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Playing live poker with PokerStars School

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Maybe youā€™ve dreamed about playing a live poker tournament for a long time. Maybe you just got the itch after watching PokerStarsā€™ own Garry Gates take fourth place at the WSOP Main Event final table. Whatever your inspiration, PokerStars School has everything you need to prepare for hitting the felt.

This week:

ā€¢ Qualifying for EPT Barcelona via satellite
ā€¢ Team Pro advice for live poker tournaments
ā€¢ Rethinking broken slogans


Satellites for EPT Barcelona are already running ā€” but Barry Carter says theyā€™re softer if you wait until closer to the tournament.

Winning satellites to EPT Barcelona

EPT Barcelona is traditionally the first major tournament festival following the World Series. With five more weeks before the first event begins, this is a great time to start thinking about qualifying for Barcelona through a satellite tournament.

This week Barry Carter, author of Poker Satellite Strategy, takes a look at the current Barcelona satellites running on PokerStars. The ā‚¬9,210 packages, which include a Main Event buy-in and travel expenses, are awarded to one of every 17 players in these qualifiers.

Carter walks you through some of the nuances of satellites that less experienced players might overlook.Ā Whether theyā€™re playing closer to the tournament date for softer fields, keeping in mind how many chips you need to get past the bubble, or taking advantage of late registration for an instant ICM boost, players who take advantage of these tips will have an edge in qualifying for major live events.

Check out Barry Carterā€™s tips for EPT Barcelona satellites and get an edge on qualifying for one of the best live events around.


Team Pro tips for live poker tournaments

Once youā€™ve taken the first step and won your seat in a live tournament, itā€™s time to start preparing for the event itself. Playing lots of online poker will help with to some degree, but there are a lot of differences in the live game ā€” and thatā€™s where this advice from a couple of Team PokerStars Pros will come in handy.

Chris Moneymakerā€™s tips can help you pick up physical tells on your opponents in a live poker tournament.

New Poker Hall of Fame inductee Chris Moneymaker has some excellent advice on playing the early levels and looking for physical tells. One valuable tip is to watch your opponents early on and see what they do when they look at their cards. ā€œEverybody has these little tendencies that they do, and everyone is different,ā€ says Moneymaker. ā€œYour job is to watch for things when they deviate from that.ā€

Fatima Moreira de Melo shares some tips on the early levels, too, as well as some practical advice that you probably havenā€™t thought about if youā€™ve never played in a casino before. From layering your clothes for unpredictable climate conditions and dressing in a way that avoids giving off physical tells, to developing a pre-tournament routine and scoping out the locations of bathrooms in advance, this is great advice that can help you avoid some practical pitfalls that online players never have to worry about.


Broken poker slogans

Nobody makes it this far in a live poker tournament relying on broken poker slogans.

When you arrive at the live tournament youā€™ve qualified for and you dive into the game, you might find yourself overwhelmed ā€” even if youā€™re following our prosā€™ advice. This is only natural. But if you find yourself thinking about old poker clichĆ©s while youā€™re at the table, itā€™s worth stepping back for a moment.

ā€œNew players are already overwhelmed and confused enough by the complexity of poker and the vast quantity of information thatā€™s out there,ā€ writes Pete Clarke. ā€œThe last thing they need is for some outdated clichĆ© to invade their framework of understanding. Nevertheless, these grains of wisdom from the nineties, when poker was a game of intuition and tells, still exist and they are not one bit compatible with the modern game and its objective truth.ā€

This week Clarke takes on a cliche that can harm your bottom line by bleeding your stack of crucially important chips: ā€œPlay the player, not the cards.ā€


Other PokerStars School content you might enjoy

ā€¢ Question of the Week: Which MicroMillions events are you playing?
ā€¢ Video: Heads-up ā€” knowing your limits
ā€¢ Video: Ramon Colillas PSPC analysis
ā€¢ Twitch: UFC Spins with OP Nick


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.

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Three becomes one to name $10m WSOP champ

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Well here we are. After 90 events spread across 48 days, weā€™ve reached the last day of the 2019 World Series of Pokerā€“and thereā€™s the small matter of the Main Event winner to be decided. By close of play tonight, one of Hossein Ensan, Alex Livingston or Dario Sammartino will be the latest champion, immortalised among the greats, and $10 million richer.

Things we know for sure include the fact that the champion will come from somewhere other than the United States. Although home players comprised the majority of the field here in Las Vegas, we have a German, a Canadian and an Italian in the final three. No Italian has ever won this event, so we could be on the brink of breaking that particular duck.

We also know that todayā€™s winner will earn the equal second highest prize of any player in the Main Event, second only to Jamie Goldā€™s $12 million in 2006. Itā€™s because this yearā€™s field of Todayā€™s champion will match the haul of Martin Jacobson in 2014, who was coincidentally the last non-American winner too.

Final day stack sizes:

šŸ‡©šŸ‡ŖHossein Ensan: 326.8 million
šŸ‡ØšŸ‡¦Alex Livingston: 120.4 million
šŸ‡®šŸ‡¹Dario Sammartino: 67.6 million

Not much else is certain, even though we have a very short-priced favourite to win the whole thing. Ensan, a former EPT champion who has impressed everyone in Europe after breaking on to the scene six years ago, was the dominant chip leader coming to the final table and has never been anywhere other than first. He is most fancied for good reason. However, both Sammartino and Livingston have been short-stacked at this final and managed to recover, so theyā€™re far from out of this yet.


MORE FROM THE 2019 WSOP
COVERAGE HUB | PHOTO GALLERY


Last year, John Cynn managed to overcome Tony Milesā€™s final-day chip lead to close it out (they were 149 BBs to 80 BBs at the start of the last day) so it is far from impossible. What also might happen again is an epic heads-up duel. If one of the two short stacks ends up knocking out the other, we could be set for a full 10 or 12 hours, or more.

Can anyone catch Hossein Ensan?

Thereā€™s a lot of fidgeting going on in and around the Amazon Room right now, with players and supporters hovering in the halls or in the corridors, waiting to be let in. As we wait for action to commence, head over to our WSOP Coverage Hub, where youā€™ll find all the details of whatā€™s been going on here these past weeks.

Cards are in the air again at 5.30pm local time.

WSOP photography by PokerPhotoArchive

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Hossein Ensan: King of the WSOP

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In front of the noisiest crowd ever assembled for a poker tournament anywhere in the world, Germanyā€™s Hossein Ensan defeated Dario Sammartino, of Italy, tonight to claim the 2019 World Series of Poker (WSOP) Main Event title and $10 million.

With an all-European heads-up battle, the stands around the table in the Amazon Room of the Rio All Suites Hotel & Casino grew to resemble a soccer stadium, with both playersā€™ names being chanted at sometimes deafening volumes. Supported by a cadre of some of the best German high rollers, Ensan was determined and ruthless in adding he biggest title in the game to his EPT Prague title, becoming the first player to triumph in the WSOP Main Event as well as on Europeā€™s leading tour.

It took a steely nerve to close it out. Ensan had earlier watched the chip lead he had held for three days vanish during three-handed play, with both Alex Livingston and Sammartino occupying top spot at some point in a topsy-turvy last day. But at 1.20am, and having worn Sammartino down in heads-up play after Livingston was knocked out in third, Sammartino got the last of his chips in with a flush draw and an inside straight draw, but could not beat Ensanā€™s pocket kings.

Ensan laps up the applause

Ensan had the word ā€œKingsā€ on his chest, the name of a casino across the border from his native Germany where he plays regularly and formerly won a WSOP circuit ring. Then the two kings in his hand tonight made him king of poker: he earns an eight-figure first prize and puts his name in the history books forever.

ā€œFor me, it is the best moment of my life,ā€ Ensan said, clasping the bracelet in his hand and mobbed by reporters and supporters alike. ā€œUnbelievable. I am so happy I am here. I am so happy, I am so happyā€¦I must go to sleep and then wake up. Itā€™s maybe a dream, I donā€™t know.ā€

Boisterous scenes on the rail

Ensan, a 55-year-old from MĆ¼nster, became the second German to win pokerā€™s most prestigious title, following in the footsteps of Pius Heinz, who took the prize in 2011. Ensanā€™s victory ended five years of American dominance in this event, with all of the last three players from outside the United States. Sammartino took $6 million for second, by far the biggest result of his career, and the best ever by an Italian at the WSOP.

After seven days of play to trim the 8,569-strong field down to a final table, the finale stretched over three days with each of the last nine securing a $1 million minimum pay-day.

Serbiaā€™s Milos Skrbic, the UKā€™s Nick Marchington and Timothy Su and Zhen Cai of the United States departed on Sunday, with the final two Americans in the field, Kevin Maahs and Garry Gates, knocked out yesterday.

That left the guarantee of a champion from overseas when the last three returned to the Amazon Room today ā€” and with Ensan still holding a commanding chip lead. He had 326.8 million to Alex Livingstonā€™s 120.4 million and Sammartinoā€™s 67.7 million, with plenty of play guaranteed.

Sammartino, who was the overnight short stack, got his final table off the perfect start when he won a flip to double through Ensan in the early stages of the last day. Livingston then began nibbling away at Ensanā€™s stack as well, and overtook Ensan to lead. It was the first time Ensan had been anywhere other than the top of the leader board since the mid point of Day 7, but Livingstonā€™s residence at the summit was short-lived.

He had his kings cracked by Sammartinoā€™s 10ā™ 6ā™¦, calling a huge all-in shove (ā€œI probably should have thought about it for more than half a second, considering itā€™s the Main Event final table,ā€ he Livingston said later), and then lost with Aā™£Jā™¦ to Ensanā€™s Aā™ Qā™¦. That gave him $4 million for third and left the two Europeans.

Alex Livingston: Out in third

Heads-up play at the Main Event is always tough and extended. The two-hour levels are not shortened, and thereā€™s usually more than 200 big blinds in play. So it proved here again, but Ensan managed to gain more traction more quickly than Sammartino, chipping consistently away. When the dealer put that final hand out, the noise from the bleachers had quelled somewhat as fatigue set in. But neither Sammartino nor Ensan had let their focus slip for even a minute. They can now split $16 million between them and look to a bright future back on the European circuit.

The final hand came about when Ensan raised his button to 11 million and Sammartino called. The flop was the co-ordinated 10ā™ 6ā™ 2ā™¦. Sammartino checked, Ensan bet 15 million and Sammartino called.

The 9ā™£ came on the turn and Sammartino checked again. Ensan bet 33 million and Sammartino moved all in for 140 million. Ensan called. Sammartino needed help with his 8ā™ 4ā™  but didnā€™t get it on the Qā™£ river. Ensanā€™s Kā™„Kā™£ stayed good.

ā€œNow, I donā€™t feel amazing because I wanted to win the tournament,ā€ Sammartino said. ā€œBut for sure tomorrow I will be super, super happy. I have to say thank you to everybody for supporting me. It was an amazing experienceā€¦I fight for this. I work for this a lot. And now finally I can live my dream. It will change my life a lot.ā€

Dapper Dario Sammartino in final table action

Despite the hurt, Sammartino said he plans to donate some of his winnings to charity. ā€œWe need to balance the world,ā€ he said. ā€œSome people cannot eat. Some people do not have water, and weā€™re playing for millions. So we have to help if we can.ā€

The end of the road for Dario Sammartino

Thereā€™s plenty to savour from our coverage of this event. Our WSOP hub is your gateway. Thanks to PokerPhotoArchive for all the pictures, and thereā€™s more of them in the photo gallery.

Itā€™s EPT Barcelona next for all of us, and more of Ensan and Sammartino, Iā€™m sure. Goodnight from Las Vegas.

World Series of Poker Main Event

Dates: July 3-16, 2019
Players: 8,569
Buy-in: $10,000
Prize pool: $80,548,600

1: Hossein Ensan, Germany ā€“ $10 million
2: Dario Sammartino, Italy ā€“ $6 million
3: Alex Livingston, Canada ā€“ $4 million
4: Garry Gates, United States ā€“ $3 million
5: Kevin Maahs, United States ā€“ $2.2 million
6: Zhen Cai, United States ā€“ $1.85 million
7: Nick Marchington, UK ā€“ $1.525 million
8: Timothy Su, United States ā€“ $1.25 million
9: Milos Skrbic, Serbia ā€“ $1 million

WSOP photography by PokerPhotoArchive

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PokerStars Ambassador Daniel Cormier wins ESPY

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This yearā€™s ESPYs ā€” ESPNā€™s annual sports award show ā€” were the first to feature a category for Best MMA Fighter. While previous years had lumped boxers and mixed martial artists into a single Best Fighter category, this year the categories were split, not surprising when you consider ESPNā€™s various partnerships with boxing promoters and the UFC for their ESPN+ service.

The first person to be handed the ESPY for the newly created category was PokerStars Ambassador Daniel Cormier, who beat out fellow nominees Amanda Nunes, Henry Cejudo and Israel Adesanya.

