Friday, February 29, 2008

Poker News - WSOP-C Council Bluffs, Day 2: Michael Martin, Bernard Lee Head Final

WSOP-C Council Bluffs, Day 2: Michael Martin, Bernard Lee Head Final
27 players returned to The Horseshoe at Council Bluffs, Iowa for Day 2 of the World Series of Poker Circuit series Main Event, with Howard Wolper leading the pack as play began. Players took barely five levels to work down to the final...

Harrah's 2007 Earnings Report: Regional Clouds and Silver Linings
On Wednesday, Harrah's Entertainment released its Fourth Quarter and Full Year financial results, giving us a window into the largest casino operator in the world and a view of the health of the industry at large. As the rights holder...

WSOP-C Council Bluffs, Day 1: Howard Wolper Takes Early Lead
98 men and one woman took to the felt yesterday at the Horseshoe in Council Bluffs, Iowa to vie for the World Series of Poker Circuit Championship ring and a seat at the World Series of Poker Main Event, with notable players such...

#347 - "Michael Craig is Giving It Away" - Cleavagegate, Loose Ends, and Hope for the Future
Naturally, I didn't get to do everything I wanted for the contest and for FTOPS. I have lots of material on Event #1 about how I played (I busted David Benyamine in the first half hour when I played top...

#340 - FTOPS is a Curse (separate from “The FTOPS Curse”)
So we’re 12+ events into FTOPS and, despite all my efforts to the contrary, I am miserable. Why am I miserable? I’ve played 8 events without cashing. I played extremely well in HORSE and finished about a half hour short...

NBC sued over Deal or No Deal
NBC and two associated companies are being sued in the state of Georgia over claims that their popular game show Deal or No Deal encouraged viewers to participate in a lottery-style drawing that attorneys argue was illegal under Georgia law. That’s according to a story published ��...full article

DONDNBC and two associated companies are being sued in the state of Georgia over claims that their popular game show Deal or No Deal encouraged viewers to participate in a lottery-style drawing that attorneys argue was illegal under Georgia law.

That’s according to a story published today in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Excerpt:

In the past, viewers were invited during each broadcast to play the “Lucky Case Game” by choosing which of six on-screen gold briefcases was the lucky case. Viewers submitted their choice on the Internet for free or through a text message that cost 99 cents. At the end of the program, the winning briefcase was revealed, and the winners were entered into a random drawing. The winner of that drawing received a prize of as much as $10,000.

Buchanan, a Columbus lawyer, called the game an illegal gambling operation. Since the 1760s, he said, Georgia law has allowed losers of such an operation to sue to get their money back.

The court should not turn a blind eye “and let NBC rake in millions of dollars” on illegal gambling, Buchanan said during arguments Tuesday held at Emory University law school.

Whole thing here.



NBC Heads-Up Poker Championship First Round Pairings Announced
Last night the 2008 NBC National Heads-Up Poker Championship pairings party was held at the nightclub Pure, at Caesars Palace. The results yielded some interesting first round match-ups. Online phenom Jonathan 'FieryJustice' Little will...

Poker News - #347 - "Michael Craig is Giving It Away" - Cleavagegate, Loose Ends, and Hope for the Future

#347 - "Michael Craig is Giving It Away" - Cleavagegate, Loose Ends, and Hope for the Future
Naturally, I didn't get to do everything I wanted for the contest and for FTOPS. I have lots of material on Event #1 about how I played (I busted David Benyamine in the first half hour when I played top...

#346 – “Michael Craig is Giving it Away” – The Rest of the Story – Part III
THIS IS A CONTINUATION OF #345 Jeremy confessed “I’m finding myself at a crossroads in my poker ‘career.’ I’m a self-confessed micro-limit warrior and I’m quickly getting burned out. I find myself constantly wondering how I’d do in a major...

#340 - FTOPS is a Curse (separate from “The FTOPS Curse”)
So we’re 12+ events into FTOPS and, despite all my efforts to the contrary, I am miserable. Why am I miserable? I’ve played 8 events without cashing. I played extremely well in HORSE and finished about a half hour short...

#343 - "Michael Craig is Giving it Away" - The Rest of the Story - Part I
I started going through the remaining entries to come up with common themes and point out some that were especially imaginative, funny, or just weird. I got most of the way done. I want a separate post for one issue,...

#345 – “Michael Craig is Giving it Away” – The Rest of the Story – Part II
“With every passing FTOPS, I find myself growing more and more upset that I do not have the supported bankroll to afford such luxurious buy-in tournaments even though I know I can be a strong success in them.” “100 words...

WSOP-C Council Bluffs, Day 1: Howard Wolper Takes Early Lead
98 men and one woman took to the felt yesterday at the Horseshoe in Council Bluffs, Iowa to vie for the World Series of Poker Circuit Championship ring and a seat at the World Series of Poker Main Event, with notable players such...

Women's Poker Spotlight: Dianna Donofrio - Behind the Poker Curtains
Who is Dianna Donofrio? I asked this question a few years ago when I kept hearing her name. Then, when I was finally introduced to her, I recognized her as one of the many staff that runs around the World Series of Poker, frantically...

UK 'Super Casino' Plan Officially Shelved
The on-again, off-again story of the United Kingdom's announced plans for "super casinos" that would rival the largest casino properties found in America has again returned to an "off" state. The controversial plans for a new...

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Poker News - Oklahoma crowns state champion of poker

Oklahoma crowns state champion of poker

Starting on Feb. 14, the Championships featured $300 buy-ins for several disciplines of poker and drew quite respectable fields. The average field was 219 players, topped by the 754 runners that came to the line for Event 2, the No-Limit Hold'em State Championship. There definitely seemed to be something for everyone as Omaha Hold'em, Pot Limit (both Omaha and Texas Hold'em) and even H.O.R.S.E. champions were crowned.

The finale of the two weeks of poker was the $3,000 Oklahoma State Championship, a No Limit Hold'em tournament. Former world champions Berry Johnson and Scotty Nguyen, the Cherokee Casino's sponsored professional players, were both in attendance, as was fellow pro Keith Lehr.

While Johnson and Lehr both were eliminated early in the action, Nguyen stuck around for most of the tournament before being eliminated on the final-table bubble.

The gentleman who took out Nguyen, Fred Roll of Seneca, Mo., turned out to be the story of the tournament. He was a one-man wrecking crew as he eliminated all but one player at the final table and, incredibly, took out three in consecutive hands at one point.

For his two days of work at the Cherokee Casino, Roll captured the Oklahoma State Championship and a payday of $113,680.

"I'm happy I won. I felt confident about the game and I've been catching cards the last two days," Roll offered as an explanation of his success.

Roll was followed at the final table by the following men:

Place
Name
Hometown
Prize
1st
Fred Roll
Seneca, Mo.
$113,680
2nd
Tony Lay
Oklahoma City, Okla.
$64,960
3rd
Jason Mitchell
Broken Arrow, Okla.
$35,728
4th
Leroy Spires
Las Cruces, N.M.
$29,232
5th
Cory Albertson
Houston, Texas
$22,736
6th
Rufus Yates
New Iberia, La.
$19,488
7th
Branden Kennedy
Broken Arrow, Okla.
$16,240
8th
Steve Keel
Norman, Okla.
$12,992
9th
Son Pham
Wichita, Kan.
$9,744

This is the third year that the Cherokee Casino has offered the State Championships, which is one of three large tournaments that the casino offers annually (the Cherokee Poker Classic and the Scotty Nguyen Poker Challenge are the other two).

"I'm proud of our accomplishments in the poker room here at Cherokee and we look forward to what our improvements will bring for the upcoming year," says Poker Room Manager Jimmy Simms. For a list of all the new Oklahoma state champions, be sure to visit www.cherokeecasino.com for more details.


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Poker News - Senators send letter questioning UIGEA

Senators send letter questioning UIGEA

The letter was addressed to U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Reserve System Board of Governors Chairman Ben Bernanke. In it, the two senators express their concerns that the regulations being set up constitute too onerous a burden on the banks that would have to implement the ban on online gambling transactions.

