 300th episode.

In addition to coaching Brokos has published several books of poker strategy as well, including a multi-volume series called The Thinking Poker Diaries in which he analyzes hands from his previous WSOP Main Event runs.

“Play Optimal Poker” by Andrew Brokos

Just last month Brokos published what may prove to be his most influential strategy book, Play Optimal Poker. Much as Brokos has continued to occupy a spot high on the Main Event leaderboard so far, Play Optimal Poker has been a top selection in the “Poker” category rankings on Amazon from the moment it became available.

“Game theory, for all” is a tagline Brokos has used to describe the book. He was inspired to write it in part after witnessing what he believes to be an ever-widening gulf developing between players who understand game theory and those who do not.

“I think the main reason people who don’t understand game theory have been reluctant to engage with it is that it seems so intimidating, and I think there’s not a lot of good, entry-level resources,” says Brokos. “The software is difficult to use, and a lot of the instructional videos already presume you understand a lot of things. So this book is really meant to be like a ‘soup-to-nuts’ introduction to game theory.”

The books steers clear of too much “solver” talk (“It’s not a ‘how to use the solver’ book”), although it does show players how “to get started and to understand how the solver might be useful to you.” A larger goal for Brokos is to help poker players see the difference between theory and practice, and to appreciate how understanding theory can help in places where practice isn’t so perfect.

“I think most people, they learn just by experience, and the problem is, in this game experience can easily lead you wrong — you play well and lose, and play badly and win,” he explains.

“Many people learn in these communities where they’re all just bouncing the same bad ideas off of each other, and they are in a little echo chamber. So theory gives you something that you can fall back on. When a friend tells you should have done this and a video tells you you should have done that, theory can help you to sort that out.”

I know that you know that I know…

There’s a big difference, of course, between playing optimally and choosing a more exploitative style. As Brokos has already noted regarding how some players might react to coming back for Day 5 of the Main Event, there will likely arise spots where the latter is preferable.

Between his new book, the podcasts, the blog, and everything else Brokos has shared over the years, his opponents surely will know that he’s a thinking player. But is he at all concerned about them knowing what he’s thinking?

One who follows @thinkingpoker brought up that concern in a tweet to him this week. To him Brokos had a ready reply:

Read again how Brokos has completed that sentence. Think about it. His opponents probably should.

WSOP photography by pokerphotoarchive.com.


Play MicroMillions for free with PokerStars School

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MicroMillions returns to PokerStars this Sunday, kicking off two weeks of intense micro-stakes action. With nearly 150 tournaments on the schedule and more than $3.8 million in guaranteed prize pools, it’s some of the best value you’ll find in online poker.

This July’s MicroMillions schedule features more than $3.8 million guaranteed prizes

The only way MicroMillions could be better is if you could play it for free — exactly the opportunity PokerStars School is offering for the next three Saturdays.

Our friends at the School are going all-in on this series, giving away hundreds of tickets to MicroMillions events with buy-ins ranging from $1.10 to $5.50. There are also more than 70 Main Event tickets up for grabs, giving you a free shot at a guaranteed $1 million prize pool.

These satellites feature a wide variety of games and formats so everyone can find a tournament to their liking. Best of all, they’re completely free to enter.

Three Saturdays, 18 satellites

Beginning at noon ET on the next three consecutive Saturdays — July 13th, 20th, and 27th — PokerStars School will sponsor six MicroMillions satellite tournaments.

Each satellite will award at least 48 free MicroMillions tickets to the top finishers. The value of these tickets ranges from $1.10 to $5.50, with a handful of $22 Main Event tickets awarded to the top finishers in each satellite.

Build a big chip stack in July and you could end up playing the MicroMillions for free

Game and format variety

The MicroMillions schedule is full of variety, and so are PokerStars School’s satellites.

You can win a MicroMillions ticket playing no-limit hold’em, if that’s your thing — in full ring, 8-max, 6-max, 3-max, or heads-up format. You can also win your way in by playing Stud, Badugi, Omaha hi-lo, Triple Draw, or mixed games. There are even Fusion and Showtime satellites!

It’s all free

The only thing you need to enter these satellites is a School Pass ticket. Click through to the PokerStars School MicroMillions satellite schedule for full details, plus the lowdown on deposit and redeposit offers that can earn you 10 free School Pass tickets each.

While you’re there looking over the schedule, be sure to leave a comment on the page. That will get you one free School Pass ticket you can use to enter a satellite — and if you share the page on Twitter you’ll get another free ticket.


General terms and conditions apply.