ā€œTonight I won the ESPY for the Best MMA Fighter, this is insane,ā€ Cormier tweeted after receiving the award. ā€œI never would have thought I would ever get nominated for something like this. I have a great support system and theyā€™re the reason things like this happen. Salina, youā€™re the glue that keeps this family rolling.

ā€œTo @crazybobcook and @dewaynezinkin you guys have been the best managers I could ever ask for. @akajav the best Head Coach in the business, @rosendo_sanchez , @slikbxr ,@camacho100, @leandrovbteam there is no staff in mma that compares. To my partners each and every one of you have built me from the ground up, special shout out to @officialcainvelasquez and @lukerockhold my brothers who have been there every step of the way. Cassandra and Heidi, all you do is recognized and appreciated greatly, I promise. All my competitors, I appreciate every one of you. The Jones rivalry has stood out above em all and have helped me to gain popularity that many people canā€™t imagine. And you the fans, youā€™ve loved me, cheered me and booā€™d me, but you cared. It takes a village, Iā€™m just a kid from the Northside of Lafayette, Louisiana. Amazing. Thank you all. I love you DC.ā€

Cormierā€™s 2018 was certainly one to remember and itā€™s not hard to see how he managed to come away with the award.

In 2017, Cormier was knocked out in his rematch with Jon Jones. He lost the Light Heavyweight Championship in the process, only to then see Jones fail a drug test, the decision overturned, and the championship placed back in Cormierā€™s possession.

This led to Cormier defending the title against Volkan Oezdemir at UFC 220 in January 2018. Oezdemir came out fast in the first round, throwing wild bombs at the champ. Cormier showed championship poise and survived the early onslaught before turning the tables with heavy punches of his own and a takedown. Round 2 was a dominant one for Cormier as he took the fight to the floor and poured on ground and pounds, leading to a TKO stoppage.

Despite Cormier technically entering the fight as the champion, he claimed to not feel like heā€™d earned the title until he won the fight.

ā€œIā€™ve lost twice to Jon Jones,ā€ Cormier said after his win. ā€œAs I came into this fight, I felt as though I was fighting for a vacant title again because (Jones) beat me last time. I fought for a vacant title and I got the job done, so Iā€™m the UFC champion again.ā€

Fighting in the main event that night was heavyweight champ Stipe Miocic. Miocic defeated Francis Ngannou to set the record for most defenses of the heavyweight title.

It only made sense for Cormier, who started his MMA career fighting at heavyweight, to move up and challenge Miocic in a champ vs. champ superfight at UFC 226.

Miocic had been hailed by some as the greatest heavyweight in UFC history for his dominant run as champ and he came into the July fight with Cormier as a slight favorite.

Fights arenā€™t won at the betting window, though, and Cormier executed a beautiful gameplan on the feet, relying heavily on a damaging jab before a crushing right hand dropped Miocic to the mat. Cormier followed up with heavy punches on the ground and scored a knockout victory without the fight leaving the first round.

Daniel Cormier had become a ā€œchamp champ.ā€

Cormier would next fight at UFC 230, taking on Derrick Lewis in a defense of his heavyweight championship. Again facing a dangerous striker, Cormier used his Olympic wrestling bona fides to neutralize the frightening right hand of Lewis.

By the second round, a hopeless Lewis was forced to submit, completing Cormierā€™s dominant, history-making 2018.

ā€œI think a lot of people have to understand that I have been doing this for nine years and I fought at a championship level for eight of them so there are no surprises to me,ā€ Cormier said. ā€œI come here to do my thing. You have to be one of the best fighters in the world to compete and Derrick just wasnā€™t up to that challenge.ā€

Cormier would also forfeit the light heavyweight belt to put his focus on making his mark at heavyweight.

His next challenge is taking on Miocic in a rematch at UFC 241 on August 17.

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En Route pour l'EPT begins at Gujan-Mestras

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Today begins what should be an exciting tournament in southwestern France ā€” the En Route pour lā€™EPT event at the Casino Gujan-Mestras.

The ā‚¬200 Main Event kicks off at today with satellites continuing to run through tomorrow. No less than 53 PokerStars qualifiers will be playing the Main Event, three of whom freerolled their way into the tournament.

Also taking part will be social media stars Luan Aoas Correa and Bilal Benyoucef, as well as Team PokerStars Pro Kalidou Sow.

Kalidou Sow

Yesterday there were already 600 registered for the Main Event, and with four Day 1 flights (Wednesday, Thursday, and two on Friday) the field will only grow larger.

Besides first prize money, the winner of the event will receive package worth ā‚¬9,210 to travel and play EPT Barcelona (August 20-September 1) ā€” hence the name ā€œEn Route pour lā€™EPT.ā€

There is an additional ā‚¬500 High Roller event starting on Saturday, for which players can satellite in as well. Meanwhile as both tournaments play down to final tables and winners on Sunday, there are plenty of other events and activities happening.

Outdoor games are taking place on each of the next three nights during the dinner hours, with prizes for those who take part in the competitions. There are multiple Sit & Goā€™s scheduled as well, including one on Friday in which Sow and others will be playing with bounties on their heads. Thereā€™s a player party, too, on Saturday night.

Also happening in Gujan on Sunday will be the final table of the EPT Experience. After winning their seats online (in satellites starting as little asĀ ā‚¬0.50), the final table players will compete in a one-table tournament for another EPT Barcelona package

EPT Experience winners and their guests will get to enjoy other activities as well, including a special get-together with Kalidou Sow and a two-hour boat excursion around the nearby Bassin dā€™Arcachon.

The event is sure to be a blast, and a great opportunity for players in France and nearby to come enjoy a low buy-in tournament experience that could pave the way to a trip to play on the EPT!

Find out more about En Route pour lā€™EPT at Gujan-Mestras (including a full schedule) at the French PokerStars Blog.

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How the Sunday Million was won (July 14)

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As the final table of the WSOP Main Event was beginning in Las Vegas this past Sunday, nine PokerStars players from six countries were already well on their way to the final of the Sunday Million. They were part of an 8,000-strong that combined for another 2,982 re-entries before the end of late registration, building a total prize pool of $1,089,200.

At the end of it all two players from Russia, ā€œkolobcheenaā€ and ā€œJigan7,ā€ cut a heads-up deal that left $20,000 on the table for the winner. Hereā€™s a look back at how they got there.


Team PokerStars was well-represented in this weekā€™s Sunday Million field. Fintan ā€œeasywithacesā€ Hand fired one bullet and busted early, but all the others who played this week managed to cash.

Lex Veldhuis fired four bullets and managed to take the last one 700 spots into the money, finishing in 1,233rd place ($209.53). Tom ā€œMajinBoobā€ Hayward took his second bullet all the way to 772nd place ($274.87). And Georgina ā€œGJReggieā€ James got the same prize as MajinBoob for finishing in 689th ā€” though she did it on just one entry.

They were all outdone, though, by Felix ā€œxflixxā€ Schneiders. He entered once and ran all the way to 78th place, earning $1,266. You can watch him play right here:

Watch SUNDAY MILLION GRND !daisho !summerbattle from xflixx on www.twitch.tv

After 12 hours and 20 minutes of poker it was time for the final table, with the blinds at 150,000/300,000 and antes at 30,000.

Canadaā€™s ā€œGraeme7777ā€ had a dominant lead with 35.3 million chips as the final nine took their seats. kolobcheena, the eventual champion, was second with 23.3 million. Three others were over the 10-million-chip mark, and the last four players had less than 20 big blinds each.

The final nine finishers from the July 14th Sunday Million

Jigan7, a 28-year-old recreational player from a small town in Russia, entered with the shortest stack at just under three big blinds, but he was unconcerned with his position. For one thing, he was playing the Milly for the first time after qualifying through a satellite. Heā€™d also been holding on in last place since there were 14 players remaining, his spirits buoyed by text messages from a friend whoā€™d been supporting him all day long.

ā€œI already knew that I was about to hunt,ā€ he said, ā€œand I waited for the right moment.ā€

Jigan7 picked up Kā™¦Kā™„ on the third hand and doubled through Austriaā€™s Voogii1990, who defended the big blind with 6ā™„4ā™„. That vaulted him ahead of United Kingdomā€™s FazoMisiek, who fell into last place and then busted in ninth ($8,669.63) on the following hand when Kā™¦Qā™£ couldnā€™t overcome JĆŗlioFantinā€™s Aā™ Kā™ . Jigan7 earned another double on the hand after that, defending the big blind all-in with Qā™£Jā™  and winning out against small-blind raiser DigoLuizā€™s Qā™„3ā™£.

Within two more minutes Voogii1990 was out in eighth ($11,946.65) after shoving with Aā™¦Jā™  and having Graeme7777 called with 10ā™£10ā™ , which held up on a queen-high board. But the next half-hour was all grind for the remaining seven players.

kolobcheena made up ground and eventually moved ahead of Graeme7777 during this stretch, though it was Brazilā€™s Galochina10 who knocked the Canadian off a 20-big-blind pot on the turn of a 7ā™ 3ā™£4ā™£Jā™£ board to claim the chip lead. ICM considerations meant the other four players were caught in between the three big stacks and mostly had to bide their time.

It seemed like it was going to take a coin flip or a cooler to break the deadlock. In the end it was the latter. alex6255, a 31-year-old Spin & Go regular from Athens, Greece, jammed for his last 4.4 million with Qā™¦Qā™£ over the top of Jigan7ā€™s 800,000-chip opening raise, only to see kolobcheena wake up with Aā™ Aā™„ in the small blind. That was the end of the line for alex6255, who walked with $16,462.12 in seventh place.

ā€œI have played the Sunday Million before and have cashed in it several times, but never gotten very deep. So final tabling was something that I always was dreaming about back some years ago when my main game was MTTs,ā€ he said, looking back on the tournament afterward. ā€œIā€™d say I was especially lucky in the first couple of hours, since I was able to collect a lot of chips quickly even in some hands where I was behind equity-wise. After becoming a big stack I was able to smooth-sail until the late stages without having to take many risks.

ā€œThe only regrettable thing in the final table was my positioning combined with my stack size, which made it very difficult to play my game. I was sitting on the right of the two most aggressive players in the table and didnā€™t have a big hand until the cooler on the final hand. So though I feel that itā€™d be great if Iā€™d gotten a higher place, still Iā€™m very satisfied with my result and my overall effort in this tournament.ā€


With six players left, the game was still up in the air.

Even with alex6255 out, the dynamic at the table remained much the same.

Galochina10 sat to the right of kolobcheena and the pair bossed the table with their twin 32-million-plus chip stacks. Graeme7777 sat to the right of them both, holding down third place with 21 million for a solid 52 big blinds. JĆŗlioFantin had a better seat, sitting directly to the left of both big stacks, and just shy of 30 big blinds. And DigoLuiz (17 BB) and Jigan7 (7 BB) were jammed between JĆŗlioFantin and Graeme7777.

ā€œIt was a good seat draw,ā€ JĆŗlioFantin said afterward. ā€œMy strategy was to play tight, seize the right spots. I got very lucky in having good hands on good spots, and things went really smooth.ā€

That smooth ride started a few minutes into six-handed play when he limped for 400,000 under the gun with Kā™£Qā™£. Ever aggressive, Galochina10 made it 2.4 million to go with 4ā™„3ā™£ from the big blind. JĆŗlioFantin tank-called, building a 5.4-million-chip pot, and then floated for one street with two overcards and a backdoor flush draw after Galochina10 set a good price with a bet of 1.2 million on the 10ā™„2ā™ 8ā™£ flop. Galochina10 fired small bets on the Qā™  turn and 5ā™£ river and JulioFantin called them both to take down the pot with a pair of queens and climb to a virtual tie for third place with 20.4 million chips.

Jigan7 survived another critical all-in moment when Aā™ Kā™  held against Galochina10ā€™s Kā™„Qā™¦. That not only kept him in the game but also set the stage for a major clash between two players who had been tangling with each other since they sat down to the final table.

Graeme7777 and kolobcheena had entered the final 1-2 in the chip counts and the Canadian had pressured the Russian at seemingly every opportunity.

ā€œI think he had a plan to widen his 3-bet [range],ā€ kolobcheena said later. ā€œSome hands before I even folded 7-7 to his 3-bet. I knew that he wouldnā€™t give me chances to check my sevens to showdown, and I awaited two barrels minimum on any board. I think itā€™s not quite right to fold sevens, but I did anyway because the pay jumps were big already.ā€

With those dynamics in mind, kolobcheena made it 2.5 million with 10ā™„10ā™¦ on the button when Graeme7777 min-raised to 1 million in the hijack seat. Graeme7777 responded with a re-raise to 6.5 million, putting a total of 10.05 million chips in the pot and leaving him 12 million behind.

Graeme7777 open-shoved for about 5 BB less than the pot on the 3ā™ 10ā™£Jā™„ flop and kolobcheena snap-called with middle set. The turn and the river were blanks, ending Graeme7777ā€™s tournament in sixth ($22,684.30) ā€” and saving the winnerā€™s equipment.