Their letter reads as follows:

Dear Secretary Paulson and Chairman Bernanke,

The effectiveness of any law is reliant on sound implementation. Federal regulations are intended to provide clarity and guidance for those subjected to their reach. The value of such regulations is to prevent non-compliance while minimizing wasted effort, time, and cost by those being regulated. Clear rules also promote interstate commerce by facilitating uniform enforcement.

In this spirit, your agencies have an opportunity to provide additional guidance in the implementation of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 (UIGEA). While the October Notice of Proposed Rulemaking contains certain guidance for the regulated community, it leaves sufficient ambiguity as to what sort of transactions are to be blocked. In failing to provide more detail, the proposed rules would inordinately burden every bank, credit union, credit card company, money transmitting business and payment system in the country, leading to non-uniform compliance and confusion. This issue is particularly important, as most federal and state gambling laws predate the Internet, and are less than specific as to their application to particular practices or circumstances.

The extensive public comments received on this issue highlight the likelihood that risk-averse financial institutions will simply choose to block every transaction that may be interpreted [as] or could resemble gambling, whether legal or not. Knowing that this is not your intention, we write to urge that any final rules contain a list of restricted transactions and instances that are covered by the law and the corresponding rules.

As an alternative, we suggest you consider separating the rules into those forms of activities for which there is settled federal law (i.e., defined by the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (PASPA)) and those that are not. This would allow immediate implementation for known activities, while providing greater time to determine what other transactions are to be captured.

We thank you in advance for your consideration.

Sincerely,

Sen. John E. Sununu [R-NH]
Sen. Pete Domenici [R-NM]

The Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act makes it illegal for people to transfer money from banks and other financial institutions to online gambling sites, essentially tightening restrictions on the online gambling industry in the United States.

The UIGEA was passed in 2006 and has since been in the implementation process as the Treasury and Federal Reserve work together to create regulations and guidelines for the law.


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Stars, Titan traffic growing

Tracking and analyzing close to 20 million hands a month, the MarketPulse section is the most comprehensive statistical overview of online poker on the Web, and subsequently can provide some pretty illuminating numbers.

Case in point: cash-game traffic, which, continuing a strong trend over the last few months, was dominated again by PokerStars in February.

Stars was far and away the cash game leader again this month, with upwards of 21,000 players at peak times and an 18% upswing in traffic volume overall. In total: averaging a massive 13,675 real-money cash players over a 24-hour period.

A distant second overall, but also experiencing a nice upswing of 9% in February, is Full Tilt Poker. which averaged 7,631 players over each 24 hour period - up from 6,976 in January.

Next biggest increase for February goes to the leading room in the iPoker network, Titan Poker, with a 4% increase in cash game traffic bringing it to 5,252 players on average.

Also of particular interest: a significant overall rise in average traffic at both PokerStars and Full Tilt, beginning back in December 2007; both have seen a very strong jump in action, with 2-3,000 more players apiece regularly dropping in for a round at the tables.

Check out the full online traffic report here.

Other numbers of note:

Average pot size (generally indicating looser or more passive games) was up at three rooms last month - Titan Poker, Mansion Poker and Party Poker.

Titan and Mansion in particular experienced fairly big upswings, with the average pot at Titan growing 7% to $26.20 and the average pot at Mansion gaining 6% to $23.10; details here.

On the juiciest games front, Bodog Poker and Pacific Poker still lead the way in low-to-mid stakes No-Limit and Limit Hold'em. Viewed-flop percentages are still hovering around 50-54% for both, although pot sizes on average are much larger at Pacific, topping out at $164 in the mid-stakes games ($1/$2-$3/$6).

#img: phil-ivey_17464.jpg: right: Phil Ivey: Knows how to drag big pots.#

At the highest stakes, Full Tilt, PokerStars and Titan hold down the top spots decidedly, dominating a large percentage of the juicy high-stakes action.

Biggest Hold'em pot won over the last 30 days remains a massive $384,951 pot the one and only Phil Ivey took from online rival seda1 - rumored to be Beverly Hills attorney Shawn Sedaghat - at Full Tilt Feb. 19.

The two had an epic series of high-stakes $500/$1,000 No-Limit Hold'em sessions over the last few weeks, with seda1 decidedly taking the worst of it - esepcially on the 19th, when he came out a mind-noggling $600k lighter in the wallet.

To see a full breakdown of the massive $385k pot, jump to our strategy snapshot here. Or you can check out some of the other huge pots they played in the MarketPulse biggest pots section, where you'll find the biggest Hold'em pots won online over the last day, week and month.

Related Articles:


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#347 - "Michael Craig is Giving It Away" - Cleavagegate, Loose Ends, and Hope for the Future
Naturally, I didn't get to do everything I wanted for the contest and for FTOPS. I have lots of material on Event #1 about how I played (I busted David Benyamine in the first half hour when I played top...

Bodog starts more satellites for Poker Open

Bodog Poker will be hosting a Bodog Poker Open Main Event Satellite every weekday night through March 7, at 8:35 p.m. (EST). There will be 20 seats to the main event guaranteed from each satellite, regardless of how many players are registered.

The main event satellite schedule is as follows:

Date Buy-in
Feb. 26 $50+$5
Feb. 27 $69+$6
Feb. 28 $40+$4
Feb. 29 $50+$5
March 3 $40+$4
March 4 $50+$5
March 5 $69+$6
March 6 $40+$4
March 7 $50+$5

The Bodog Poker Open will begin on Monday with the first of five preliminary events leading up to the main event. The main event will take place March 9 with a $470+$30 buy-in, and Bodog Poker will also be adding an extra $25,000 to the prize pool.

The event schedule is as follows:

Date Event Format Buy-in Added
March 3 No. 1 No-Limit $250+$20 $10,000
March 4 No. 2 No-Limit 6-Handed $300+$25 $10,000
March 5 No. 3 Re-buy $100+$10 $10,000
March 6 No. 4 Pot-Limit $200+$15 $10,000
March 7 No. 5 Limit $150+$10 $10,000
March 9 No. 6 Main Event (No-Limit) $470+$30 $25,000

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Speculation continues regarding the identity of seda1
Seda1, the mysterious online poker player who has been battling it out with Phil Ivey in the largest cash games online lately at Full Tilt Poker, has finally been identified - at least that’s the speculation coming out of Poker King and 2+2 recently. PK ran ��...full article

AKSeda1, the mysterious online poker player who has been battling it out with Phil Ivey in the largest cash games online lately at Full Tilt Poker, has finally been identified - at least that’s the speculation coming out of Poker King and 2+2 recently.

PK ran a story yesterday based largely on a 2+2 thread that identified seda1 as Shawn Sedaghat. Excerpt:

It seems as though the true identity of “seda1″ is likely to be Shawn Sedaghat.

Sedaghat is a wealthy businessman who has been known to play in some high-stakes poker games. He reportedly took millions of dollars off of Ron Meyer, long-time head of Universal Studios, according to this article.

Sedaghat won $29,925 at the 2005 World Series of Poker Main Event, which is the only cash that I can find to his name.

Sedaghat was formerly the President and Chief Executive Officer of Seda Specialty Packaging until the company was purchased by CCL Industries, Inc. on June 16, 1997. SEC Document here

Whole thing here.

2+2 thread here.



PokerStars qualifier wins EPT’s Scandinavian Open
An American is the latest winner on the European Poker Tour, as PokerStars qualifier Tim Vance won the tour’s stop in Copenhagen, Denmark. Vance, a 46-year-old construction company manager from near St. Louis, Missouri, won the first prize of 21,086,400 Danish Kroner (around 830,000 Euros or ��...full article

ept.jpgAn American is the latest winner on the European Poker Tour, as PokerStars qualifier Tim Vance won the tour’s stop in Copenhagen, Denmark.

Vance, a 46-year-old construction company manager from near St. Louis, Missouri, won the first prize of 21,086,400 Danish Kroner (around 830,000 Euros or more than $1.2 million). He outlasted 460 players to earn the title of the tournament, which had a prize pool of about 3 million Euros ($4.5 million)

Vance entered the final table with a huge chip lead, more than 1.4 million in chips to the second-place competitor’s 800,000.

Once the tournament got to heads up, there were apparently hundreds of hands played between Vance and Denmark’s Soren Jensen, with few confrontations. Vance finally won when Jensen shoved into his Vance’s nut flush on the turn. For a look back at the heads up battle, you can check out pokerlistings.com.