WSOP photography by pokerphotoarchive.com

'GG The Rec' riding the WSOP wave yet again

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A decent summer at the World Series of Poker (WSOP) has the potential to change lives. Even if players don’t go all the way to the Main Event final table, scoring a handful of decent cashes might prompt an up-and-coming grinder to make the leap to the professional game–and enduring the opposite might persuade someone less successful to shy away.

It not something Garry Gates is thinking about, however.

Gates is a 37-year-old recreational player based here in Nevada, and reminds himself of his status when he messages his friends, many of whom are professionals, signing off as “GG The Rec”. But Gates has also played three tournaments this year at the WSOP and has cashed all three, the most recent of which is this enormous Main Event.

As they went to a dinner break on Day 5, Gates was at his absolute peak — a stack of around 2.4 million — and guaranteed a payout of $40,000 at least. This is his fourth Main Event cash in seven attempts, which is the form of someone who can really play this game, but he also says, quite clearly and very much on the record, that he will not be giving up his day job.

“Rest assured I won’t be quitting any time soon, even if we get to the end,” he says.

The reason for Gates’s absolute clarity on this point has a lot to do with the publication he’s speaking with. When he’s not slaying WSOP fields, Gates is more often to be found on conference calls with the Isle of Man, or skittering around casinos hosting EPT events. Gates is also one of PokerStars’ longest-serving employees — officially the company’s “Senior Manager of Player Relation, Engagement and Communities”, which he truncates in his Twitter bio to “Utilitarian collaborator @PokerStars.”

Gates in player liaison mode

“That’s one of the nice things about working for PokerStars,” Gates says. “They get it that most of us like to dabble and play. When you have an opportunity to play and make a deep run, I think people tend to understand and start rooting for you…I’d love to win the money, but I don’t play professionally. This is not what I do on the regular. For me, I love the competition, it’s a massive adrenalin rush.”

While much of what goes on at PokerStars takes place behind the scenes, Gates has been front-facing for much of his career with the company, particularly as a player liaison. When the company first began to put on Super High Roller tournaments, Gates was the man charged with filling the seats in the most exclusive games and making sure the VIPs found them comfortable. He was also instrumental in giving the 300-plus Platinum Pass winners to January’s PokerStars Players Championship (PSPC) the kind of experience they would remember for the rest of their lives. It has made Gates one of the most popular men in poker.

“Garry reminds me of all the PokerStars employees who were there when I joined in 2005,” says Brad Willis, PokerStars’ Head of Blogging. “The company found skilled poker players and let them use their second skill set to make PokerStars a success. That’s what Garry does today. He is really good player, and he has true empathy for the players. That’s what makes him so good at his job. He understands the players because he is a great one himself.”


MORE FROM THE 2019 WSOP
COVERAGE HUB | PHOTO GALLERY


Gates says that his connections in the game have helped him in this deep run, with a handful of players getting in touch to offer support or information on opponents, should it be required. He has outlasted all of the PokerStars Ambassadors in this Main Event, however, so perhaps they should be turning to him for advice.

“It’s nice to know I can run hands past people if I need to,” Gates says, adding that he finds the Main Event particularly enjoyable because of the wriggle room its structure offers to players at his level.

“I pick my spots very carefully,” he says. “I try not to get too out of line. The structure is so good that a guy like me can make five or six mistakes and it doesn’t cost them the tournament, whereas in some of the smaller buy-ins you’re out and that’s it.

“The structure really suits my play and now, especially because I’ve been there before, I’ve made deep runs, I feel a lot more comfortable, I’m having fun and just enjoying the ride…It’s one of those tournaments that anybody can win and that, more than anything, makes it appealing to me.”

No one is expecting Gates back at the office any time soon, but people are certainly watching. “That’s actually the best thing for me, knowing how much all my friends and coworkers, people I know in the industry have jumped on my rail,” he says. “I’m getting goosebumps just thinking about it.”

And in many ways his recent excellent form at the WSOP parallels some of what is actually going on at the 9-5. “Work has picked up a lot,” Gates says. “I’d say we have a lot of exciting projects cooking right now. It’s been great for me seeing so many States passing online poker legislation or considering it actively, so I feel like things are trending in the right direction and I’m excited about what’s to come.”

WSOP photography by PokerPhotoArchive

Poker music: What to listen to?

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Back in the old west, poker players in a saloon might have been entertained by a piano player or dance hall singer while they played.

A little later, in clubs and poker rooms of the mid-20th century, there might have been a jukebox cranking out songs to keep the atmosphere lively.

Then forty years ago the Walkman was invented. At which point some players chose tunes over table talk.

And when online poker came along twenty years ago, anyone playing cards had even more options to choose from.

What’s the best music to listen to while playing poker?