ā€œI folded the sevens, but this time I called and caught a set,ā€ kolobcheena remembers. ā€œI think that I would have crashed my monitor if the chips had gone to his box after the river was dealt.ā€


The final five players (of the 2019 WSOP Main Event)

Half the field was gone now. kolobcheena had 110 big blinds in his stack and led his nearest opponent by more than 30 million. It was a dream spot for his second time playing the Sunday Million, especially given that he used a satellite ticket heā€™d won more than a year ago to enter this weekā€™s tournament. (He won three others back then and says heā€™s saving them for the next anniversary Milly.)

ā€œFour opponents remained ā€” IMHO, the strongest opponents left,ā€ he said. ā€œBut I had a chip leader stack, and their stacks were almost even. I thought that it was almost perfect situation to put the pressure on. I am not fond of ICM spots and honestly Iā€™m quite an amateur. But after this hand I allowed a thought that this could be it. I just needed to put the pressure on.ā€

Recognizing the situation made kolobcheenaā€™s ride from there a smooth one. While the other players had to worry about ICM, he expanded his lead to more than 43 million chips with the blinds at 300,000/600,000.

Eventually DigoLuiz drew the short straw. First the Brazilian open-shoved for 8.8 million with 6ā™„5ā™„ in the small blind only to see Jigan7 wake up with 10ā™ 10ā™£ in the small blind. Left with just two big blinds, DigoLuiz moved in with Kā™¦8ā™¦ on the following hand and left in fifth place ($31,258.39) when Galochina10 called with 5ā™ 5ā™£ and flopped a set.

The dynamics remained unchanged as kolobcheena still led three similarly-stacked players. Then Jigan7 min-raised under the gun with Aā™¦10ā™„ and called when Galochina10 shoved for 10 million with 7ā™¦7ā™  on the button. Galochina10 made a set with the 7ā™„ on the flop but three other hearts hit the board to give Jigan7 a flush, sending Galochina10 to the rail in fourth ($43,073.27).

There was brief discussion of a deal but with JulioFantin holding just under 20 big blinds, Jigan7 and kolobcheena decided to wait. They played for close to 10 minutes before Jigan7 opened with 7ā™£7ā™„ and called JĆŗlioFantinā€™s three-bet shove with Aā™¦9ā™£; the pair held and JĆŗlioFantin departed in third place.

He says that even finishing in third for $59,353.97 was ā€œan incredible moment,ā€ since heā€™s played the Sunday Million with some regularity over the years. Not only does the $59K he won top a Milly run from earlier this year when he busted with two tables remaining, but it also qualifies as the biggest cash of his career.

ā€œItā€™s such a great tournament, and every Sunday I hope I can win this time,ā€ he said. ā€œThis last one I got close! Itā€™s very satisfying. I put a lot of work into this game, so this big score means a lot.ā€


The prize from the real-life, once-a-year equivalent of the Sunday Million (aka the WSOP Main Event)

JĆŗlioFantinā€™s departure left just kolobcheena and Jigan7 at the table, the former holding 68.6 million chips to the latterā€™s 41.2 million. They quickly decided to cut a deal.

ā€œI was not set up for heads-up, because I was already very tired and I already had a good result so I wanted to end as soon as possible,ā€ Jigan7 said later.

kolobcheena was also ready to deal, in large part to cut down on his variance. ā€œI was concerned that a single successful steal, successful c-bet, and successful 3-bet in a row would cost me a lot of money. And if you add in a lost coin flip, you risk having an even smaller stack. But ICM was fine for him too. So finally, we reached the moment where we could breathe out.ā€

With the prizes divided up, the game went another 10 minutes before kolobcheena closed out the victory. In the days afterward, both players had nothing but good words to say about each other and happy thoughts to share about their experiences.

ā€œMy opponent played a great game throughout the tournament,ā€ said Jigan7, who earned $85,742.64 for second place. ā€œThe money I won is big for our town, well, I will find a reasonable use for it! This tournament was a great experience for me and it gives me faith in my strength and capabilities. I think this is a small step into the world of poker!ā€

ā€œI am very happy for the runner-up,ā€ said kolobcheena. ā€œI crossed paths with him several times before the final table. And every time I saw him he was the shortest ā€” 3 BB, 7 BB, 5 BB. I can say that discipline beats any skills. His success is the proof.ā€

As for his reaction to winning $108,759.15 in the biggest weekly tournament in poker, the champion says he was a little stunned at the end of it all.

ā€œThe emotions were great. Iā€™m not a native speaker of the English language so I canā€™t fully describe it, but it was quite funny. After the auto-closing of the table I turned my PC off and stared at a dot of the ceiling. Maybeā€¦maybe I didnā€™t even breathe, for all of 15 minutes. After this I remembered my name and started walking back and forth in the room. I felt great that moment and I do now, too.ā€


Want to play the Sunday Million for free? PokerStars School wants to help.


WSOP photography by pokerphotoarchive.com

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LEX LIVE 2: Full London schedule announced

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The full schedule for Lex Live London has now been announced, featuring eight Ā£230 Main Event starting flights, satellites, and a bunch of side events.

From September 27 to October 6 2019, Lex Veldhuis will be hosting the second ever edition of Lex Live at the Aspers Casino in Westfield Stratford City, London. This festival follows the hugely successful Lex Live debut in Namur, Belgium, back in March.

CLICK HERE TO VIEW THE FULL LEX LIVE LONDON SCHEDULE (PDF)

Details on other fun activities outside of the poker room (of which there will be plenty), and online qualifiers will be revealed when we get them.

For all the info on Lex Live London, head to our content hub here.

You should also check out our intensive London travel guide, for any newcomers to the city.

Ā 


Ready to sign up for PokerStars and qualify for Lex Live London? Click here to get an account.


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Chase Your Dream to Barcelona and Win ā‚¬10K

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Have you ever dreamt of playing a poker tournament live on air, surrounded by sporting legends, celebrities, and your poker heroes? Well here is your chance.

PokerStars has put together an exciting competition that could see you heading on a VIP trip to Spain for EPT Barcelona, where youā€™ll put your poker skills to the test against both PokerStars Ambassadors and celebrities for the chance to winĀ ā‚¬10,000.

There are four prize packages available (two for PokerStars.com players, one for PokerStars.es, and one for PokerStars.fr). Those prizes include:

  • Return flights for two to Barcelona
  • Three nightsā€™ stay for two at a five-star hotel (August 26-28)
  • ā‚¬500 in spending money (credited to Stars Account)
  • Free entry to the exclusive tournament on August 27

HOW YOU COULD WIN

Players must depositĀ Ā£/$/ā‚¬ using the bonus code: DREAMEPT

You will then have 10 tickets credited to your account which allow you to play in the ā€˜Chase Your Dreamsā€™ freerolls (these can only be entered using the special tickets).

These freerolls take place over a seven-day period (July 18 ā€“ 24), with three freerolls a day.

If you finish in the top 20 of any of the Chase Your Dreams freerolls, you will then be invited to submit an audition video.

Tell us about yourself. Showcase your personality and what makes you stand out from the crowd.

A shortlist of video entries will then be announced, before four winners are revealed.

WHAT HAPPENS NEXT

All four winners will then be on their way to EPT Barcelona (August 26-28), where they will be paired with a PokerStars Ambassador hailing from their region to be their coach and mentor.

PokerStars Ambassadors Ramon Colillas and Kalidou Sow will act as mentors

The four winners will then take part in a live streamed poker tournament against other PokerStars Ambassadors and celebrities.

The best performing pro or celebrity will win ā‚¬10,000 for the charity of their choice, while the two best performing qualifiers will advance to a final, where they will play heads up for ā‚¬10,000.

Donā€™t miss out on your chance to win this incredible prize.

Dare to dream. Click here for more information.


Want to be in with a shot at winning a trip to EPT Barcelona? Opening a PokerStars account is easy. Click here to get an account in minutes.

Casino Barcelona


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Staying healthy in the poker world

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There was once a time when you could spot the health conscious poker player because he switched to greyhounds after six vodka sodas for the vitamins in the grapefruit juice. But that kind of thing is so long ago, it feels like a nostalgia trip even to write it.Ā 

Poker tournament champions these days are specimens. Although their daily lives at home, as they play online, can often mean long nights and a vampiric sleep pattern, successful players have grown increasingly aware of the need for nutrients, exercise and a schedule that allows for recuperation in between long trips. They carry vitamin smoothies to the table, and pick hotels based on the standard of the gym. They are aware of their posture at the tables, and they pay personal trainers to iron out all the flaws.

At the World Series of Poker in Las Vegas, All American Daveā€™s food truck is regularly far busier than the burger stand in the hallway. Its menu has blackened salmon, vegan caesar salad and four choices of protein shakes. Even the coffee is organic.

All American Daveā€™s WSOP menu (2019)

ā€œWeā€™re all about healthy food, served in macronutrient balance, meaning thereā€™s the right amount of protein, carbohydrates and fat in every single meal,ā€ Dave Swanson, the company founder, told All In magazine. ā€œPoker players, more than anybody I think, need this type of food because theyā€™re sitting in a sedentary area where theyā€™re just not moving around. And then theyā€™re under high stress. Every single decision matters.ā€

Although most poker takes place away from the WSOP, and you canā€™t hope for a macronutrient-aware food truck to pull up outside your house during an online poker grind, there are some simple rules everyone can follow to keep themselves as healthy as possible. Most significantly, itā€™s the simple awareness that though poker players might try to act like robots, they are only human. They need to stay in shape and maintain a healthy diet, which means plenty of fresh fruit and vegetables and enough fluids to stay hydrated. Your poker playing skills are directly correlated to how well you look after the body clicking the buttons.

DIET

Writing for PokerStars Blog in 2013, Sara Varela offered some easy tips for a poker playerā€™s diet during long trips to tournaments.

Varela listed some useful dos and donā€™ts for players at the airport, in transit and at the hotel, and also shared some simple healthy recipes ā€” for avocado toast, a green smoothie and almond milk ā€” all of which can be whipped up with only basic supplies and equipment.

Avoiding coffee and loading up on vitamin-rich foodstuffs is just a part of it, and the tips are well worth reading in full. Warning: may require the purchase of a travel blender.

SLEEP

Poker tournaments often require long and unsociable hours, but the importance of sleep cannot be underestimated. Tiredness causes more mistakes than perhaps any other ailment, so being well rested is a must to play to your optimum ability.

When youā€™re at home, just focus on getting as much rest as you can and sticking to a decent routine. Make sure you do everything you can to rest up before and after long sessions.

Meanwhile, being on the road often means packing as many tournaments in as you can, but that doesnā€™t mean you should skimp on your base camp. All hotels selected by PokerStars Travel, will be high-end and therefore come equipped with the basics ā€” namely a good bed, clean linen and a Do Not Disturb sign ā€” but it canā€™t help to squirrel a couple of other useful pieces of equipment in your bag: ear plugs and a mask. No guest can expect other residents to keep the noise down 24 hours a day (and weā€™ve all been woken by a vacuum cleaner), so those buds are going to be worth their weight in gold. Meanwhile, daylight is always going to intervene in the life of a committed nocturnal being, so pinch a mask from a plane next time you see one.

Otherwise, itā€™s worth remembering that hotels themselves are usually well stocked with everything their guests need. Donā€™t be afraid to pick up the phone and ask the front desk to help you out, even requesting a room change if necessary. They will always have catered to far ruder patrons than you, and the customer is always right!

EXERCISE

One of the best exercises you can put your fingers through is to type ā€œhotel room workoutā€ into Google and see what comes back. Just because youā€™re going to be spending a lot of time confined to a small space while you travel for poker (or while youā€™re in your own home preparing to play online) it doesnā€™t mean you canā€™t keep in shape.

Thereā€™s the 20-Minute Hotel-Room Workout from Livestrong, or the 30-Minute Hotel-Room Workout from Warrior Mode. Pushed for time? Try the same from the 12-Minute Athlete or dip into a list of exercises suggested by Entrepreneur magazine.

Not long ago, we also consulted London-based yoga instructor Lauren Gasser, who came up with a series of yoga stretches that can be done in the five-minute tournament breaks afforded online players. No excuses to miss this one, even if you only speak German or Portuguese.

One of Gasserā€™s yoga suggestions

*****

There are other, sometimes less obvious hazards to poker playing too, including the kind of repetitive strain injury (RSI) that can affect any office worker, as well as eye fatigue from staring for long periods at a screen. Itā€™s also super important to remain hydrated, whether playing live or online. Thereā€™s plenty of information available online for addressing these issues too, so be sure to look after your body and mind, and the results should take care of themselves.

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Qualify for EPT Open Sochi today

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The WSOP is over. EPT Barcelona is coming up soon. Right after that, the EPT Open will return to Sochi, Russia ā€” and you can win your package for the Main Event online with PokerStars.