For more details on the event, visit the tournament’s Web site.



U.K. scraps supercasino plans

According to a Bloomberg story, Prime Minster Gordon Brown's government officially vetoed plans to build a Las Vegas-style casino in Manchester. Instead, 16 casinos (eight larger and eight small) will be built in the areas that competed to host the supercasino.

The move was confirmed by Culture Secretary Andy Burnham today, who told MPs that there had been concerns over the negative impact of the supercasino.

While the new Gambling Act made the supercasino legal, Parliament's two chambers had been deadlocked on approving the Manchester casino.

Manchester had beat bids from London and Blackpool to build the supercasino as a way to lure £265 million of investment and 2,700 jobs to the area.

Sir Howard Bernstein, chief executive of the Manchester City Council, told Bloomberg, "A regional casino has been a fundamental part of our regeneration strategy."

However, when Gordon Brown became prime minister last year, he expressed his opposition to the plans. He called for a review of the supercasino decision and wanted to find a better way to regenerate areas.

According to an article in InTheNews.co.uk, Burnham said that there is a big difference in scale in terms of gambling opportunities in a supercasino compared to in one of the smaller casinos.

Today he approved casinos with up to 150 slot machines holding jackpots of up to £4,000 in Leeds, Southampton, Great Yarmouth, Middlesbrough, Solihull, Hull, Milton Keynes and Newham in London.

Smaller casinos were approved for the Bath area, Stranraer, Scarborough, Wolverhampton, Swansea, Luton, Torbay and East Lindsey.

Burnham also claimed that the United Kingdom would have the toughest regulatory regime for gambling in the world. The plan is to force casinos to close their doors for six hours a day, to not allow credit card use and to not offer drink promotions involving free beverages.

Related Articles:


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Antonio Esfandiari hired by the WPT to do something or other
The WPT has apparently decided that their model for success relies on fewer tournaments and more hype - at least that’s one conclusion you could draw from today’s announcement that the World Poker Tour has hired Antonio Esfandiari to be the ‘face of the WPT ��...full article

WPTThe WPT has apparently decided that their model for success relies on fewer tournaments and more hype - at least that’s one conclusion you could draw from today’s announcement that the World Poker Tour has hired Antonio Esfandiari to be the ‘face of the WPT Poker-Made Millionaire’.

CardPlayer ran a story on the announcement. Excerpt:

According to the WPTE, Esfandiari will leverage his experience to provide poker tips, tools and tricks for fans and players while delivering updates and information from tournament stops via WPT Live Updates, web videos and online blogs. He will also represent WPT in tournaments and events across the world, including the upcoming WPT tournament at Casino Barcelona in May, which is the first of many regional events WPT will implement in various markets worldwide.

“Antonio embodies the excitement that has become the WPT journey,” said Lipscomb. ”This is the only sport in the history of televised sports that allows you to watch it, dream it and be it. Now, WPT fans and poker enthusiasts can take the journey with Antonio as he leads the way for the next WPT Poker-Made Millionaire.”

Whole thing here.

Pokerati ran a bit on the story here.

Wicked Chops hasn’t run anything on it yet, but they probably will soon. You should go there regardless.



#340 - FTOPS is a Curse (separate from “The FTOPS Curse”)
So we’re 12+ events into FTOPS and, despite all my efforts to the contrary, I am miserable. Why am I miserable? I’ve played 8 events without cashing. I played extremely well in HORSE and finished about a half hour short...

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Poker News - Possible issues with TridX poker network

Possible issues with TridX poker network
A thread on CasinoMeister’s forums raises some concerns about rooms on the TridX network that, if legitimate, should be worrying to any players with funds on rooms connected to that network. The thread details a lack of communication from support, issues with cashouts, and a host ��...full article

TridxA thread on CasinoMeister’s forums raises some concerns about rooms on the TridX network that, if legitimate, should be worrying to any players with funds on rooms connected to that network.

The thread details a lack of communication from support, issues with cashouts, and a host of smaller issues. Excerpt:

(more…)


Poker News - WSOPC heads to Hawkeye State

WSOPC heads to Hawkeye State

But the World Series of Poker Circuit has landed there for its latest stop at the Horseshoe Casino and Hotel, transforming the small city into a bit of a poker mecca, and its 11-event schedule has already seen poker players turning out in droves.

Although there hasn't yet been a slew of star-player sightings, a solid stable of Midwesterners have been putting on a great show during the past week.

Event 1

Monday saw the first event kick off, the $300 No Limit Hold'em tournament. A surprising 492 players ponied up the buy-in for a shot at the top prize of $42,942 and the WSOPC championship ring that goes to each event winner.

Joel Brown, a 22-year-old college student at the University of Nebraska, came to the final table Tuesday with almost half of the $1.5 million in chips in play, only to find himself under attack from the outset. Michael Armstrong wrested the chip lead away from Brown when his pocket jacks defeated Brown's A-K, and he continued to hold that lead as the action led to a heads-up brawl between him and Brown.

Leading by a 2-1 margin, Armstrong looked good to deliver the final blow and take the championship, but Brown wouldn't go away. After 100 hands of play, it looked as if Armstrong had found his moment when, on a 10-7-3 flop, Brown moved all-in with 10-4.

Armstrong called the bet with his dominating 10-6 but, when a four came on the turn, the tide had changed once again and Brown assumed an edge that he wouldn't release.

Three hands later, on a K-J-6-5 board, Brown bet out with an innocuous K-2 and Armstrong responded with an all-in push. Brown reluctantly called but found himself in decent shape when Armstrong could only muster a 7-5 to go against him.

When the river blanked out, Brown had a WSOPC win. The final-table results were:

Place
Name
Hometown
Prize
1st
Joel Brown
Lincoln, Neb.
$42,942
2nd
Michael Armstrong
Chicago, Ill.
$23,051
3rd
Eric Francois
Bellevue, Neb.
$11,454
4th
Don Marchi
Leawood, Kan.
$10,022
5th
Corey Ferger
Rock Falls, Ill.
$8,590
6th
Glenn Wallin
Dixon, Ill.
$7,159
7th
Duane Gerleman
Ridgeway, Iowa
$5,727
8th
Larry Cascio
Bellevue, Neb.
$4,295
9th
Tim Laws
Columbia, Mo.
$2,863

Event 2

Tuesday also saw the second event, the $500 No Limit Hold'em tournament, play down from its starting field of 223 to a champion.

Professional player Danny Walker carried a slim lead into the final table with $203,000 in chips and, from the start, he controlled the play at the final table. After suffering a little hiccup and tripling up the short-stacked Jason Vargas, Walker eliminated Blake Cahail on the next hand to extend his lead until Larry Christensen passed him during three-handed play.

This seemed to spark Walker's competitive fires, as he went on the attack against Christensen. Surprisingly, he took a hand when he moved all-in with a ten high and Christensen could only muster a nine high to compete with him, giving the chip lead back to Walker.

Shortly after hand, on a K-J-6 board, Christensen moved in with K-2 and was crushed by Walker's K-J for two pair, eliminating Christensen in third place.

Heads-up against John Kurtenbach, Walker held nearly a 3-1 lead, but Kurtenbach chipped up to cut that lead to 2-1. During a break in the action, the two players agreed on a chop for the majority of the money. They played on, however, for the title and the WSOPC championship ring, per Iowa law. In the end, Walker flopped a pair with 9-8 on a Q-J-9 board, turned two pair when another jack hit, and filled the gut-shot draw when a ten came on the river. Kurtenbach couldn't show a better hand and Walker pulled down the $500 event at the WSOPC.

The final-table results were:

Place
Name
Hometown
Prize
1st
Danny Walker
Omaha, Neb.
$34,608*
2nd
John Kurtenbach
Omaha, Neb.
$19,035*
3rd
Larry Christensen
Kennebec, S.D.
$9,734
4th
Scott Buller
Lincoln, Neb.
$7,571
5th
Ron Miller
Mosinee, Wis.
$6,489
6th
Steve Spratlen
Lincoln, Neb.
$5,408
7th
Daniel Sindelar
Omaha, Neb.
$3,245
8th
Jason Vargas
Omaha, Neb.
$3,245
9th
Blake Cahail
Columbia, Mo.
$2,163

* Does not reflect deal.