For me, choosing music to listen to while playing poker is very similar to finding appropriate “soundtracks” when doing other activities that require some intellectual effort like reading or writing.

My personal preference is for calming, slower-paced tunes that tend to remain just below conscious thought — music I am aware of to the extent that it is pleasing to the ear, but that doesn’t demand the attention I need in order to focus on the task at hand.

When I play poker I’ll often listen to music categorized as ambient or electronic or even experimental. Actual film soundtracks can be good as well, as long as they aren’t too dramatic or noisy. I like to listen to a lot of jazz, too, ranging from the cool classics to fusion, as well as some prog rock, post-punk, and even some classical.

More often than not I prefer to listen to instrumental music so as not to be distracted by lyrics, although sometimes having something to sing along to (even just mentally) can help with the occasional tedium of tournaments.

All of this is very subjective, though, the product of a lifetime spent curating a music collection according to personal taste, then the last decade or so following recommendations produced by online algorithms and clicking those “you may also like” links.

What’s your personal preference?

For most players, their “poker music” represents a subsection of music they already like and with which they have positive associations. That could mean anything — classic rock, R & B, pop, jazz, blues, country, hip-hop, reggae — you name it.

Like wearing the right clothes or having the right snacks and beverages nearby, the right music playing in the background forms part of a context of comfort that helps improve the mood, reduce stress, and enable clear thinking at the poker table.

Just as you have to find the right style and approach to suit your poker playing skills, the music you choose to listen to while playing will also probably have something to do with your personality and preferences. Thus while Team PokerStars Pro Liv Boeree might be just fine blaring Finnish metal while she plays, that might not work as well for me.

Twitch streamers have brought renewed attention to poker players’ music selections as they often will play music while streaming, playing “DJ” (in a way) as they grind. A short while back Lex Veldhuis of Team Online shared a lengthy Spotify playlist of “Deephouse/Techno” tracks with his followers — more than 80 hours’ worth! Search for “raszi” on Spotify to find it.

How poker appears in music, too

Finally, I can’t very well bring up “Poker Music” without also talking a bit about poker in music, a topic which happens to feature in one of the chapters in my new book Poker & Pop Culture: Telling the Story of America’s Favorite Card Game.

In that chapter (and in a few other places in the book), I discuss dozens of songs in which poker comes up in a meaningful way. Of course “The Gambler” and “Poker Face” get attention, but there have been many other examples and I try to discuss a number of them.

I gathered together 50 of the songs I mention in Poker & Pop Culture and created a playlist of my own. Kenny Rogers and Lady Gaga are in there, of course, as are Bob Dylan, Ray Charles, and Motörhead. But there are a number of artists and songs I’m going to guess will be new even to the most dedicated enthusiast of poker in music.

When considering this list, it’s interesting to consider the wide range of genres in which poker songs appear — further evidence of the game’s widespread popularity (I would argue).

There’s blues, pop, rock, folk, country, metal, hip-hop — you name it. In other words, precisely the sort of variety that necessarily grabs your attention as it proceeds from track to track, and thus (in my opinion) does not work that well as background music when grinding online.

It might, however, work nicely as something interesting to put on during the next home game when playing with your friends. Search for “Poker & Pop Culture” on Spotify and give it a spin.

Richard Seymour making most of second career

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Those tuning into ESPN last night to watch the 2019 World Series of Poker Main Event spent a number of hours seeing a world-class athlete in action, someone whose exploits on a different green field had been featured on the network many times before.

At age 39, Richard Seymour has already completed one career full of high achievements, having played 12 seasons in the National Football League before retiring in 2012. During his tenure on the gridiron Seymour was recognized as one of the game’s greats, making the Pro Bowl seven times and being named to the NFL’s “All-Decade Team” for the 2000s.

The poker world has gotten to know Seymour even better over the last several years. That’s because since his retirement from football, Seymour has followed the path of many other athletes to enjoy the competition poker provides.

A second career

Here at the PokerStars Blog we’ve grown accustomed to seeing Seymour each January at the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure. In fact, at the 2018 PCA he finished third in the $25K High Roller for a career-high $376,360 score. Coincidentially, January is when the NFL playoffs happen, with the games typically shown on the big screens all around the tournament room as events play out.

With the New England Patriots the defensive lineman won three Super Bowls, playing an important role as one of the team’s defensive captains. He was with the Pats for a fourth Super Bowl, too, the one they lost in dramatic fashion to the New York Giants to rob them of another title and an unprecedented 19-0 season.

When Seymour looks up from the table while playing at the Atlantis to see those NFL games taking place, does he ever feel like he’s missing out? From what he told ESPN last night, it doesn’t seem as though he does.