First, the basics: the EPT Open Sochi festival is set to take place at Casino Sochi from October 4-13, 2019. The RUB 133,000 Main Event runs from October 9-13, and the RUB 258,000 High Roller tournament is scheduled for October 12-13.

There are a couple of ways you can qualify online for the Main Event.

Every Thursday and Sunday at 13:15 ET, our $215 EPT Open Sochi Qualifier guarantees two Main Event packages valued at $3,300 (including $569 in expenses).

If spinning up small change into a shot a big prize is your thing, smaller qualifiers into the tournaments are available. A range of them runs around the clock with buy-ins ranging from $11 up to $22.

And beginning on July 29, youā€™ll have a chance to win an EPT Open Sochi package by playing in special $5.50 Spin & Go tournaments. The winners in these tourneys will take away a $4,000 package (including $1,269 expenses) while second place wins $22 and third place gets $11.

Casino Sochi at dusk

One final thing to note: you need to have a visa to travel to Russia. If you donā€™t already have one, PokerStarsā€™ quick and easy dedicated visa service is ready to hook you up. Click through for full detailsĀ on the festival and visa service, and good luck at the tables!

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The weekly round-up

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Hereā€™s a round-up from the week on PokerStars Blogā€¦

  • Hossein Ensan wins WSOP Main Event for $10M
  • Chase your dreams to EPT Barcelona and winĀ ā‚¬10K
  • Staying healthy in the poker world
  • Lex Live 2: Full London schedule announced
  • How the Sunday Million was won (July 14)

HOSSEIN ENSAN WINS WSOP MAIN EVENT FOR $10M

World Champion: Hossein Ensan

One of the most exciting World Series of Poker (WSOP) Main Events in recent memory came to an end earlier this week, when Germanyā€™s Hossein Ensan defeated Italian high roller Dario Sammartino heads-up to win the $10M first-place prize.

PokerStars Blogā€™s Howard Swain was on hand at the Rio in Las Vegas to capture all of the action, and brought us the very best features and interviews from the entire Main Event final table (which also featured PokerStars legend Garry Gates).

Check out all of Swainsā€™ work here.


CHASE YOUR DREAMS TO EPT BARCELONA AND WIN $10K

Have you ever dreamt of playing a poker tournament live on air, surrounded by sporting legends, celebrities, and your poker heroes? Well here is your chance.

PokerStars has put together an exciting competition that could see you heading on a VIP trip to Spain for EPT Barcelona, where youā€™ll put your poker skills to the test against both PokerStars Ambassadors and celebrities for the chance to winĀ ā‚¬10,000.

There are four prize packages available (two for PokerStars.com players, one for PokerStars.es, and one for PokerStars.fr). Those prizes include:

  • Return flights for two to Barcelona
  • Three nightsā€™ stay for two at a five-star hotel (August 26-28)
  • ā‚¬500 in spending money (credited to Stars Account)
  • Free entry to the exclusive tournament on August 27

Find out how you could win here.


STAYING HEALTHY IN THE POKER WORLD

There was once a time when you could spot the health conscious poker player because he switched to greyhounds after six vodka sodas for the vitamins in the grapefruit juice. But that kind of thing is so long ago, it feels like a nostalgia trip even to write it.

These days, itā€™s common for poker players to look after themselves.Ā They need to stay in shape and maintain a healthy diet, which means plenty of fresh fruit and vegetables and enough fluids to stay hydrated. YourĀ poker playing skillsĀ are directly correlated to how well you look after the body clicking the buttons.

Click here for a guide on staying healthy in the poker world.


LEX LIVE 2: FULL LONDON SCHEDULE ANNOUNCED

After the huge success of Lex Live in Namur, Belgium back in March, Lex Veldhuis is now taking his live poker extravaganza to London.

From September 27 ā€“ October 6, 2019, Lex Live 2 will take place at the Aspers Casino, and yesterday the full schedule was announced.

Check out the full London schedule here.


HOW THE SUNDAY MILLION WAS WON (JULY 14)

As the final table of the WSOP Main Event was beginning in Las Vegas this past Sunday, nine PokerStars players from six countries were already well on their way to the final of the Sunday Million. They were part of an 8,000-strong that combined for another 2,982 re-entries before the end of late registration, building a total prize pool of $1,089,200.

At the end of it all two players from Russia, ā€œkolobcheenaā€ and ā€œJigan7,ā€ cut a heads-up deal that left $20,000 on the table for the winner.

Hereā€™s a look back at how they got there.

WSOP photography by pokerphotoarchive.com


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


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10 Most Dominant Heavyweights in UFC History

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When Daniel Cormier and Stipe Miocic meet in a rematch for the heavyweight championship at UFC 241, many people will crown the winner the greatest heavyweight to ever step in the Octagon.

Heavyweight has always been a marquee division in fight sports and through much of history the ā€œheavyweight champion of the worldā€ was recognized as a true global celebrity.

While the UFC has not had a big man champ who carries the name value of a Muhammad Ali, Mike Tyson or Joe Lewis, it has seen its fair share of great fighters holding the heavyweight strap.

Mark Coleman

The first man to hold the official UFC heavyweight championship, defeating Dan Severn at UFC 12.

Colemanā€™s hulking physique and Olympic wrestling background made him an absolute force in the cage. His style of executing takedowns and brutalizing opponents with strikes on the ground has become one of the classic fight styles in MMA, a style he coined as ā€œground and pound.ā€

Maurice Smith

While a strong ground game was seen as the effective approach in the early days of the UFC, with jiu jitsu and wrestling forming the base of most high-level competitors, Maurice Smith was an accomplished kickboxer who brought elite striking skills to the Octagon.

Despite coming to the UFC with a career record of 5-7, Smith was immediately placed in the cage with Coleman at UFC 14 in a fight the champ was expected to win handily.

It was actually Smithā€™s cardio and impressive ground game which led him to the championship as he was active off his back and made it hard for Coleman to effectively use his ground and pound style. As the minutes ticked by, Coleman became increasingly fatigued and even when he had Smith on his back, it was the challenger delivering strikes.

In the end, Smith took a shocking unanimous decision victory that redefined strategic thinking in the cage and placed a new emphasis on the importance of good cardio at heavyweight.

Randy Couture

One of the absolute all-time greats in the UFC, Randy Couture was the man to take the title from Smith at UFC Japan in 1997.

Couture was an Olympic alternate in wrestling but lacked Colemanā€™s musclebound physique, meaning he had the cardio to keep up his attacks throughout a fight. His win over Smith wasnā€™t a thriller but almost three years later, at UFC 28, he captured the championship for a second time when he defeated Kevin Randleman by TKO.

Fast forward six and a half years and Couture, who had gone to light heavyweight, become champion and eventually retired from competition, returned from retirement to heavyweight where he faced 6ā€™8ā€ Tim Sylvia. Despite a year out of competition, moving back to heavyweight and fighting a much larger man, Couture dominated Sylvia to become UFC heavyweight champ for a third time.

Frank Mir

In some ways, Frank Mirā€™s two stints as heavyweight champion are disappointing. Mir initially won the title by defeating Tim Sylvia at UFC 48. Mir was something of a submission revivalist. The heavyweight division had not featured many men who employed the beautiful techniques of submission attacks and instead had become a land for brawlers and maulers.

Mir changed that, bringing a submission game that was as mean as it was slick. He was not hesitant in the least to put a bit of extra torque on a limb heā€™d trapped if it meant getting the job done quickly.

Unfortunately, he suffered an accident while on his motorcycle and was kept out of action for a year and a half, during which time he was stripped of the belt.

At UFC 92 he regained the championship, knocking out Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira. He would lose the belt in his next fight, but for his longevity toward the top of the division and multiple title reigns, Mir ranks among the UFCā€™s heavyweight greats.

Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira

Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira belongs with Mir and Fabricio Werdum in discussions of heavyweight submission machines. His most iconic days may have come during his run in PRIDE Fighting Championships where he was placed in the ring to submit physically imposing monsters, but he also had a run as interim champ in the UFC, defeating Tim Sylvia at UFC 81.

Brock Lesnar

Brock Lesnar brought a new level of star power to the Octagon. A fighting wall of meat, Lesnar brought legitimate high level amateur wrestling credentials and the ability to talk up a fight honed through a run as a top superstar in the WWE.

His 5-3 record is shorter than most but before losing his final two UFC fights ā€” not counting a return at UFC 200 where a win was overturned due to Lesnar failing drug tests ā€” he defeated some of the most dangerous men in the history of the UFC division, including Mir and Couture.

Cain Velasquez

On sheer potential, Cain Velasquez could have been the UFC heavyweight GOAT. Instead, during much of his prime, he was sidelined by injury. After defeating Brock Lesnar for the title, he lost a bout to Junior Dos Santos in just over a minute. He was able to bounce back and rattle off four straight wins, recapture the title and avenge his loss to Dos Santos.

However, he only fought twice in 2012, twice in 2013, not at all in 2014, once in 2015 and 2016 and did not fight again until earlier this year, losing a stunning 26 second knockout. Repeated knee injuries were the primary culprit for his lack of activity compared to much of the UFC roster.

That said, Velasquez has shown elite talent when healthy and active.

Fabricio Werdum

Fabricio Werdum gets neatly shuffled into the ā€œheavyweight submission greatsā€ category. In between two UFC stints, Werdum picked up a career defining win by being the first man in more than 25 fights to defeat the legendary Fedor Emelianenko.

In the UFC, however, it was a wild run of success that included wins over Nogueira and a title capturing submission of Cain Velasquez that truly cemented his place in MMA history.

Stipe Miocic

Stipe Miocic picked up three knockouts in his first eight UFC fights, but then a run of six straight wins saw him pick up five knockouts, win the UFC heavyweight championship and defend it a promotion-record three consecutive defenses of the title.

That run led many to declare Miocic the best heavyweight in UFC history, and at least statistically he was the most dominant champ in the history of the division.

With an 18-3 record in his career and a 4-1 record in title fights, Miocic can improve his resume even more by defeating Daniel Cormier in their rematch this August.

Daniel Cormier

Daniel Cormier made his way to MMA after an incredible amateur wrestling career and proved to be perfectly made for fighting, even if his physical appearance may be a bit deceiving.

Cormier went 11-0 before joining the UFC, picking up regional championships as well as winning the deep Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix. Once he made it to the UFC, he won three fights before dropping down to light heavyweight where he found his true rival in Jon Jones. Despite stumbles against Jones, Cormier won the light heavyweight title and successfully defended the belt three times.

Then came the big move of jumping back to heavyweight and knocking out Miocic in the first round to become heavyweight champion as well.

With one successful title defense under his belt already, Cormier looks to erase all doubt of his status when he faces Miocic in their rematch at UFC 241.

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Gates, Moneymaker, and how poker brings us together

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At various points throughout my book Poker & Pop Culture, I observe how among the many paradoxes of the game, one is the curious way poker tends to build community at the same time it forces participants to engage in competition against each other.

Itā€™s weird, isnā€™t it? In theory, a game like poker in which no one person can win unless someone else loses should tear us apart. But we know thatā€™s not the way it usually works. In fact, for most of us who enjoy poker, we experience it as a game that brings people together ā€” that brings us closer to others.

Indeed, pokerā€™s important social component often has a way of somehow ā€œenrichingā€ all of us, even if technically speaking only some of us can ever literally become ā€œricherā€ when we play.

I couldnā€™t help but think of that paradox this week when watching the exciting conclusion to the 2019 World Series of Poker Main Event. There were so many memorable moments and stories, many of which were chronicled right here.

Like a lot of you, Iā€™ve been following the ESPN broadcasts of the Main Event for a long time ā€” to be specific, ever since that big breakout year of 2003 when the televised coverage was expanded significantly. (Is that when you started watching, too?)

For me, watching the Main Event was a little different this year. A friend of mine actually made the final table (no shinola!). And it wasnā€™t even a professional player for whom such an achievement might not have seemed so unexpected. Sitting there among the final nine was my buddy, the serious-though-by-no-means-a-pro player Garry Gates.

Garry Gates at the 2019 WSOP Main Event final table (no shinola!)

It was kind of uncanny seeing a familiar, friendly face there at the table vying for pokerā€™s most prestigious prize. When I try to describe what it was like watching Garry on my television, Norman Chadā€™s words from those 2003 broadcasts to describe Chris Moneymakerā€™s improbable run to the title spring to mind ā€” words that some of us were laughingly quoting to each other verbatim as it was happening:

ā€œThis is beyond fairy tale. Itā€™s inconceivable.ā€

The hashtag passed around on social media by Garryā€™s supporters was #LFGGG ā€” a rallying cry for Garry Gates to keep it (effinā€™) going. He did that all right, much further than anyone including Garry himself would have ever imagined he would. He made it all of the way to fourth place, finally busting on Monday night for a $3 million cash.