Event 3

Wednesday saw the second $300 No-Limit Hold'em event hit the felt with 374 runners battling for the title and the $33,742 first-place prize. Once they worked their way down to the final table, they came back on Thursday.

Two of the short stacks at the start of the final table were able to get into the game through key double-ups early on. David Andrew outran Josh Shmerl's pocket jacks with K-J when he rivered a king, and Rick Behrendt used an aggressive all-in style to build himself up from the bottom of the leaderboard to the top.

As play winnowed the field down to the final three, Behrendt still held a sizable lead over Shmerl and Andrew but was unable to drive to the victory.

Shmerl took around 450k in chips from Behrendt when Shmerl made two pair with K-5 against him, and it was Shmerl who dispatched Behrendt from the final table when both had pocket pairs. Shmerl's pocket pair was bigger, though, as his kings stood up to Behrendt's pocket tens to eliminate Behrendt in third.

Shmerl and Andrew swapped the lead on several occasions during heads-up action. After losing a pot with pocket eights to Shmerl's pocket nines to even up the chip counts, Andrew began to seize control. He ground Shmerl's stack down relentlessly.

Then Shmerl made the mistake of slow-playing pocket aces, and let Andrew see the flop with 6-5. When it came down 6-5-x, Shmerl went all-in only to see that he had allowed Andrew to hit two pair. When the turn and river didn't improve Shmerl's hand, David Andrew had captured the title.

The final-table results were:

Place
Name
Hometown
Prize
1st
David Andrew
Bondurant, Iowa
$33,742
2nd
Josh Shmerl
Wauconda, Ill.
$17,413
3rd
Rick Behrendt
Ravenna, Neb.
$8,707
4th
Jason Bartholomew
Sarasota, Fla.
$7,618
5th
Amy Miller
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
$6,530
6th
Chris Drew
Omaha, Neb.
$5,442
7th
David Sawyer
Lincoln, Neb.
$4,353
8th Sean Johnson
Chamberlain, S.D.
$3,265
9th
Jeff Hubbard
Lincoln, Neb.
$2,177

Weekend action at the Horseshoe Casino will bring the $300 Omaha Hi-Lo final table on Friday, the $1500 No-Limit tournament on Saturday and the $500 H.O.R.S.E event on Sunday. It's all paving the way for the start of the $5,000 Circuit Championship Event Monday, where PokerListings.com will be in attendance to provide live coverage.


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Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Poker News - Titan sending players to Ireland

Titan sending players to Ireland

The poker site already has players picked from Denmark, Germany, France, Hungary, Italy, United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Serbia, Slovak Republic, Spain and Switzerland to send to Dublin for the tournament.

According to Titan Poker, all 16 players who won the trip to Dublin have been awarded $8,500 prize packages to the Irish Open taking place March 19-24.

The prize package includes entry into the €3,000,000 Guaranteed Main Event, flights, accommodation and a chance to enjoy the beautiful scenery and charm of Dublin.

Ole Langvad Wessby, a winner from Denmark, plans to turn his win into a family vacation. His wife, two children and parents will be heading to Ireland with him for a vacation and to cheer him on.

"I'm really excited for this opportunity to compare my poker abilities against the pros," said another winner, Jeffrey Maynard from the Netherlands.

The Irish Open isn't the only tournament Titan Poker players have been sent to. The poker site regularly awards its players with seats to major tournaments around the world.

It has sent players to the World Series of Poker in Las Vegas, the Aussie Millions and various European Poker Tour events.

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Monday, February 25, 2008

Poker News - Layla Kayleigh grabs the top spot in AskMen’s top 10 poker hotties list

Layla Kayleigh grabs the top spot in AskMen’s top 10 poker hotties list
Any list of attractive women in poker that doesn’t include Shana Hiatt but puts Jennifer Tilly in the #2 slot clearly has some methodological issues, but AskMen’s recently published list of the top 10 ‘Poker Hotties’ salvaged at least some credibility by awarding WPT hostess ��...full article

Layla KayleighAny list of attractive women in poker that doesn’t include Shana Hiatt but puts Jennifer Tilly in the #2 slot clearly has some methodological issues, but AskMen’s recently published list of the top 10 ‘Poker Hotties’ salvaged at least some credibility by awarding WPT hostess Layla Kayleigh the top spot.

Excerpt from AM’s justification for Kayleigh’s win:

Layla Kayleigh is the newest host of the World Poker Tour’s televised circuit. She originally hails from London, England, but now calls Hollywood her home. She’s our No. 1 poker hottie because she combines an incredible body, stunning looks and the ability to charm the world over, which in our opinion is the only remedy for a bad beat at the poker table.


Whole thing here
.



Bodog gives update on patent dispute

Bodog points out in its press release that subpoenas sought from companies that work in conjunction with Bodog will be of no use in 1st Tech's patent dispute.

According to Bodog, 1st Tech brought its disagreement to a company in Costa Rica that provided domain management service for Bodog but was not actually a part of Bodog.

"At no time did Data Entry and Domain Management, S.A. (as it is now known) have a corporate relationship with Bodog," says Bodog in the release.

1st Tech claims the downloaded software used by Bodog customers for gaming violates patents held by the company. When it took its case to court, the company in Costa Rica was served.

When Bodog didn't respond in court, 1st Tech was awarded a summary judgment of $45 million as well as the Bodog.com domain.

The domain now sits empty as Bodog and its various products such as Bodog Poker have moved to BodogLife.com domains.

Meanwhile Bodog is now fighting the summary judgment and reiterates that the company served with the original paperwork in the lawsuit is not a part of the Bodog corporation.

Bodog has been based in Antigua since fall 2006 and had previously been operating there under a license that was obtained when purchased from BetWWTS. Shortly after that, Bodog obtained its own license from the Antigua Gaming Commission, months prior to 1st Tech receiving a default judgment against Bodog's former independent domain management service provider.

Bodog's former domain management service provider is and has always been based in Costa Rica and has only ever provided Bodog with domain management and data entry services, said Bodog in its press release.

The company did say that at one time it did allow the Costa Rica company to use the Bodog name to make their domain management work for Bodog easier, but that is no longer and will never again be the case.

"The company targeted by Scott Lewis and 1st Tech in the patent dispute is not and has never been Bodog," says Bodog Founder Calvin Ayre.

"The company itself has been asset-less since long before litigation even began. No amount of subpoenas issued on the part of Scott Lewis and 1st Tech will make the wrong company the right company or put assets into an asset-less company. At this point they're just chasing shadows."

Bodog also pointed out that Bodoglife.com is in no way connected with 1st Tech's case.

"No subpoena that is targeted at anything to do with Bodog.com should affect Bodoglife.com or .net advertising relationship," said Bodog.

Related Articles:


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Poker News - Hearing date set for online poker ban fight

Hearing date set for online poker ban fight

In a statement he issued on the Poker Players Alliance Web site, Rousso said his hearing is scheduled for April 25 at 11 a.m. (PST). He plans to file his brief on or before March 28 and will provide a copy to be posted on the PPA site as well.

"I hope Washington State poker players will come to the hearing and show their support," Rousso says in his posting.

Rousso, a lawyer and the state representative for the PPA in Washington, is challenging the constitutionality of Washington's online gambling ban. He filed the lawsuit on the first day of the 2007 World Series of Poker Main Event.

He alleges that the state's online gambling ban fails to comply with the Wire Act passed by the federal government, which has never extended criminal liability to the players, whereas the Washington law makes it a felony to gamble online.

Rousso is also accusing the state of imposing a ban on online gambling to protect its own gambling industry. That would be a violation of the U.S. Constitution's commerce clause forbidding individual states from passing protectionist laws against other states' business.

Last year the case hit a snag after the state demanded information, as part of discovery, that Rousso believes is confidential and implicates his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. When the King County Superior Court denied his request for a protective order or other relief from producing the information, Rousso took the decision to the Court of Appeals.

The Court of Appeals returned the case to the lower court in January for more litigation over the discovery issue.

Related Articles:


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The Poker Boom Part 6: The future

The state of online poker

If the UIGEA was doomsday for online poker, today's market shows there is indeed life after death. The total number of real-money players at peak times today, according to PokerListings.com's MarketPulse, tops out at around 70,000. In late 2005 you could find that many players on Party Poker alone, but given the shifts in the market since 2006 the traffic is healthy and only continues to grow each day.