“It’s funny,” he said. “Actually I was at the Super Bowl this past year with the Rams and the Patriots, and I was standing on the sideline and I had absolutely no desire,” he laughed. He went on to say how knowing “what it takes to lead up to that point and just the grind and focusing in” required to succeed was part of why he felt no discontent at not being out there between the lines.

“Things are going to happen to you in life,” Seymour continued, shifting gears just a little to talk about how we deal with those woulda-shoulda questions, generally speaking. “It’s not ‘if,’ it’s ‘when’ they happen. But it’s just about how you react to it, you know, your outlook.”

Making decisions to avoid collisions

Speaking of seeming at peace, Seymour came across as mostly content to steer clear of conflict during some of the hands ESPN showed him playing. Unlike the player who collected nearly 500 tackles and 57.5 sacks during his career, it appeared Seymour was more interested in avoiding collisions in what he calls the “Super Bowl” of poker.

Richard Seymour at the ESPN Feature Table

In one hand Seymour had been dealt 10♥10♦ in the small blind and watched Dario Sammartino raise from early position. It folded to Seymour who just called, as did Jeffrey Eldred in the big blind with 6♥5♠.

The blinds both checked the 4♥2♣8♦ flop, then Sammartino continued and Seymour just called with his overpair. Eldred then jammed all in for 990,000 with his double-gutter, forcing a fold from Sammartino (who had ace-king). Seymour tanked for a long while — more than four minutes — saying “I don’t feel good about it” before folding and preserving his stack of 2.26 million.

Eldred showed his hand and Seymour acknowledged the good play, saying “you deserve it.” As it happened, Eldred was sporting a Kansas City Chiefs shirt, the team New England beat to get to this year’s Super Bowl. Somehow their budding rivalry felt analogous to the one developing between Seymour and Eldred.

It wasn’t the first (or the last) time we’d see Seymour choose the cautious route. Earlier he had just checked down on the river with two pair in a spot where he might have value bet. Later he’d fold ace-king preflop after a player opened and another jammed (a hand as it turned out he would have lost had he played).

Living with results

It was just before the last break of the night that Seymour ended up taking one final risk, open-pushing from the button for his last 12 big blinds or so with K♥4♦. Alas for Seymour, both of the bigger-stacked blinds had calling hands — Anuj Agarwal with A♦3♦ in the small, then Zhen Cai with Q♥Q♦ in the big.

A king-high flop put Seymour in seemingly good position to win, not unlike New England in Super Bowl XLII when they were up 14-10 with less than two minutes to go.

But much as the Giants came back to score a winning touchdown to snatch that Super Bowl away from New England, a queen appeared on the turn and suddenly Seymour was drawing dead. From there he went to the cashier’s desk where he collected $59,295 for finishing 131st.

Talking with ESPN’s Kara Scott afterwards, Seymour exhibited the same serene approach that no doubt helped him in his NFL career and has likely been of benefit to him at the poker tables, too.

“I got in some spots where I felt like I had to make some big folds,” he explained, clearly thinking back to hands earlier in the night. “I just think you go out and you try to make the best decisions possible, and you live with the results. You know, it didn’t work out, but it’s not too much that I regret.”

Seymour spoke as well about “the thrill of playing with a lot of great players” and that while it was bittersweet for the run to have ended, “at the end of the day we had a great time.”

“Whoever takes it down will be a happy man,” he grinned.

Seymour was on the sidelines once more — or the rail, as we call it in poker. And while he obviously has the desire to get back in the game, he’s also obviously content with where he is.

He may be out of the Main, but we will see more Seymour

WSOP photography by pokerphotoarchive.com.

Save the date: EPT Prague confirmed

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Mark your calendars! The European Poker Tour is returning to Hilton Hotel Prague in the Czech Republic for a full slate of tournaments from December 6-17, 2019.

Key dates

• December 7-11: €1,100 EPT National
• December 9-10: €330 EPT Cup
• December 10-11: €2,200 EPT National High Roller
• December 11-17: €5,300 EPT Main Event
• December 15-17: €10,300 EPT High Roller

Hilton Prague in the snow

Besides the tournament schedule there are cash games (played in Czech Koruna) running 21 hours a day. There’s free swag and a players’ party on the schedule. And perhaps best of all, nobody will look at you funny if you choose to eat schnitzel for every meal.

If you’ve never been to Prague before, don’t miss out this year. This really is one of the best stops on the tour — just ask some of last year’s champions like Paul Michaelis, Henrik Hecklen, and Matthias Eibinger.

Click through for full EPT Prague 2019 information.

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