A few hours before Garryā€™s final hand, ESPN ran a short clip in which Garry talked about how the 2003 Main Event had helped encourage his own excitement about the game.

ā€œWhen Chris Moneymaker won the Main Event back in 2003, I remember being in my bedroom listening to a radio broadcast of that final table,ā€ he explained. ā€œJust a couple of days ago I see a tweet from Chris Moneymaker saying ā€˜Can Garry Gates please win the Main Event?ā€™ To see my journey come full circle that wayā€¦ Chris and I are close friends now, and I meanā€¦ this is the stuff that poker dreams are made of.ā€

ā€œGarry says he wants to win this for the casual player who has a dream, like Chris Moneymaker,ā€ explained Norman Chad following the clip, who along with Lon McEachern has continued to provide Main Event commentary every year since 2003. ā€œActually, heā€™s Chris Moneymaker 2.0, just a bit older,ā€ Chad added. (Moneymaker was 27 when he won the Main Event; Garry is 37.)

It wasnā€™t that long after that clip was shown that this yearā€™s inductees for the Poker Hall of Fame were announced, and as it happens Chris Moneymaker was one of those named.

Moneymakerā€™s victory in 2003 brought many into poker, and his efforts ever since to be an ambassador for the game were a big part of why he earned the recognition. As he pointed out when talking to PokerStars Blog about his induction, both ā€œplayersā€ and ā€œbuildersā€ can receive the honor. While Moneymakerā€™s Main Event win represented a high achievement to which any player would aspire, what heā€™s accomplished as a builder has obviously ā€œcontributed to the overall growth and success of the game of poker, with indelible positive and lasting resultsā€ (to quote from the PHoFā€™s criteria).

That 2003 WSOP Main Event further fueled Garryā€™s interest in poker. (Is that what happened to you, too?) Eventually that interest led Garry down a career path that has seen him become a kind a ā€œbuilderā€ for the game, too.

Working for PokerNews, Garry helped influence and grow tournament reporting, so vital to encouraging interest in poker and increasing the gameā€™s popularity. Later he moved over to PokerStars where he has collaborated with players in a variety of ways, most recently as the Senior Consultant of Player Affairs for PokerStars Live.

Garry Gates, at his day job

Garry recently played an important role in the Platinum Pass promotion in which more than 300 players won their way to the Bahamas to take part in the PokerStars Players No-Limit Holdā€™em Championship, among them champion Ramon Colillas. The great majority of those Platinum Pass winners who got to play the $25,000 buy-in event were a lot like both Moneymaker in 2003 and Gates in 2019 ā€” casual players with a dream.

Describing Garry as ā€œMoneymaker 2.0ā€ is not a stretch, by any means. He was certainly the closest example of any of those who made the final table of a non-professional whose success could inspire others in a way similar to what happened 16 years ago. Itā€™s not hard to imagine at all that some watching Garryā€™s run this year will be encouraged to come to Las Vegas next summer to take their WSOP shot.

But Garry is also already an ambassador for the game. Unlike Moneymaker who grew into that role after his Main Event success, Gates has had a career doing exactly that.

After his elimination on Monday, Kara Scott interviewed Garry for ESPN. She asked him how after heā€™d been second in chips with five remaining, ā€œwhere it went wrong.ā€

ā€œI donā€™t think it went wrong at all,ā€ answered Garry with a big grin. ā€œFourth place in the World Series Main Event? You gotta be kidding meā€¦ thatā€™s a dream,ā€ he said.

Garry Gates and Kara Scott

While acknowledging he obviously would have liked to finish higher, he couldnā€™t hold back the excitement at having gotten as far as he did. Nor could he repress the emotion he felt after having experienced the outpouring of support for him along the way.

ā€œI felt the loveā€¦ I want to honestly say thank you to everybody, everybody around the world.ā€ Thatā€™s when the tears appeared, and you didnā€™t have to be of friend of Garryā€™s to have been affected. ā€œI felt so loved this week,ā€ he continued. ā€œAnd that meant everything.ā€

He concluded with one final message, one that circles back to that paradox I mentioned at the start.

ā€œWe won though, guys,ā€ he said with a big smile and chuckle. ā€œWe won.ā€

They say poker is a ā€œzero sum game.ā€ In concrete terms ā€” when only talking about the money ā€” poker is undeniably that.

But that doesnā€™t mean the game doesnā€™t produce more winners than losers. Sometimes, in fact, it somehow feels like weā€™re all winning.

Poker brought Moneymaker and Gates together, both literally as friends and now in their shared role as ambassadors for the game. It has brought us together, too, to watch them and support them, and to stay with the game going forward.

And it will continue to do so. It just keeps (effinā€™) going.

WSOP photography by pokerphotoarchive.com.

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Beresford wins the Milly ($112K); "C. Darwin2" clinches HRC title ($38K)

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Hereā€™s everything you need to know from the weekend on PokerStarsā€¦

  • Conor ā€œ1_conor_b_1ā€ Beresford wins Sunday Million for $112K
  • ā€œC. Darwin2ā€ clinches High Roller Club title ($38K)
  • Top 5 results from the High Roller Club
  • Top 5 results from the weekend majors

CONOR ā€œ1_conor_b_1ā€ BERESFORD WINS SUNDAY MILLION ($112K)

Out of a huge field of 10,931 entries, a very familiar face rose to the top of the ranks in yesterdayā€™s $109 Sunday Million.

If youā€™re not familiar with the UKā€™s Conor ā€œ1_conor_b_1ā€ Beresford, you havenā€™t been paying attention. The Brit is a beast online, and has now added $112,185 and a Sunday Million title to his impressiveĀ rĆ©sumĆ©. Beresford defeated Ukraineā€™s ā€œmanumanu1985ā€ ($81,408) heads-up for the victory.

Connor ā€œ1_conor_b_1ā€ Beresford: Sunday Million champion

Beresford also boasts a Spring Championship of Online Poker (SCOOP) title ($171K with a win in a $2,100 4-max event back in 2016), and victories in other Sunday major events including the Warm-up and the Sunday HR. His total online earnings now sit at more than $8.5M.

You might also have clocked him going deep in the EPT Monte Carlo Main Event earlier this year, when he finished 11th forĀ ā‚¬50,930. The closest Beresford has come in the Milly prior to yesterday was a fifth-place finish back in 2012 for $65,800.


ā€œC. Darwin2ā€ CLINCHES HIGH ROLLER CLUB TITLE ($38K)

We also saw a very well-known player take down a title over in the High Roller Club.

Simon ā€œC. Darwin2ā€ Mattsson is arguably one of the G.O.A.T.s of online poker. Currently ranked third in the world (according to PocketFives), Mattsson has rarely (if at all) been ranked out of the top five in as long as we can remember, amassing more than $13.2M in online earnings along the way.

Simon ā€œC. Darwin2ā€ Mattsson

Mattsson took down the prestigious $2,100 Sunday HR yesterday for $38,327, defeating Preben ā€œprebzā€ Stokkan heads-up ($29,136). Mattssonā€™s fellow swede, and current no.1-ranked player in the world Niklas ā€œLena900ā€Ā Ć…stedtĀ finished in fourth ($16,837), while Sunday Million champion Conor ā€œ1_conor_b_1ā€ Beresford also made the final table (6th ā€“ $9,730).

The biggest winner from the High Roller Club this weekend was Canadaā€™s ā€œcantstopmeAAā€ who took down the $530 Bounty Builder for $35,241 plus $37,406 in bounties.


TOP 5 RESULTS FROM THE HIGH ROLLER CLUB

TOURNAMENT PLAYER COUNTRY PRIZE BOUNTY
HRC $530 BOUNTY BUILDER (PKO) cantstopmeAA Canada $35,241 $37,406
HRC $2,100 SUNDAY COOLDOWN (PKO) Radioromashka Russia $20,790 $26,406
HRC $2,100 SUNDAY HR C. Darwin2 Sweden $38,327
HRC $1,050 SUNDAY WARM-UP kleanthous1930 Cyprus $34,877
HRC $1,050 SUNDAY SUPERSONIC Darsolation New Zealand $30,918

TOP 5 RESULTS FROM THE WEEKEND MAJORS

TOURNAMENT PLAYER COUNTRY PRIZE
$109 SUNDAY MILLION 1_conor_b_1 Netherlands $112,185
$215 SUNDAY WARM-UP MaxHendrix Russia $21,157
$215 SUNDAY SUPERSONIC Chry1982 Argentina $15,140
$22 MINI SUNDAY MILLION goodluckgabi Hungary $14,000
$55 SUNDAY MARATHON megafish2 Brazil $13,277

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TV chef asks "Who is that?" (you know who)

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As members of the poker media, weā€™re used to seeing famous players pop up on our social media feeds. But what we saw this weekend was a little different.

While casually browsing through Instagram on a lazy Sunday afternoon, we stopped on a post from British ā€œInstagram chefā€ Miguel Barclay, well known online for his One Pound Meals series of cookbooks. In the Instagram video, Barclay and his wife are trying out a London restaurantā€”Prix Fixe in bustling Sohoā€“with him then showcasing the dishes to his more than 300,000 followers.

So far, so Instagram. But what happened next made us do a full-on double-take.

Mid-meal and mid-video, Barclay then turns his phone away from the dining table (and his cauliflower cheese entrƩe) and aims the camera across the busy street. It seemed a famous person was walking by, causing a hubbub amongst members of the public as he went.

ā€œWhoa, everyone is queuing up to have their photo taken with this guy,ā€ Barclay says. ā€œWho is he? Who is that guy?ā€

Your first guess might be a Hollywood actor or a popular musician. But no.

ā€˜That guyā€™ was none other than Tom ā€œdurrrā€ Dwan.

ā€œWho is that guy?ā€ asks Barclay

Heā€™ll be familiar to you poker fans, no doubt. Dwan himself has more than 160,000 followers on a Twitter account he seldom uses. But Barclay was none the wiser. Scrolling through the comments on the video, it seems only one of his 306,000 followers recognised the mystery man attracting attention.

ā€œHe is Tom Dwan. Professional crazy poker player who was really popular back in Poker After Dark show during late 2000s,ā€ wrote Instagram user @gadimbaylisahil.

If, like Barclay, youā€™re not sure of who Dwan is, hereā€™s some backstory.

Dwan was undeniably a poker prodigy, turning a $50 online poker investment into a five-figure bankroll in a matter of weeks by playing sit and gos. He then quickly rose through the cash game ranks, climbing from the $1/$2 tables to the highest possible nosebleed stakes around, using a fearless, hyper-aggressive style that confused even the most talented regulars.

He was a legend in his early twenties, and nowā€”as he approaches his 33rd birthdayā€”his popularity clearly hasnā€™t diminished.

ā€œOver the course of the last decade, Tom Dwan has emerged as not only one of the gamesā€™ more elusive players, but also one of its most bewildering,ā€ wrote PokerStars Blogā€™s own Stephen Bartley two years ago. ā€œTo watch him is to be left scratching your head asking ā€œhow?ā€, while to imitate him is to find yourself drawing dead with just a high card. To take ā€œdurrrā€ on typically results in humiliation, the public kind, the kind that will live on forever in poker history.ā€

But this weekend, Dwan wasnā€™t dishing out public humiliation. He was receiving public adoration.

And hereā€™s the strange thing: there wasnā€™t even a big poker event going on in London last weekend.

Dwan was simply going about his business, doing whatever he likes to do when in the big smoke, and his mere presence on London streets (no poker chips or other poker players in sight) was enough to cause a commotion strong enough that a well-known Instagram celebrity asked who he was.

It begs the question: is Tom Dwan more famous than we may have thought?

To us in the poker world, heā€™s a superstar. Whenever he turns up at a poker eventā€”just like he did at the 2019 World Series of Poker in Las Vegas to play the $50,000 Players Championshipā€”his arrival causes a ripple of excitement. But we wouldnā€™t have guessed heā€™d be unable to walk down a streetā€”nowhere near a card gameā€“without people clamouring for photos.

Tom Dwan at the 2019 WSOP

Then again, this ties in perfectly with the myth of Dwan.

While arguably pokerā€™s greatest enigma Phil Ivey was recently in the mainstream news for his casino controversies, and again only a couple of months ago when he opted to reveal his poker secrets by releasing a Masterclass, we donā€™t really know anything about Dwanā€™s day-to-day life, other than:

  • He plays in the biggest cash games in the world
  • He spends a lot of time in Asia
  • His durrr challenge with Daniel ā€œJunglemanā€ Cates remains unfinished
  • Heā€™s married to Bianca (his Twitter bio links to her Instagram page)
  • He experienced his first earthquake this summer

Maybe itā€™s best that way. The less we know about him, the more his enigma grows.

Did he pose for the photos? If you were one of the people who spotted him on the street, let us know on Twitter at @PokerStarsBlog.

We do know one thing, though, thanks to Barclayā€™s video:

The food at Prix Fixe looks delicious.