Nearly one-third of today's players (32%) play at PokerStars, which has supplanted Party Poker as market leader. On average, twice as many players play at PokerStars as at any other online poker room. It's worth noting that PokerStars is one of the few privately owned companies in the business; because it didn't have to answer to shareholders, it never left the U.S. market.

Full Tilt Poker, another privately held company that never left the U.S. market, continues to do solid business with about 15% market share. Party Poker's traffic might have dropped off after leaving the U.S., but it still holds steady in third place, with a market share of 12%. At peak times, Party sometimes surpasses Full Tilt's player count, showing its resilience in the new world order of online poker.

Worldwide markets

Much as it was during the immediate aftermath of the UIGEA, the growth of foreign markets will be key to sustaining poker's profitability. Just how much those markets can be tapped will depend on how national governments respond when the poker rooms come knocking.

Germany, for instance, recently passed a law banning all forms of Web-based gambling within its borders, despite warnings from a German court that such a ban would be nearly impossible to enforce. The German government has authorized Internet service providers to block access to sites that allow betting.

Fellow European Union member France has historically banned the licensing of online gaming companies. The French government has also authorized U.S.-style arrests of foreign nationals who run online gaming companies, such as Petter Nylander of Unibet Group.

Germany and France made their moves against online gaming in order to protect state-run monopolies on gambling. If online poker grows popular in other countries or regions where similar monopolies exist, we can expect to see those governments follow suit.

The outlook for online poker in such markets isn't all dark, though. The EU has been working to open up competition among its member states in the online gaming market. If it were to successfully sue a member nation over anti-competitive online gaming laws, an important worldwide precedent could be set.

Then there is the prospect of more governments getting in on the action themselves. Austria recently opened its state-run online poker room, joining Sweden as the only countries in the world to operate such businesses. Finland's culture and sport minister recently proposed a similar venture, pointing to the profits made by online gaming operators as justification. The EU has publicly pondered going after such state-sponsored online poker rooms, so their future is unclear at this time.

The U.S. market

The sheer size of the U.S. online poker market, if it wasn't already apparent, was revealed immediately after passage of the UIGEA, when so many poker rooms pulled out and the traffic dried up. Even today, U.S.-facing rooms tend to have the most traffic despite the damage dealt by the U.S. government.

With such a huge amount of money remaining untaxed and the federal government's budget in the red, it comes as no surprise that the idea of regulating and taxing online gambling within the U.S. has slowly become more popular.

Several bills with varying approaches to online gambling have been proposed in Congress. Chief among them is the Internet Gambling Regulation and Enforcement Act, proposed by Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA). IGREA would repeal the UIGEA and, as its name suggests, implement a regulatory scheme for all forms of online gambling. Other bills seek to protect skill games, to tax online poker and to commission a government study of online gambling.

The last option opens up some interesting possibilities. The American Gaming Association, which represents major players in the casino industry such as Harrah's Entertainment and MGM Mirage, has called for such a study. If the results of a government study such as the one proposed by the AGA were positive, the door could be opened for major American casino companies to jump into the online gaming market - especially if either of the current Democratic presidential candidates were to win the presidency. (Both have come out in favor of the AGA's proposed study.)

For now, the U.S. online poker market remains the domain of the hardcore poker player. The glory days of the early-2000s Party Poker fishbowl might never return, but a shift in the rules of the game - especially given the ever-changing nature of American politics - doesn't seem far away.

Online tournament series

As popular as live tournament series like the WSOP are, the online equivalents are gaining ground. And why not? With no travel costs, more affordable buy-ins, dirt-cheap satellites and the same variety of games as are available live, series like FTOPS and WCOOP are the perfect alternative to major live tournaments.

  • FTOPS

The seventh edition of the Full Tilt Online Poker Series (FTOPS) that has taken place over the last 18 months just wrapped up. If the results are anything to go by, the series is more popular than ever.

The first FTOPS, held in August 2006, featured eight tournaments and awarded a little under $2 million. By contrast, FTOPS VII featured 20 events and the first six of them alone awarded over $3.7 million in prize money.

  • WCOOP

The PokerStars World Championship of Online Poker (WCOOP) comes only once a year, but when it does it brings the noise.

The 2007 installment of the oldest continuing poker series online drew an amazing 40,280 players for its 23 events and handed out over $24 million in cash. Even the lowest first-prize payout in 2007 - $171,400 in the Pot-Limit Five-Card Draw event - was nearly triple that of the 2002 WCOOP main event top prize. The future only looks to get brighter for the WCOOP.

Satellites for live events

Online poker series might be growing in popularity, but the big money is still in major live tournaments held around the world.

Cheap satellites have been a big boost to the popularity of the EPT in its four seasons, and they fueled much of the participation in the first season of the APPT as well. Having so many satellite qualifiers from overseas helped bolster the fields of the new Asian events to respectable levels, encouraging locals to pick up the game and qualify for the next year's installment.

As more live tournaments spring up around the world, their promoters and host casinos will be looking to fill up as many seats as possible with players from outside the local area. Expect to see the major online rooms come on board to sponsor tournaments wherever possible, especially in newer markets, and offer cheap satellites to entice players with the dream of hitting a big score.

Conclusion

Online poker has been on a tumultuous ride, going from cult pastime to worldwide cultural phenomenon to conservative media target in the space of just a few years. With the industry still in its infancy and political forces undecided on how to deal with it, its future is murky to say the least.

What does appear sure is that no matter the method outside forces choose to use in dealing with it, poker's popularity in all forms remains robust in 2008. Tournament fields around the world continue to grow, new tournaments crowd the schedule and new players and markets emerge every day.

Whatever the course poker takes in the future, PokerListings.com will be here to deliver the news.


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Poker News - #335 - FTOPS VII Event #1 – A Surprise Call from Ted Forrest – Part C

#335 - FTOPS VII Event #1 – A Surprise Call from Ted Forrest – Part C
As I was rushing home to make the start of the event, I received a cell call that appeared to be from Roxana, Ted Forrest’s girlfriend. I said hello and was surprised to hear Ted’s voice....

Sexton's Corner, Vol. 33: Archie Karas, Part 3
If you won $7,000,000 on a three-month rush, and stacked up all the cash on a big table, would you then risk it all playing the world's greatest players, including Chip Reese, Doyle Brunson, Stu Ungar, Johnny Chan, and a host...

TV presenter wins

"This is just simply fantastic," said Scott. "I did fancy my chances at the final table but knew there would be some tough opponents."

Joining Scott at the final table after winning heats against fellow athletes and sports personalities were darts sensation Wayne Mardle, snooker legend Steve Davis, former England cricket seamer Gladstone Small, Wakefield rugby league hooker Brad Drew and Manchester United football legend Norman Whiteside.

"Steve Davis had to be the favourite at the start, and I'm just so happy that I came out on top in my skirmishes with him," Scott said. "I've played with him a number of times before, and he's always won. Early in the heat, I was sure he was pushing me around, so I knew I had to get more aggressive, and it worked."

Scott is a poker and kickboxing television presenter. She is originally from northern Alberta, Canada, and moved to the United Kingdom in 1999.

For first place in the PartyPoker event, she received £20,000 - plenty of cash to play a little more poker herself along with presenting the game on TV.

"I'm going to use the money as a bankroll," she said. "But, I will also buy a few pairs of shoes."

The final table finished as follows:

Place Name Prize
1st Kara Scott £20,000
2nd Norman Whiteside £10,000
3rd Gladstone Small £5,000
4th Steve Davis  
5th Brad Drew  
6th Wayne Mardle  

Scott's win marks the first time a woman has appeared at the final table of the PartyPoker Sports Stars Challenge as well as the first time a woman has won.

"Kara's reputation on the poker scene continues to rise and rise; she's on a bit of a roll. Last year, she made the final table of the Women's World Open and impressed there with her aggressive game," said a PartyPoker spokesman. "It's obvious that this win means a lot to her, and she deserves it."

The event played out at 3 Mills Studios, in London, where it was organized and filmed for television by Matchroom Sport. It featured 36 players including tables for soccer players, cricketers, presenters, snooker players, rugby players and darts players.

