December 23rd, 2007 |
Published in
Live play, Tournaments
Congratulations to Joe Beevers, who won the Poker Million VI tournament on Friday night/Saturday morning and claimed the one million dollar prize after beating a high quality final table that included Liam Flood, Julian Gardner, Howard Lederer, Marty Smyth and Ian Cox.
The tournament was shown live in the UK on Sky Sports. It’s unusual to see a live tournament on television these days and there’s a reason for that. The pace of play over the first few hours could best be described as ‘glacial’, with only three flops seen in the first two hours. Pretty much every hand was taken down by the first raise. Some time after midnight Julian Gardner joked to Howard Lederer that they hadn’t seen a turn card yet. That was over three hours into the tournament. I’d got back from a Christmas party and I fell asleep not long afterwards, so I missed the end. There’s a reason why they edit these things down folks.
Anyway, congratulations to Joe. And a nice job by commentators Jesse May and Roy Brindley, who kept the broadcast entertaining despite the slow pace early on.
May 25th, 2007 |
Published in
Tournaments
For the next seven weekends, Challenge TV (the UK satellite/cable channel) will be showing highlights of each of the rounds of the third season of the European Poker Tour.
Each week there are three shows. One each on a Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
It all kicks off at 11pm tonight (Friday 25th May) with the Barcelona event.
Disappointingly, the production company has decided to persist with presenter Colin Murray for the third season, but at least we get to hear EPT boss John Duthie regularly exposing Murray’s complete lack of poker knowledge with the odd well-timed, withering comment.
I often bemoan the lack of top quality play on British TV (well, not on this blog – not in the last year anyway) so it’ll be good to see some top class European players up close. With three hours of coverage per event we should get to see more than just the final table too.
Full schedule is listed here.
Update: An hour after I published this post, I got an email from PokerStars giving more info. It mentions expert analysis from Greg Raymer, John Duthie and Lee Jones – and there’s no mention of Colin Murray. Okay, I won’t get my hopes up just yet.
April 23rd, 2006 |
Published in
No Limit Holdem, Online Poker, Tournaments
My run of good results in WWdN Eurofriendly tournaments at PokerStars continued on Friday. After driving like a maniac to get home in time for the start (and getting back a few minutes late), I was there until the bitter end again, this time finishing in second place after I won the first one back in February.

Obviously you have to be delighted with such a good result, but I was still a little bit disappointed not to win it again. There were a couple of occasions when I had big chip leads at the final table – double the number of chips that anyone else had when we were down to seven, and more significantly, having 30k of the 55k in play when we were down to three. But perhaps that’s being super picky. I thought I played really well, but just got out-played heads-up by fellow British poker blogger TanOrpheus.
I’m really taking a liking to tournaments with longer blind intervals, so I should probably make more of an effort to look for non-WWdN tournaments with similar blind structures to play in.
As I said, I got home a few minutes late so I missed the first couple of hands at my table. That was long enough for Pauly to bust out though, although I didn’t see quite how he managed it. I don’t suppose he’s going to mention it now that he’s out in Vegas at the WPT Championship either, so if anybody was on that table and saw what happened, let me know. All I saw was the aftermath – somebody saying, “wow, that was a brave call” in the chat window.
Incidently, if I ever come across ‘Jemad19′ at the tables again, dude, I’ll be giving you more than the $1 you asked me and Tan to lend you while we were trying to concentrate on playing heads-up. How anybody has the nerve to just walk in like that at the end of a tournament and ask to borrow money is just beyond me.
As ever though, it was a fun tournament to play in. Thanks again to Wil for setting it up. Somehow, I managed to avoid playing at the same table as him again though. Never mind, one of these days.
April 21st, 2006 |
Published in
Software, Tournaments
All of the cool kids are using Google Calendar these days, and frankly if you’re not then you’re different and strange and people will not be attracted to you.
One of the many good things about Google Calendar is the ability to share calendars with friends or with other users. In fact, Google have used the iCal format popularised by recent MacOSs, so you don’t even have to be using Google Calendar in order to view a calendar created in Google Calendar.
So anyway, a bit of easter weekend boredom prompted me to create a calendar that contains all of the events at the 2006 World Series of Poker which I’d like to share with all of you, so that you too will now be able to locate the lone Stud event in amongst the dozens of NL Hold’em tournaments.
If you’re already using Google Calendar, then the easiest way to add my WSOP calendar is to do a search for ‘poker’ and you should find it on the first page of results.
Otherwise you can click on either of the two links below to get an RSS feed or iCal calendar instead, although I’ve tried the RSS feed in Bloglines and it looks, well… rubbish.

Frankly, given the eight hour time difference between my house and Vegas, I’m not sure how much notice I’ll be taking of the live updates, unless of course the final table takes like three days to finish like it did last year, prompting runner-up Steve Dannenman to admit later that he was happy to give up the $7.5m first prize because he was bored of playing.
At some point I’ll probably do some other calendars for major tournaments in Europe and the US.
If anyone has any trouble with this particular calendar (either finding it or using it) then leave a comment or mail me and I’ll see what I can do.
March 13th, 2006 |
Published in
Tournaments
So the second season of the European Poker Tour ended over the weekend with the Final in Monte Carlo, and despite a European-dominated final table, the winner of the €900,000 prize was 19 year-old American college student and young Bobby Baldwin look-alike (according to Lee Jones) Jeff Williams.
Marcel Luske was an 11/4 favourite going in to the final table, but didn’t have any luck, eventually going out 7th when his pocket 8s were beaten by Marc Karam’s J7 after Karam hit runner-runner 7s on turn and river.
The prize pool of almost €3m was the biggest in European poker history and eleven of the twenty-seven players who finished in the money were British. Best story may be Irish Frequent Player Points qualifier Matthew Davey who went from second to last in chips on the final day to finish 12th, giving him a €33,500 pay day and giving the rest of us hope for next year.