WSOP photography by pokerphotoarchive.com

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Remembering the 1979 WSOP Main Event

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The 2019 World Series of Poker is at last over, with the milestone of it being the 50th running of the series having earned a lot of notice. So did other celebrated Main Event milestones.

The 10th anniversary of Joe Cada setting the record as the youngest ever Main Event champion got some attention when 21-year-old Nick Marchington made the final table with a chance of setting a new mark before getting knocked out in seventh.

The 20th anniversary of 61-year-old Noel Furlongā€™s Main Event win in 1999 was recalled as well when 55-year-old Hossein Ensan claimed this yearā€™s title, making him the oldest winner in two decades.

And given Phil Hellmuthā€™s prominence at the WSOP and on the Main Event broadcasts, you knew the 30th anniversary of his Main Event win in 1989 wouldnā€™t go unnoticed.

This year also marked the 40th anniversary of what was arguably one of the most historic WSOP Main Events. In 1979, Hal Fowler stunned the poker world by topping a field made up primarily of professional players to become the first ever amateur to win pokerā€™s most prestigious title.

Hal Fowler (UNLV Special Collections)

Thereafter observers spoke of the ā€œFowler Effectā€ ā€” kind of a proto-version of the ā€œMoneymaker Effectā€ that arrived nearly a quarter century later to help ignite the ā€œpoker boomā€ and ultimately contribute toward the induction of 2003 Main Event winner Chris Moneymaker into the Poker Hall of Fame. (Coincidentally, the PHoF was first introduced at the 1979 WSOP with an inaugural class of seven that included Johnny Moss, Wild Bill Hickok, and Edmond Hoyle.)

ā€œEvery Friday-night poker player now feels he has a chance against the pros,ā€ said Jack Binion in a press release delivered just before the following yearā€™s WSOP, referring to response to Fowlerā€™s surprise win.

ā€œTruth is that anyone can win,ā€ said Binion. ā€œAll anyone needs to enter the series is money, self-confidence, an ability to play good poker, guts and the ambition to best the pros.ā€

During this summerā€™s WSOP I spent some time exploring the Special Collections at the Center for Gaming Research at the University of Nevada Las Vegas, including studying materials from the 1979 World Series of Poker. Now that this yearā€™s Main Event is over, I wanted to share a few of the more interesting stories from 40 years ago, including a few of the lesser known details tucked away in those archives.

1. Kenny Rogers was there to sing pokerā€™s new ā€œtheme songā€

That year CBS produced a one-hour broadcast of the Main Event, with the television crew and other media helping contribute to a very crowded environment at the Horseshoe. In a write-up of the event for Gambling Times, Len Miller described the scene as ā€œtoo cramped,ā€ with the TV crew, news photographers, lighting set-ups, and ā€œhoards of spectatorsā€ together providing ā€œthe makings of a congested freeway with all the charm of rush-hour traffic.ā€

By then ā€œThe Gamblerā€ by Kenny Rogers had been out for about six months, having reached No. 1 on the country charts and crossed over to be a hit on the Billboard Hot 100 as well. The CBS broadcast actually began and ended with ā€œThe Gambler,ā€ and in fact Rogers was there at Binionā€™s Horseshoe to perform the song as well.

Kenny Rogers singing ā€œThe Gamblerā€ at the 1979 WSOP Main Event (Gambling Times, courtesy Ann Sludikoff)

It was clear by then that ā€œThe Gamblerā€ had already become a cultural phenomenon. Less than a year later, the first of a series of television movies inspired by the song and starring Rogers would appear on CBS.

On the program, host Frank Glieber talked to Rogers about the song that Glieber says ā€œmay become a standard, I guess, for poker players.ā€

ā€œItā€™s so funny, because every time I go places now, people will say to me, ā€˜you gotta know when to holdā€™em and know when to foldā€™em,'ā€ says Rogers. ā€œAnd I keep thinking about how many times Iā€™ve sat down at these tables and didnā€™t know when to hold ā€™em and when to fold ā€™em.ā€

At another point in the show, Glieber and Jimmy ā€œThe Greekā€ Snyder handicap the field, with Glieber asking Snyder, ā€œDoes a non-professional have a chance?ā€

ā€œI donā€™t think there are many non-professionals in here,ā€ answers Snyder. ā€œTheyā€™re professional in their own hometown, but when they get here, theyā€™re not quite as professional because the great professionals are here.ā€

2. Among the amateursā€¦ a marine biologist?

Play began at Binionā€™s Horseshoe on Tuesday, May 22 at 1:30 p.m. with 54 players putting up the $10,000 buy-in plus $50 entry fee. (Thatā€™s right ā€” $50.)

A handwritten ledger provides details regarding all 54 paid entrants, along with each playerā€™s hometown and occupation. The 52-year-old Fowlerā€™s hometown is listed as Los Angeles with his occupation ā€œpublic relations.ā€ Miller notes how Fowler was from Norwalk, a suburb of L.A., where he had ā€œbowed out of his weekly game with the boys at home to become a contestant in this event.ā€

Meanwhile the pros are especially well represented. Not only was Johnny Moss part of the field, but so were nine other players who would later join Moss in the Poker Hall of Fame: Crandall Addington, Doyle Brunson, Walter ā€œPuggyā€ Pearson, ā€œAmarilloā€ Slim Preston, David ā€œChipā€ Reese, Brian ā€œSailorā€ Roberts, Jack Straus, Dewey Tomko, and the previous yearā€™s Main Event winner Bobby Baldwin.

Around half of the entrants have occupations indicating something other than poker or gambling as their primary vocation. Two women participated ā€” Barbara Freer (who had been the first woman to play the Main the year before) and Betty Carey. In Millerā€™s account, he reports the field was comprised of 47 professionals and seven amateurs.

Among the latter group was actor and comedian Gabe Kaplan of Brooklyn, New York, returning to play the Main for a second time. Take a look at how heā€™s listed among the participants registering for the event:

Funny business at the registration table, courtesy Mr. Kotter (UNLV Special Collections)

Check out that hometown ā€” Manila, Phillipines [sic]. And that occupation ā€” marine biologist.

It gets even better. Look closely at Kaplanā€™s name. It has been written over top of another one, that of the defending champ, Bobby Baldwin. Itā€™s hard not to imagine a scene at the registration table in which Kaplan had been asked three questions, and in response he delivered an inspired triple-barrel bluff.

On the CBS broadcast, host Frank Glieber spoke with Kaplan following his early Day 1 exit, asking him ā€œWhen did you get serious about this game?ā€

ā€œIā€™m still not serious about it. Couldnā€™t you tell by the way I was playing out there?ā€ Kaplan cracked.

ā€œLast year I was the fourth one out, and this year I was the sixth one out,ā€ he continued. ā€œSo in another 50 years Iā€™m going to win.ā€

Gabe Kaplan, marine biologist (UNLV Special Collections)

With 54 taking part, the $540,000 prize pool would be divided among the top five finishers, with half of it ā€” $270,000 ā€” going to the winner.

On that first day Jack Straus (who would win the Main Event three years later) had been the first elimination, going out even before Kaplan. At the end of Day 1 Dewey Tomko led the 34 players who survived 40,375, while Fowler was in seventh position with 22,650.

Just 10 made it through Day 2, with Lakewood Louieā€™s royal flush versus George Huber a genuine ā€œhand of the dayā€ highlight. Despite that memorable hand, Louie was knocked out near the end of the night after he aces were cracked by Fowlerā€™s pocket queens when a queen arrived on the river. It was a lucky runout that prefigured more good fortune for Fowler on the third and final day.

When players returned on Thursday, May 24, for Day 3, Sam Moon was on top with Fowler below the average in seventh. Here are the end-of-day counts:

Chip counts to start the final day of the 1979 WSOP Main Event

3. The play down from 10 to 2 was bonkers

You might have known this already, but reading through various accounts of the final day of the 1979 WSOP Main Event reveals some of the wilder hands youā€™ll ever come across.

Leader Moon picked up pocket aces twice in the early going, first knocking out Aubrey Day (who had kings) in 10th, then Bobby Baldwin (who had eights) in ninth. In Baldwinā€™s elimination hand he actually flopped a set at which point he got his chips in the middle, but an ace came on the turn and Moon won the pot.

With eight players left they redrew around a single table, and before long Bobby Hoff took the chip lead after knocking out ā€œChicagoā€ Sam Petrillo in eighth. Petrillo had pocket aces in his last hand, losing to Hoffā€™s jacks after a jack flopped. Moon next eliminated Crandall Addington in seventh, then Hoff KOā€™d both Chip Reese in sixth and Johnny Moss in fifth.

Bobby Baldwin, Crandall Addington, and Johnny Moss in action at the 1979 WSOP (UNLV Special Collections)

At one point Hoff had a big chip lead with four left with more than 60 percent of the chips in play, but Fowler pulled nearly even after scoring the next two knockouts. In the first Fowler used Jā™„10ā™£ to beat Moonā€™s Aā™£Aā™„, making a straight to beat Moonā€™s set of aces.

Hoff describes that hand in Des Wilsonā€™s 2008 book Ghosts at the Table, presenting it as evidence that the amateur Fowler not only ā€œdidnā€™t seem to know what to do,ā€ there were times when ā€œhe didnā€™t even know it was his turn to play.ā€

Before the flop Moon had raised with his aces, and with the action on Fowler the others had to tell him it was his turn. Moon got his attention by saying ā€œHal, throw your hand away, you know youā€™re not going to call.ā€ Thatā€™s when Fowler looked at his jack-ten, said ā€œOh yeah, Iā€™m going to call it,ā€ and the flop promptly fell A-Q-K.

ā€œHe shouldnā€™t have been in the hand,ā€ recalls Hoff, but Fowler was and Moon was out in fourth. Fowler then eliminated a short-stacked Huber in third to increase his stack to 260,000 to start heads-up play versus Hoff who had 280,000.

4. Heads-up was even more bonkers

It was about 9:45 p.m. when the Hoff and Fowlerā€™s duel began. On the 12th hand between them, Fowler raised preflop then continued after the first three cards came Aā™ 10ā™„Kā™£. Hoff kept calling, then after the Jā™¦ fell on the turn Fowler made a massive overbet all in. Hoff folded, and Fowler showed his cards ā€” 5ā™„2ā™¦!

(It should be noted, there are a lot of conflicting accounts of the action in some of these hands. In this one, for example, some reports say Fowler had 6-2, and when Hoff recalled it for Wilson he said Fowler had 6-4. Hoff also reports he folded A-T.)

ā€œIt was a bluff, pure and simple,ā€ states the WSOPā€™s typewritten account of the final table. In hisĀ Gambling Times report, Len Miller shares a quote from Hoff uttered just after, describing it as having been said ā€œloud enough for his poker professional friends to hearā€:

ā€œThis guy ainā€™t going to be nearly as easy as Iā€™d thought heā€™d be,ā€ said Hoff.

Bobby Hoff (UNLV Special Collections)

From there came several more remarkable hands to punctuate what would ultimately be more than five hoursā€™ worth of heads-up play. To summarize them quickly:

1. With the board showing Q-5-2-J, Fowler was all in holding K-J (jacks) versus Hoffā€™s Q-6 (queens), then a jack fell on the river to give Fowler trips.

2. At around 1 a.m. Fowler was all in again with pocket jacks versus Hoffā€™s pocket queens, and once more ā€œFowler hits a J on the riverā€ (says the report).

3. Four hands after that, Fowler won a 398,000-chip pot after pushing all in on a 9ā™£Jā™„7ā™¦2ā™¦Qā™¦ board with Aā™¦8ā™¦ and getting called by Hoff who had Kā™¦6ā™¦.

Hoff built back up, but Fowler had the edge when the final hand took place, another memorable one demonstrating Fowlerā€™s extreme good fortune.

The typewritten account says the final hand was the 160th hand of heads-up, although itā€™s hard to confirm the accuracy of that total. In any case it was close to 3 a.m., or more than five hours since Huberā€™s elimination, when Hoff opened with a raise and Fowler called.

The flop came 5ā™„3ā™£Jā™  and Hoff continued for 40,000 or about half his remaining stack, and Fowler called again. The turn was the 4ā™ , and after Hoff pushed all in Fowler called right away, making the pot 242,000.

Unlike today, players didnā€™t table their cards at that point, and so it wasnā€™t until after the 10ā™¦ river was dealt that Hoff showed his Aā™£Aā™„. Fowler then turned over his hand ā€” 7ā™ 6ā™¦ ā€” to reveal heā€™d turned a straight. After winning Fowler sat expressionless for a few moments, hand on hip and not moving, before finally rising to shake Hoffā€™s hand.

Fowler had done the unthinkable. An amateur had finally won the WSOP Main Event!

1979 WSOP Main Event payouts

Fowlerā€™s finish was a great improvement over his first try playing the WSOP Main Event the year before when he was eliminated on Day 1. Who had knocked Fowler out of the tournament the first time he played? Bobby Hoff.