Last year's winner was snooker champion Ken Doherty, while in 2006 former England rugby union international Austin Healey emerged triumphant. Coverage of the event will be aired in the United Kingdom later this year on Sky Sports and distributed internationally.

Related Article: Sports Stars Challenge Begins Sunday


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Casino de Montreal hosts automated tournament

According to a press release, the entire tournament was run by only four staff members as players took their seats at the 25 PokerPro tables at the casino.

The $225 buy-in tournament sold out two weeks in advance as 240 players wanted a shot in the tournament. In the end it was Mohamed Nadim, an engineering student, who was crowned the champ and given a $20,000 CAD top prize.

Quebec Sports television and radio host Pierre Rinfret took the second-place spot and $10,000 CAD prize. The prize pool was spread to the top 20 players in the event.

"Running a tournament of this magnitude is what we always envisioned for PokerPro," said Chris Halligan, CEO of PokerTek, manufacturer of the PokerPro tables. "We are pleased with the success of this tournament and proud of our partnership with Casino de Montreal. The Quebecois players have embraced automated poker, as validated by the response to this tournament."

Casino de Montreal is home to the largest installation of automated poker tables in the world after debuting its 100% PokerPro room Jan. 18. This tournament gives the facility a second record for largest automated tournament as well.

Both Crown Casino in Melbourne, Australia, and the Four Winds Casino Resort in New Buffalo, Mich., have run PokerPro tournaments with 100 players.

The Casino de Montral currently offers cash games and daily sit-and-go tournaments, plus weekly and monthly multi-table tournaments in its poker room.

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#336 - FTOPS VII Event #8 Preview - Meet Julius Goat (Again)
I’ve got a horse in $120 + $9 NLHE KO FTOPS Event (#8) on Sunday at 14:00 ET. Or a goat. It’s Julius_Goat, the runner-up in the “Michael Craig is Giving it Away” contest. (And yes, I will be writing...

#345 – “Michael Craig is Giving it Away” – The Rest of the Story – Part II
“With every passing FTOPS, I find myself growing more and more upset that I do not have the supported bankroll to afford such luxurious buy-in tournaments even though I know I can be a strong success in them.” “100 words...

Glutton for punishment? seda1 back for more

After a much publicized six-hour session of $500/$1,000 No-Limit Hold'em with Phil Ivey on Tuesday that left seda1 seemingly battered and broken - and $600k in the hole - the two were back at it again last night, going head-to-head in another multi-hour session at Ivey's own personal heads-up Deathmatch table at Full Tilt Poker.

This time though, it looks like seda1 emerged a little less the worse for wear - even taking a $195,000 pot of his own, miraculously hitting a set on the turn despite getting all-in behind on the flop.

#img: lou-diamond-phillips_5228.jpg: left: How far has Lou Diamond Phillips fallen off the pop culture map? Didn't even make the "possible seda1" rumor list. Compare: Kimbo Slice and Razor Ramon both did.#

Nonetheless, although totals for the session were undetermined, Ivey still took the lion's share of the biggest pots - including the biggest, for $251,935. Ironically, it was also after hitting a set on the turn. Except he waited until he actually hit the set before getting it all-in.

Check out all the big pots from the latest session over in the PL.com MarketPulse section, plus the rest of the Top 10 biggest Hold'em pots won online over the last day, week and month.

Also on a side note: the mysterious identity of seda1 was apparently revealed over in the 2+2 forums last night (although still highly speculative and unconfirmed), with much less fanfare than expected.

Why? The unidentified rounder apparently isn't the sports or entertainment star, such as Jay-Z or Gilbert Arenas, the railbirds so desperately wanted it to be.

It's likely a less-than-famous amateur poker player from Beverly Hills named Shawn Sedaghat. Check the 2+2 forum thread for the details.

Here's the hand history for the latest $250k stomper:

Full Tilt Poker Game #5348468724: Table Ivey Deathmatch - $500/$1000 - No-Limit Hold'em - 21:53:32 ET - 2008/02/21
Seat 1: Phil Ivey ($125,967.75)
Seat 2: seda1 ($173,970.75)
seda1 posts the small blind of $500
Phil Ivey posts the big blind of $1,000
The button is in seat #2

*** HOLE CARDS ***

Seda1 raise to $3,000

Phil Ivey raises to $9,000
seda1 calls $6,000

*** FLOP ***

#Jc-#Ah-#9s

Phil Ivey bets $13,000
seda1 calls $13,000

*** TURN ***

#Jc-#Ah-#9s-#6h

Phil Ivey bets $33,000
seda1 has 15 seconds left to act
seda1 has requested TIME
seda1 raises to $143,000
Phil Ivey calls $70,967.75, and is all-in

seda1 shows #As-#Ks

Phil Ivey shows #6c-#6d

Uncalled bet of $39,032.25 returned to seda1

*** RIVER ***

#Jc-#Ah-#9s-#6h-#3s

seda1 shows a pair of aces
Phil Ivey shows three of a kind, sixes
Phil Ivey wins the pot ($251,935) with three of a kind, sixes

*** SUMMARY ***

Total pot $251,935.50 | Rake $0.50
Board: #Jc-#Ah-#9s-#6h-#3s
Seat 1: Phil Ivey (big blind) showed #6c-#6d and won ($251,935) with three of a kind, sixes
Seat 2: seda1 (small blind) showed #As-#Ks and lost with a pair of aces

Tracking and analyzing close to 20 million online poker hands every month, the PokerListings.com MarketPulse section is the most comprehensive, real-time statistical "snapshot" of the online poker industry.

Biggest Hold'em pots with full hand histories; traffic volume and trends across all poker rooms; where to find the juiciest games; statistical breakdowns for all Hold'em limits across heads-up, short-handed and full ring games... all stats you can find now, with more categories being added in the near future.

Data is also updated hourly, so check back frequently. And take advantage of the Real-Time TableFinder to search for and access your perfect game, tournament or freeroll directly.


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#343 - "Michael Craig is Giving it Away" - The Rest of the Story - Part I
I started going through the remaining entries to come up with common themes and point out some that were especially imaginative, funny, or just weird. I got most of the way done. I want a separate post for one issue,...

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Poker News - Report issued on attacks against gambling Web sites

Report issued on attacks against gambling Web sites
More has been learned on the attacks that have plagued gambling and poker Web sites – among them Full Tilt Poker — this week. A Web site called shadowserver.org, which tracks hacker activity globally, said the Distributed Denial of Service attacks are being caused by a ��...full article

FTP logo

More has been learned on the attacks that have plagued gambling and poker Web sites – among them Full Tilt Poker — this week.

A Web site called shadowserver.org, which tracks hacker activity globally, said the Distributed Denial of Service attacks are being caused by a network of hacker compromised computers. The report from the group said many gambling sites were affected, and their own site was a victim as well.

According to a UPI story published at majorwager.com:

The report listed more than 30 gambling sites attacked in the past week, the majority with Russian Internet addresses, but also including U.S. companies and one British site.

“Some were attacked for a few hours and others for a few days. … The desired result of the attacker is to completely disrupt service to the Web site,” reads the report. It noted that several of the sites being attacked were “fully unavailable for the last few hours.”

News and discussion sites for online gamblers noted that several poker sites were hard or impossible to access at various times over the past few days.

Here’s the whole story.

No motive for the attacks has been discovered yet.



Glutton for punishment? seda1 back for more

After a much publicized six-hour session of $500/$1,000 No-Limit Hold'em with Phil Ivey on Tuesday that left seda1 seemingly battered and broken - and $600k in the hole - the two were back at it again last night, going head-to-head in another multi-hour session at Ivey's own personal heads-up Deathmatch table at Full Tilt Poker.

This time though, it looks like seda1 emerged a little less the worse for wear - even taking a $195,000 pot of his own, miraculously hitting a set on the turn despite getting all-in behind on the flop.

#img: lou-diamond-phillips_5228.jpg: left: How far has Lou Diamond Phillips fallen off the pop culture map? Didn't even make the "possible seda1" rumor list. Compare: Kimbo Slice and Razor Ramon both did.#

Nonetheless, although totals for the session were undetermined, Ivey still took the lion's share of the biggest pots - including the biggest, for $251,935. Ironically, it was also after hitting a set on the turn. Except he waited until he actually hit the set before getting it all-in.