Jack Binion, Bobby Hoff, and Hal Fowler (UNLV Special Collections)

5. Fowler did not take the money and run

ā€œRight now all of the professionals are in a state of shock,ā€ said Fowler after his win as reported in a WSOP press release. ā€œThey have a right to be shocked, because they are so much better than I am; but, I played hard and proved I have good poker sense. Thatā€™s the one thing that won it for me.ā€

In other comments made by Fowler, he drew attention to one other factor that he believed helped him improve so greatly upon his performance from the previous year ā€” namely, a particular purchase he had made.

ā€œIt was theĀ smartest investment I ever made,ā€ said Fowler. ā€œI have purchased every book written on poker, but after reading Super/System when I returned home, I threw all the other books away. Doyleā€™s book Super/System taught me all the things I did not learn before, and every poker player in the world should buy their own personal copy. It will make a winner out of any poker player whether he plays only penny ante games right up to no-limit table stakes games.ā€

In a blog post from 2008, Brunson described how after Fowler won ā€œhe told me he was going to go on tour and sell 10,000 copies of Super/System. I bet him $5,000 that he wouldnā€™t do it and after one year I got a cashierā€™s check in the mail for $5,000 from Fowler.ā€

Other WSOP press materials emphasize Fowlerā€™s post-victory intention to draw upon his public relations background and become a kind of ambassador for poker.

ā€œHe plans to travel for eleven (11) months throughout the United States, Canada and several other foreign countries, speaking before groups at private luncheons and dinners, on the subject of how to play World Championship Poker and explaining the game of Hold ā€˜Em,ā€ explains one report.

ā€œHe is a fine World Champion and will be a great representative of poker,ā€ adds Jack Binion.

Fowler did not, however, harbor much of a desire to become a poker pro.

Among the items in the UNLV Special Collections is an audio cassette with syndicated radio reports from the 1979 WSOP Main Event that were sent out to be played on stations all over the country. Fowler can be heard there as well being asked about his future.

ā€œMaybe I could turn professional, but I donā€™t want to,ā€ says Fowler. ā€œI wouldnā€™t want the life of a professional poker player. Too much strife. Chicken today, feathers tomorrow. These people, they lose threeā€¦ four hundred thousand dollars in a night!ā€

Despite such prudent talk, thereā€™s another story of Fowler having apparently taken just such a risk with his winnings. Gabe Kaplan returned again in 1980 to play in the Main Event, and in the WSOPā€™s player profile of him for that year there isĀ another interesting tidbit involving Fowler.

ā€œShortly after the completion of the Series, he took on 1979 Hold ā€˜Em champ Hal Fowler and 1978 champion Bobby Baldwin in separate $200,000 Heads-Up Freeze-Out games. Kaplan ended up with all the chips in both contests,ā€ says the profile.

After busting early the first two times he played, Kaplan did much better in the 1980 Main Event. In fact, he made it all of the way to the final table where he finished sixth, although alas for him only the top five spots paid.

Fowler is sometimes said to have disappeared from poker altogether following his 1979 win, but that was not the case. Another release from the 1980 WSOP explains that ā€œSince his win, Fowler has participated in large-stakes games with the regular poker greats, sharpening his abilities for the defense of his title in this yearā€™s competition. Currently, he plays in the Los Angeles area in addition to Las Vegas, with occasional trips to Hong Kong.ā€

Indeed, Fowler is one of the 73 players listed as entering the Main Event in 1980, with a note showing he made it to Day 2 before busting. Fowler is again listed among the Main Event entrants in 1981 and 1982, but does not appear after that.

Fowler died in relative obscurity in 2000 at nursing home at age 73. Des Wilson reports that among the few possessions he left among friends at the facility was a gun and a videotape of the 1979 WSOP Main Event broadcast.

The memory of Fowlerā€™s remarkable run lives on, however ā€” the first time an amateur managed to win the WSOP Main Event and secure a place in history alongside other champions.

Fowler and other Main Event champs recognized at this yearā€™s WSOP

Thanks to the Center for Gaming Research at the University of Nevada Las Vegas.

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Maria Konnikova's Live Tournament Tips

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Last week PokerStars School got you prepared to play in a live tournament with tips on satellite strategy and advice from Team Pros Chris Moneymaker and Fatima Moreira de Melo. This week they hand the reins to Maria Konnikova, who went from knowing next to nothing about poker to winning live tournaments in less than a year. If youā€™re even considering making the jump from online play to live tournaments, youā€™ll want to read on for some excellent advice to make your own transition a smooth one.

This week:

ā€¢ Live tourney tips from Maria Konnikova
ā€¢ Learning when to trust your instincts


Maria Konnikovaā€™s Live Tournament Tips

Major live poker tournaments are endurance contests as much as they are tests of poker skill. All of the things you normally have to worry about in an online poker tournament are present along in with a host of other factors, not the least of which is the fact that to have a chance at winning requires handling everything better than hundreds of opponents for days on end.

Maria Konnikova plays in the 2019 EPT Monte Carlo Main Event.

Thereā€™s a lot to keep track of, and nobody knows that better than Maria Konnikova.

The author and journalist says she was ā€œincredibly nervousā€ the first time she played live, but less than three years down the line sheā€™s a successful poker pro with Team PokerStars. So how did she get there? Mostly diligent study and practice, but taking good advice from the best minds in poker and applying it rigorously at the tables has also been a big part of her success.

If youā€™re looking to take the step into playing major live events, Konnikovaā€™s advice is a gold mine. Unsurprisingly, itā€™s thorough and detailed ā€” she covers a wide range of topics from preparing your body for long tournament days and monitoring your emotional state to taking effective notes, playing against pros, and looking for tells while you keep tabs on your perceived table image. But perhaps most importantly, it comes from someone who was in your shoes just a short time ago and knows exactly how and why she has been successful.

Read Maria Konnikovaā€™s tips for playing live poker tournaments and youā€™ll be ready for a deep run in your next live event.


Trusting your instincts

When youā€™re looking relatively new to something and soaking up advice from people more experienced than yourself, itā€™s not uncommon for people to say that you should ā€œtrust your instincts.ā€

Learning when to trust your instincts ā€“ and when to ignore them ā€“ can make all the difference at the poker table.

This can be helpful advice in the right situations, since the subconscious mind is great at solving simple or familiar problems. But blindly following such a tip can you astray in poker, where, as Pete Clarke writes, ā€œthere is much more statistical information to compute [and] instincts can be wildly off.ā€

The trick is in figuring out how to harness your instinct to help you the most at the table. Understanding the different kinds of instinctive reactions that people have can help you tell the difference between a spot where your emotions are driving your reactions and one where you donā€™t have to consider your options that carefully because youā€™ve studied this situation repeatedly. And knowing those kinds of differences can be the determining factor between a win and a loss.

Let Clarke help you learn when to trust your instincts in poker and youā€™ll leave unhelpful emotional reactions behind in no time.


Other PokerStars School content you might enjoy

ā€¢ Promotion: Path to the Sunday Million
ā€¢ Question of the Week: What would be your Sunday Million strategy advice?
ā€¢ Video: Check-raising as a semi-bluff
ā€¢ Twitch: ZOOM Cash Games with Pete Clarke


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.

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Behind the scenes of #LFGGG

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Weā€™re not quite ready to stop rambling about PokerStars employee and all-round legend Garry Gatesā€™ incredible World Series of Poker Main Event run just yet. And luckily for us, his valiant efforts are also still fresh in the mind of poker vlogger, cash game grinder, and one of Gatesā€™ close friends, Johnnie Moreno (better known in the poker world as Johnnie Vibes).


Weā€™ve written a lot about Garry Gates these past couple of weeks. PokerStars Blogā€™s Howard Swains was on the tournament floor at the Rio in Las Vegas bringing us the best write ups from what was surely one of the most exciting Main Events in recent years.

When Gates bowed out in fourth place to win $3M, it wasnā€™t a time for ā€œwhat might have beenā€, but rather a chance to celebrate what already was. Pokerā€™s Martin Harris (author of the fantastic new book Poker and Pop Culture) recently compared Gatesā€™ run to Chris Moneymakerā€™s back in 2003.

ā€œFor me, watching the Main Event was a little different this year,ā€ Harris wrote. ā€œSitting there among the final nine was my buddy, the serious-though-by-no-means-a-pro player Garry Gates.

Garry Gates

ā€œThey say poker is a ā€œzero sum game.ā€ In concrete terms ā€” when only talking about the money ā€” poker is undeniably that. But that doesnā€™t mean the game doesnā€™t produce more winners than losers. Sometimes, in fact, it somehow feels like weā€™reĀ allĀ winning.

ā€œPoker brought Moneymaker and Gates together, both literally as friends and now in their shared role as ambassadors for the game. It has brought us together, too, to watch them and support them, and to stay with the game going forward.ā€


Johnnie Vibes

One man who was closer than most to Gatesā€™ Main Event run was Johnnie Vibes. He was actually staying at Gatesā€™ home in Henderson, Nevada throughout the wild ride.

In his latest vlogĀ (which you can watch below) Vibes tells us about his own Main Event journey, which ended in 1,266th place (good for a $15,000 cash). But his attention then switches to his good friend Garry, a man who was a part of Morenoā€™s wedding, and at that point in the video had reached the final nine and was guaranteed a million bucks.

ā€œGarry is the ultimate story of the everyday man with the job, the poker enthusiast, who has great instincts, who is not a tournament crusher sicko, rising above it all and final tabling the Main Event. This is what the WSOP is all about,ā€ Vibes tells his audience.

ā€œWeā€™re going to conclude this vlog in Garryā€™s honour. Can Garry run this up and win the Main Event? Oh my gosh, that would be so amazing.ā€

Gates being interviewed by Vibes

Vibes then interviews Gates at the latterā€™s house, presumably on Gatesā€™ day off leading up to the final table. Gates explains that the only poker he gets to play regularly is his $1/$2 local cash game, but each summer he gets to fire a couple of WSOP events.

Boy, was that a good idea in 2019.

ā€œ[Garry] busted in fourth place,ā€ Vibes says at the end of the vlog. ā€œI think it shows an amazing story of an underdog who bested a field of nearly 9,000 people to take home $3M. Itā€™s what the poker dream is.ā€


Check out all of Johnnie Vibesā€™ YouTube content here.


WSOP photography by pokerphotoarchive.com

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How the Sunday Million was won (July 21)

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The definitive account of last weekā€™s Sunday Million (July 21).

We were plenty familiar here at PokerStars Blog with UK poker pro Conor Beresford even before last weekend, having watched him numerous times on the European Poker Tour including most recently at EPT Monte Carlo where he made a deep run in the Main Event to finish 11th.

Beresford captured our attention again on Sunday. Playing as ā€œ1_conor_b_1,ā€ he topped a huge 10,931-entry field to win the Sunday Million and a handsome $112,185.24 first prize.

Conor ā€œ1_conor_b_1ā€ Beresford

While Beresford was the best known player at the final table and enjoyed a big stack for much of the endgame, others provided him a significant challenge. Hereā€™s the story of how the July 21 Sunday Million played out, with some input from a couple of those who came closest to keeping ā€œ1_conor_b_1ā€ out of the winnerā€™s circle.

Beresford builds big stack

Those 10,931 entries built a total prize pool of $1,093,100, with the top 1,934 finishers dividing those riches. Team Onlineā€™s Lex Veldhuis squeaked into the money by finishing 1,918th, and Team Pro Fatima Moreira de Melo likewise min-cashed for $182.11 after making it to 1,512nd.

Also sporting the red spade, new PokerStars Twitch streamer Tom ā€œMajinBoobā€ Hayward made it a little further to finish 1,168th for a $208.56 prize.

Tom ā€œMajinBoobā€ Hayward in action on his stream

Sometime after that the nine-handed final table began, at which point Beresford, ā€œspanishdj1,ā€ and ā€œexculibrusā€ were the big stacks.

A key hand early saw Beresford flop a set of sevens and get all in on the turn versus exculibrusā€™ flush draw. When the river blanked Beresford was the chip leader and exculibrus the tableā€™s short stack, and exculibrus went out soon thereafter in ninth.

ā€œGeraldoCesarā€ next went out in eighth when his ace-king couldnā€™t catch up to the pocket sixes of ā€œjakubc1.ā€ Beresford then claimed the next two knockouts to add further to his stack.

First he took out ā€œMinReraiseā€ in seventh when the latter got his last three-and-a-half big blinds in with Kā™„8ā™  versus Beresfordā€™s Kā™£5ā™¦ and a five came.

Then came a hand in which jakubc1 min-raised with Aā™£Aā™„ and Beresford called with Aā™¦10ā™£, then the flop came Qā™ Jā™ Kā™£. After jakubc1 check-called a couple of small bets on the flop and turn, he check-called all in on the river but Beresfordā€™s straight was still best and jakubc1 was out in sixth.