Check out all the big pots from the latest session over in the PL.com MarketPulse section, plus the rest of the Top 10 biggest Hold'em pots won online over the last day, week and month.

Also on a side note: the mysterious identity of seda1 was apparently revealed over in the 2+2 forums last night (although still highly speculative and unconfirmed), with much less fanfare than expected.

Why? The unidentified rounder apparently isn't the sports or entertainment star, such as Jay-Z or Gilbert Arenas, the railbirds so desperately wanted it to be.

It's likely a less-than-famous amateur poker player from Beverly Hills named Shawn Sedaghat. Check the 2+2 forum thread for the details.

Here's the hand history for the latest $250k stomper:

Full Tilt Poker Game #5348468724: Table Ivey Deathmatch - $500/$1000 - No-Limit Hold'em - 21:53:32 ET - 2008/02/21
Seat 1: Phil Ivey ($125,967.75)
Seat 2: seda1 ($173,970.75)
seda1 posts the small blind of $500
Phil Ivey posts the big blind of $1,000
The button is in seat #2

*** HOLE CARDS ***

Seda1 raise to $3,000

Phil Ivey raises to $9,000
seda1 calls $6,000

*** FLOP ***

#Jc-#Ah-#9s

Phil Ivey bets $13,000
seda1 calls $13,000

*** TURN ***

#Jc-#Ah-#9s-#6h

Phil Ivey bets $33,000
seda1 has 15 seconds left to act
seda1 has requested TIME
seda1 raises to $143,000
Phil Ivey calls $70,967.75, and is all-in

seda1 shows #As-#Ks

Phil Ivey shows #6c-#6d

Uncalled bet of $39,032.25 returned to seda1

*** RIVER ***

#Jc-#Ah-#9s-#6h-#3s

seda1 shows a pair of aces
Phil Ivey shows three of a kind, sixes
Phil Ivey wins the pot ($251,935) with three of a kind, sixes

*** SUMMARY ***

Total pot $251,935.50 | Rake $0.50
Board: #Jc-#Ah-#9s-#6h-#3s
Seat 1: Phil Ivey (big blind) showed #6c-#6d and won ($251,935) with three of a kind, sixes
Seat 2: seda1 (small blind) showed #As-#Ks and lost with a pair of aces

Tracking and analyzing close to 20 million online poker hands every month, the PokerListings.com MarketPulse section is the most comprehensive, real-time statistical "snapshot" of the online poker industry.

Biggest Hold'em pots with full hand histories; traffic volume and trends across all poker rooms; where to find the juiciest games; statistical breakdowns for all Hold'em limits across heads-up, short-handed and full ring games... all stats you can find now, with more categories being added in the near future.

Data is also updated hourly, so check back frequently. And take advantage of the Real-Time TableFinder to search for and access your perfect game, tournament or freeroll directly.


Visit PokerListings.com

DDoS Attacks Hamper Online Poker Sites
A wave of Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks targeting major online poker and gambling sites has at times impaired the functionality of several of those major sites in recent days. According to a report at the Shadowserver...

WSOPC heads to Hawkeye State

But the World Series of Poker Circuit has landed there for its latest stop at the Horseshoe Casino and Hotel, transforming the small city into a bit of a poker mecca, and its 11-event schedule has already seen poker players turning out in droves.

Although there hasn't yet been a slew of star-player sightings, a solid stable of Midwesterners have been putting on a great show during the past week.

Event 1

Monday saw the first event kick off, the $300 No Limit Hold'em tournament. A surprising 492 players ponied up the buy-in for a shot at the top prize of $42,942 and the WSOPC championship ring that goes to each event winner.

Joel Brown, a 22-year-old college student at the University of Nebraska, came to the final table Tuesday with almost half of the $1.5 million in chips in play, only to find himself under attack from the outset. Michael Armstrong wrested the chip lead away from Brown when his pocket jacks defeated Brown's A-K, and he continued to hold that lead as the action led to a heads-up brawl between him and Brown.

Leading by a 2-1 margin, Armstrong looked good to deliver the final blow and take the championship, but Brown wouldn't go away. After 100 hands of play, it looked as if Armstrong had found his moment when, on a 10-7-3 flop, Brown moved all-in with 10-4.

Armstrong called the bet with his dominating 10-6 but, when a four came on the turn, the tide had changed once again and Brown assumed an edge that he wouldn't release.

Three hands later, on a K-J-6-5 board, Brown bet out with an innocuous K-2 and Armstrong responded with an all-in push. Brown reluctantly called but found himself in decent shape when Armstrong could only muster a 7-5 to go against him.

When the river blanked out, Brown had a WSOPC win. The final-table results were:

Place
Name
Hometown
Prize
1st
Joel Brown
Lincoln, Neb.
$42,942
2nd
Michael Armstrong
Chicago, Ill.
$23,051
3rd
Eric Francois
Bellevue, Neb.
$11,454
4th
Don Marchi
Leawood, Kan.
$10,022
5th
Corey Ferger
Rock Falls, Ill.
$8,590
6th
Glenn Wallin
Dixon, Ill.
$7,159
7th
Duane Gerleman
Ridgeway, Iowa
$5,727
8th
Larry Cascio
Bellevue, Neb.
$4,295
9th
Tim Laws
Columbia, Mo.
$2,863

Event 2

Tuesday also saw the second event, the $500 No Limit Hold'em tournament, play down from its starting field of 223 to a champion.

Professional player Danny Walker carried a slim lead into the final table with $203,000 in chips and, from the start, he controlled the play at the final table. After suffering a little hiccup and tripling up the short-stacked Jason Vargas, Walker eliminated Blake Cahail on the next hand to extend his lead until Larry Christensen passed him during three-handed play.

This seemed to spark Walker's competitive fires, as he went on the attack against Christensen. Surprisingly, he took a hand when he moved all-in with a ten high and Christensen could only muster a nine high to compete with him, giving the chip lead back to Walker.

Shortly after hand, on a K-J-6 board, Christensen moved in with K-2 and was crushed by Walker's K-J for two pair, eliminating Christensen in third place.

Heads-up against John Kurtenbach, Walker held nearly a 3-1 lead, but Kurtenbach chipped up to cut that lead to 2-1. During a break in the action, the two players agreed on a chop for the majority of the money. They played on, however, for the title and the WSOPC championship ring, per Iowa law. In the end, Walker flopped a pair with 9-8 on a Q-J-9 board, turned two pair when another jack hit, and filled the gut-shot draw when a ten came on the river. Kurtenbach couldn't show a better hand and Walker pulled down the $500 event at the WSOPC.

The final-table results were:

Place
Name
Hometown
Prize
1st
Danny Walker
Omaha, Neb.
$34,608*
2nd
John Kurtenbach
Omaha, Neb.
$19,035*
3rd
Larry Christensen
Kennebec, S.D.
$9,734
4th
Scott Buller
Lincoln, Neb.
$7,571
5th
Ron Miller
Mosinee, Wis.
$6,489
6th
Steve Spratlen
Lincoln, Neb.
$5,408
7th
Daniel Sindelar
Omaha, Neb.
$3,245
8th
Jason Vargas
Omaha, Neb.
$3,245
9th
Blake Cahail
Columbia, Mo.
$2,163

* Does not reflect deal.

Event 3

Wednesday saw the second $300 No-Limit Hold'em event hit the felt with 374 runners battling for the title and the $33,742 first-place prize. Once they worked their way down to the final table, they came back on Thursday.

Two of the short stacks at the start of the final table were able to get into the game through key double-ups early on. David Andrew outran Josh Shmerl's pocket jacks with K-J when he rivered a king, and Rick Behrendt used an aggressive all-in style to build himself up from the bottom of the leaderboard to the top.

As play winnowed the field down to the final three, Behrendt still held a sizable lead over Shmerl and Andrew but was unable to drive to the victory.

Shmerl took around 450k in chips from Behrendt when Shmerl made two pair with K-5 against him, and it was Shmerl who dispatched Behrendt from the final table when both had pocket pairs. Shmerl's pocket pair was bigger, though, as his kings stood up to Behrendt's pocket tens to eliminate Behrendt in third.