Pocket nines then failed ā€œsvquitā€ in a preflop all-in versus spanishdj1ā€™s ace-queen, sending svquit out in fifth. Four-handed play continued for a short while with the stacks evening up a bit and spanishdj1 even taking the chip lead away from Beresford for a time.

Big score for BIGHOOPS00

One of the final four was ā€œBIGHOOPS00ā€ of Canada, a real estate agent who had late registered the tournament about 12 hours earlier on Sunday afternoon. Talking with BIGHOOPS00 afterwards, he shared a funny story about how his Sunday Million got started.

ā€œIt was at an open house,ā€ he laughs. ā€œI mean, I was bored.ā€ He explained how at one point a prospective buyer even caught a glimpse of his laptop and asked him how it was going.

ā€œI told him it was going great,ā€ says BIGHOOPS00. ā€œAnd then it ended greatā€¦ so that was pretty funny.ā€

Indeed, the whole day had gone pretty well for him. ā€œI had a couple of big pots pretty earlyā€¦ where it was like three of us all in,ā€ he explains. ā€œBut I was always kind of middle of the packā€¦ around the average. Iā€™d win a big hand, Iā€™d bump up, and then the average would catch up to me.ā€

He continued to grind all of the way to the final table. After having played online tournaments since the 2000s, BIGHOOPS00 was suddenly within reach of earning his biggest ever cash.

ā€œIt was nerve-wracking at times,ā€ he says of the final table. ā€œI just sort of felt like I stayed in my lane a little. I wasnā€™t speeding too often.ā€

Finally at four-handed a hand arose when BIGHOOPS00 was dealt Aā™ 10ā™„ and when folded to on the button jammed all in for a little over 24 big blinds. Alas for him, spanishdj1 woke up with Aā™£Qā™„ in the small blind and reraise-shoved. spanishdj1 then flopped Broadway, and when the turn and river didnā€™t help BIGHOOPS00 was out in fourth.

ā€œI wanted to be more patient, says BIGHOOPS00. ā€œI just wanted the blinds, and it ended up being a mistake because someone had ace-queenā€¦. Thatā€™s my one big regret ā€” that I didnā€™t just raise and fold and get one more position and another $20,000 or something, like huge money, right?ā€

Even so, the almost $43K career-high cash was plenty satisfying for him, his long day ending much more excitingly than it had began back at that quiet open house. And coming so close to the win has made him eager to try again.

ā€œIā€™m mad I didnā€™t win that tournament,ā€ he says. ā€œIā€™m happy about the money, itā€™s greatā€¦ but itā€™s not a win, and I want a win. So youā€™ll see me back there!ā€

manumanu1985 discusses going mano a mano with Beresford

That pot made spanishdj1 the big chip leader, but within a few orbits the final three players were again roughly even in chips.

Then after Beresford built up and spanishdj1 slipped, a hand arose in which Beresford flopped two pair and spanishdj1 a flush draw. The chips went in the middle, the draw didnā€™t come, and spanishdj1 was out in third.

Beresford had a little over 68.2 million to Ievgenii ā€œmanumanu1985ā€ Ostroverkhovā€˜s just over 41 million to begin heads-up play. Like BIGHOOPS00, a fast start to the tournament had helped Ostroverkhov early, and the run good had continued from there to put him in position to win.

ā€œI almost tripled up right away,ā€ explains Ostroverkhov. ā€œThen it took more luck to get to the very end, but thatā€™s usually needed to get to the top spots.ā€

Ostroverkhov had taken note of how when others had wanted to discuss a deal at five-handed, Beresford wasnā€™t interested. The UK proā€™s aggressive play had also gotten Ostroverkhovā€™s attention.

ā€œHe tried to attack the table all the time,ā€ says Ostroverkhov. ā€œAnd as a result, that brought him first place ā€” as he wanted!ā€

Unfortunately for Ostroverkhov, it was just a few hands into heads-up that a hand arose in which he limped from the button with 8ā™ 7ā™£, Beresford raised and Ostroverkhov called, then the flop fell Jā™£10ā™¦9ā™£ to give Ostroverkhov a straight.

Ostroverkhov check-raised Beresford on the flop, then the Qā™  came on the turn and both checked. After the 9ā™„ river Ostroverkhov called off a Beresford bet to see his opponent had Kā™£8ā™¦ for a better straight, and just like that he was facing a 6-to-1 chip deficit.

Soon Ostroverkhov called all in with Aā™£Jā™¦ versus Beresfordā€™s Kā™ 5ā™¦, and after a 9ā™¦7ā™„5ā™ 5ā™£9ā™  runout Beresford had won.

Even so, Ostroverkhov was in a celebratory mood afterwards.

ā€œIā€™ve played for about three years on PokerStars ā€” playing poker is not my profession,ā€ he explains. ā€œBut I have some skills, I think. Iā€™ve played Sunday tournaments from time to time, but I havenā€™t much time to play all day.ā€

After earning his biggest tourney cash ever on Sunday, Ostroverkhov might just try to find more time to play going forward.

As BIGHOOPS00 pointed out to us, while Beresfordā€™s road to victory was fairly smooth, it was nonetheless kind of a topsy-turvy finish in which just about anyone had a chance.

ā€œYou know itā€™s amazing to see the way the guy who is the big chip lead at the table just all of a sudden be gone, and the guy who is at the bottom, the short stack, is all of a sudden big,ā€ he pointed out.

ā€œI think you always look at your stack, but really you just have to think youā€™ve got a chairā€¦ and everyoneā€™s got a chair.ā€

Indeed, as this weekā€™s Sunday Million showed ā€” if you have a chair, you have a chance.


Opening a PokerStars account is easy. Click here to get an account in minutes, and perhaps you, too, can find a chair at a Sunday Million final table.

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Feel the heat: Playing poker in the summer

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Itā€™s summer. Itā€™s hot. The outside is calling. But deep within you can still feel the poker itch. Ever since you developed a love for cash games and tournaments back in the dark days of winter, that persistent hankering wonā€™t go away, even though the sun now shines.

But donā€™t be fooled into thinking that poker canā€™t also be a summer pursuit. In fact, plenty of poker games go on during the summer months, and some of the worldā€™s most prestigious poker series take place when the days are warmest. Hereā€™s a quick look at how to stay playing while spending your time away from the tables soaking up the vitamin D.

PokerStars Mobile Client
Everywhere, all the time

Poker anywhere, all the time

Actually, before we even look at poker tournament series that take place in summer destinations, letā€™s not forget the best way of all to play poker while also catching some rays. The PokerStars Mobile client is available on iOS and Android and brings all the functionality and range of games to your phone.

It means that you can be on the beach, in the garden, on the terrace or even bobbing along the river in a boat and also playing a full range of tournaments, sit n goes, Spin & Gos or cash games at the same time. You can also just practice poker, playing for nothing more than play money. Just be careful not to drip ice cream on to the screen.

EPT Barcelona
Casino Barcelona, Spain
August 20-September 1, 2019

Pretty much every year for the past decade and a half, the entire poker world has headed to Catalonia in late August for one of the most popular stops on the calendar: EPT Barcelona. This is the only location that has featured on every season of the European Poker Tour, as well as during its one year hiatus, when the PokerStars Championship also came to the same venue.

Itā€™s very easy to see the attraction. Casino Barcelona, the host venue for the event, is in Barcelonaā€™s Port Olympique region, a matter of yards from Platja del Somorrostro, which is one of the cityā€™s many municipal beaches. One can go from hotel to casino to ice-cream parlour to beach to ocean in minutes, in whichever order one chooses.

A must for August: EPT Barcelona

Barcelona is one of the worldā€™s premier tourist destinations, combining exceptional food and nightlife with centuries of history. It is a thriving metropolis at the centre of a region of outstanding natural beauty, with numerous sleepy Spanish villages also within striking distance.

The poker schedule is also second to none, with tournament satellites at the casino starting at ā‚¬150, and the ever-popular EPT Cup costing ā‚¬550 to enter. Should your budget be slightly higher, you might be tempted by the ā‚¬100,000 Super High Roller.

Itā€™s not too late to make it to the 2019 renewal. Head to PokerStars Travel to get your hotel sorted.

The World Series of Poker (WSOP)
Rio Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas, USA
June/July annually

Among the many, many things that donā€™t make sense about Las Vegas is the fact that this is a city built in the middle of the desert ā€” specifically the Mojave Desert, where the average summer high is around 100Ā°F (37Ā°C). Not far away is Death Valley, officially the hottest place in North America, where researchers logged a temperature of 134Ā°F (57Ā°C) in July 1913, and set a record for the highest air temperature ever recorded on Earth.

The World Series of Poker (WSOP) swings into Las Vegas every June and July ā€” i.e. during the hottest season in one of the hottest places on the planet. If youā€™re not at the tables, suffice to say the opportunities for topping up the sun-tan (read: turning skin from the colour of milk to the colour of strawberry milkshake) are plentiful. Almost all hotels and condo buildings have outdoor swimming pools, many of which also host hedonistic pool parties. So you can bathe in both cool water while swilling cool cocktails all day long. (Just be sure to drink plenty of water too.)

World Champion: Hossein Ensan

Geography would have you believe that thereā€™s not much chance for beach action in Las Vegas, given the fact that the closest ocean, the Pacific, is a 275-mile drive away. But impossible is nothing here, and no fewer than four hotels have beaches. The best known is probably the Mandalay Bay Beach, whose pools also have waves. But thereā€™s also VooDoo Beach at the Rio Hotel & Casino, which is also home to the WSOP. So it is possible to traipse sand to the WSOP tables if you want. (The other beaches are at the HRH Beach Club, at the Hard Rock, and Tao Beach at the Venetian.)

Of course, your trip to Las Vegas will be mainly about poker, and you never need to look very far during WSOP time for a major tournament or high-stakes cash game. In addition to the bracelet events, of which there are up to nine per day in play, there are tournament series running concurrently at the Venetian, the Aria and Bellagio, and poker rooms all the way down the Strip, as well as off-Strip properties such as the Orleans and the Rio itself. Ironically, the one thing you absolutely must pack when you head to the WSOP is a sweater or a hoody. Youā€™ll roast the minute you set foot outside, but the air conditioning inside Las Vegas convention centres is as efficient as your average refrigerator. Itā€™s perishing indoors, so be well prepared.

Aussie Millions
Crown Casino, Melbourne, Australia
January 4-24, 2020

Crown Casino in Melbourne, Australia, has been hosting the Aussie Millions every year since 1998, making this tournament series older even than the European Poker Tour. Back in the earliest days, it was limit holdā€™em, for a buy-in of $1,000, and attracted 74 players. But like the rest of the poker world, things have moved on since then.

These days, the Aussie Millions is often inked into the diary as a first priority ā€” not least because it takes place in January when the northern hemisphere shivers. At that point, Melbourne is enjoying the height of summer, and the Australian Open tennis tournament is usually going on at precisely the same time. (Many of the tennis pros often stay at the Crown at the time of the poker.)

Melbourne regularly features prominently on lists of must-visit southern hemisphere cities, famed for its variety of beaches, its stunning bars and restaurants, and its peerless coffee-shop culture. It is also renowned as the most friendly city in the world.

As for the poker? Well, the AU$10,000 Main Event (around $7,000) regularly pays its top two more than AU$1 million, and recent winners include Bryn Kenney, Toby Lewis and Ari Angel. There are usually more than 700 runners too. If thatā€™s not big enough, the origins of the Super High Roller scene can be traced to the Aussie Millions too, and its AU$100,000 event started in 2006. Since, 2011, the AU$250,000 buy-in tournament has been a fixture too and has been won by Phil Ivey three times.

Triton Series London
Park Lane Hilton, London, UK
July 31 ā€“ August 8, 2019

Ordinarily, you would never think to include anything hosted in London in a round-up of events recommended for summer weather ā€” even if that event takes place in August. But the British capital is basking/melting in record-setting temperatures at the moment, just in time for the latest Triton event to arrive in town.

This isnā€™t just any old event either. Triton is the Asia-based brand that caters solely to the super high roller end of the poker spectrum, with the equivalent of $25,000 the absolute minimum youā€™ll need to sit down in the smallest tournaments. The centrepiece of the London festival costs 42 times that amount to play: its Ā£1.05 million ($1.31 million) buy-in is the highest ever required to play a poker tournament, beating the previous ā‚¬1m ($1.11 million) it cost to play the Big One for One Drop in Monte Carlo in 2016. Elton Tsang won that, for ā‚¬11,111,111, and the champion of the Triton Ā£1m Charity Event should win more.

The tournament is open to invitation holders and their invited guests only, which means youā€™ll need to do some schmoozing to get in (once youā€™ve found that Ā£1 million you have tucked under the bed). But even if you decide to head to London just to hang out, youā€™ll be in a fine spot. The location, in the Hilton Hotel on Park Lane, is right across the street from Hyde Park, the biggest park in the city. It includes the Serpentine Lido, offering freshwater, outdoor swimming and a welcome chance to cool off.

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