Shmerl and Andrew swapped the lead on several occasions during heads-up action. After losing a pot with pocket eights to Shmerl's pocket nines to even up the chip counts, Andrew began to seize control. He ground Shmerl's stack down relentlessly.

Then Shmerl made the mistake of slow-playing pocket aces, and let Andrew see the flop with 6-5. When it came down 6-5-x, Shmerl went all-in only to see that he had allowed Andrew to hit two pair. When the turn and river didn't improve Shmerl's hand, David Andrew had captured the title.

The final-table results were:

Place
Name
Hometown
Prize
1st
David Andrew
Bondurant, Iowa
$33,742
2nd
Josh Shmerl
Wauconda, Ill.
$17,413
3rd
Rick Behrendt
Ravenna, Neb.
$8,707
4th
Jason Bartholomew
Sarasota, Fla.
$7,618
5th
Amy Miller
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
$6,530
6th
Chris Drew
Omaha, Neb.
$5,442
7th
David Sawyer
Lincoln, Neb.
$4,353
8th Sean Johnson
Chamberlain, S.D.
$3,265
9th
Jeff Hubbard
Lincoln, Neb.
$2,177

Weekend action at the Horseshoe Casino will bring the $300 Omaha Hi-Lo final table on Friday, the $1500 No-Limit tournament on Saturday and the $500 H.O.R.S.E event on Sunday. It's all paving the way for the start of the $5,000 Circuit Championship Event Monday, where PokerListings.com will be in attendance to provide live coverage.


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PokerListings players make the grade at FTOPS VII

Among the money winners were a few PokerListings.com players. Several players cashed in the Main Event on Sunday, while one player even managed a second-place finish during the series.

The first PokerListings.com player to make an appearance in the money was jwerk, who made it to 52nd place in Event 9, the $300+$22 No-Limit Hold'em tournament hosted by Erick Lindgren.

The tournament had a $1 million guarantee and saw 5,637 players turn out to make it $1,691,100. Lindgren made FTOPS history by winning the event himself, but jwerk made a respectable $2,959 cash for his 52nd place out of the 738 players who were paid out in the event.

Event 10 also paid out for a PokerListings.com player. Of the 204 who cashed in the $1,000+$60 No-Limit Hold'em six-max event, vikihris landed in 194th place for $1,484 from the $1,649,000 prize pool.

#img: ftops-vii-event-15_17148.jpg: left#

It was in Event 15, however, that PokerListings players got their biggest bite of a prize pool. With Yahoobie coming in second for $46,645, and TeMEPyT hitting 21st spot for $1,815, they brought home a pretty big chunk of the $363,000 prize pool in the $200+$16 No-Limit Hold'em six-max event.

On Saturday, 849 players showed up for the $1.5 million guaranteed, two-day No-Limit Hold'em event hosted by Scott Fischman. One of those players was PokerListings player jotaele1, who cashed in 160th place in the event.

The FTOPS VII many players wanted to take on was the Main Event. Hosted by Allen Cunningham on Sunday, the $500+$35 No-Limit Hold'em main event offered a $2 million guaranteed prize pool. By the time the cards were shuffled and dealt, 5,291 players had registered to play, making it a $1,122,500 prize pool instead.

Four PokerListings players cashed in on that event, with herod79 faring the best in 62nd place. The four players who cashed were:

Place Name Prize
62nd herod79 $4,629
160th jakchel $1,719
222nd kingdevine $1,375
256th All In Reed $1,375

For more information about this and other events, visit Full Tilt Poker.

Related Articles:


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Lunch with Jack Effel: Changes to the 2008 WSOP, Part 1
The other day I was invited to lunch with WSOP Tournament Director Jack Effel. I really like Jack and figured he would have a comp so I accepted. I brought my wife along as well, as I knew that he would have to be nice to me...

Update: Bodog domain dispute heats up
It looks like the conflict between gaming / entertainment conglomerate BodogLife and 1st Technology, LLC is coming to a head yet again. This week witnessed two dispatches from BodogLife, a press release and a blog entry from BodogLife owner Calvin Ayre, both of which ��...full article

BodogIt looks like the conflict between gaming / entertainment conglomerate BodogLife and 1st Technology, LLC is coming to a head yet again. This week witnessed two dispatches from BodogLife, a press release and a blog entry from BodogLife owner Calvin Ayre, both of which took a heated tone in addressing recent tactics by 1st Technology, LLC in the ongoing legal dispute between the two parties.

Both the press release and the blog entry spend extensive time driving home the argument that the company 1st Technology is suing, Data Entry and Domain Management, S.A., is not now, nor has it ever been, a part of Bodog. Rather, the company in question in characterized by Ayre as a separate organization that provided some services to Bodog.

Excerpt from Ayre’s blog:

4. And the latest reports that some of our advertising contacts being issued subpoenas? No amount of digging through subpoenas on the part of the patent trolls is going to make the wrong company the right company or put assets into a company that was asset-less since before the litigation started. My advice to anyone getting one of these is to just say you have never worked for Bodog.com (you cannot work for a domain), or the company they mention in the documents and then just throw the thing in the garbage and treat the Trolls with the respect they deserve, ignore them entirely.

5. Let’s also not forget that I don’t know this guy at all, and neither do any of the other many companies he is victimizing. He made the conscious decision to attack one of our suppliers for personal gain at their expense, and in this effort has cost me and a lot of my good friends personally when our domains got dragged into this and he unilaterally shut them off without contacting us in advance. This is not someone I would feel inclined to hold back on as I cover this the way I see it. In my opinion Scott Lewis represents all that is evil in business today and I call them as I see them on my blog.

Excerpt from the press release:

As is clearly stated by the Antigua Gaming Commission, Bodog (now Bodoglife.com on the Internet) has been based in Antigua since fall 2006 and had been previously operating there under a license that was obtained when purchased from BetWWTS. Shortly thereafter, Bodog obtained its own license from the Antigua Gaming Commission, months prior to 1st Tech receiving a default judgment against Bodog’s former independent domain management service provider.

The Bodoglife.com domain was established shortly after the original Bodog domain was lost and has never received redirects from Bodog.com. The Bodoglife.com domain is no way connected with 1st Tech’s case and it stretches credulity for 1st Tech to claim that relationships between Bodog and its suppliers in relation to this domain could be in any way relevant to 1st Tech’s effort to collect its questionable default judgment from an independent, defunct, and essentially insolvent ex-service provider. No subpoena that is targeted at anything to do with Bodog.com should affect Bodoglife.com or .net advertising relationships.


Ayre blog entry located here
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Poker Room Review: Route 66 Casino Hotel, Albuquerque, NM
New Mexico has a nice cluster of poker rooms situated within 30 minutes of the corridor between Santa Fe and Albuquerque. There are seven rooms in all – though some don't operate full time, and only one has a full host of games...

Online poker bill introduced in California

According to Capitol Weekly, the newspaper of California government and politics, Bill AB 2026 would order a study on the federal online gambling laws that ban Internet poker and see if the state could regulate the online game for California residents.

Levine said in the newspaper that the federal law appears to leave room for states to legalize online gambling as long as the player and server hosting the online game are both located in the state. His bill proposes a study to find out if that's true.

He is referring to the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act that was passed as a part of the Safe Port Act in 2006. The Act hasn't been fully implemented yet, but when it is it will effectively ban online gambling prohibiting money transactions related to illegal online gambling.

However, the Act doesn't define what illegal online gambling is. Instead, it leaves that open for the states to determine.

That means a state could potentially allow online gambling for its residents. While there are many issues to work out in setting up an intra-state online poker site, Levine told Capital Weekly the beauty of a one-state system is that the legislature and the governor will ultimately be able to control decisions such as who will be allowed to set up online operations, whether and how tax will be assessed, and more.

"It would be regulated," Levine said in the Capitol Weekly. "We don't know what the state's piece will be, but it will be a regulated entity."

He also believes online gambling operated in a regulated environment in the state would ensure consumer protection for Internet gamblers. He points out that if a player is playing legally on a site that is legal in California, there is recourse if a site refuses to pay a customer.

For now, his bill is just a study to see if this system would even be feasible in the face of federal law. But he did say if it's viable, his bill could evolve into an actual push to re-legalize online poker in the state.


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