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Tuesday, August 14, 2007

PokerStars doles out cash on Sunday

It was a jam-packed Sunday on the PokerStars.com servers. IG0tDibs, zangbezan24, mk12It and ael1979 were the big winners with plenty of deals and excitement to go around. Play route 66 poker.

Ael1979 (Cyprus) took first place for $65,569 in the PokerStars Sunday Warm-Up although there was a deal made with second place finisher BOKPOWER (Netherlands). Women poker.

The PokerStars Sunday Hundred Grand had a somewhat unusual five way deal that saw mk12It (Australia) take home $12,335 with the four players below him all taking home $7,335.

zangbezan24 (Canada) continued his dominance of the PokerStars High Stakes Showdown and won $50,000 while $tinger (United States) won $30,000. Play $500 match poker bonus.

IG0tDibs (United States) did indeed have dibs on first place in the PokerStars Sunday Million winning $188,176. downosaur (United States) took second place and $98,014. No deals here! Download poker wallpapers.

Here are the complete PokerStars results for Sunday:

PokerStars Sunday Warm-Up
Based on finishing order and two-way deal

1. ael1979 (Cyprus) $65,569.12
2. BOKPOWER (Netherlands) $43,718.40
3. puyablaze (United States) $29,101.44
4. NemoStars22 (United States) $23,404.80
5. mymandi1 (United States) $18,547.20
6. PezPoisson (United States) $14,087.04
7. Mighty_L (Denmark) $10,112.64
8. vic_xcite (Sweden) $6,359.04
9. bid7777 (United States) $3,709.44

PokerStars Sunday Hundred Grand
Based on finishing order and five-way deal

1. mk12lt (Australia) $12,335.81
2. UsedTa (United States) $7,335.81
3. magicmeess (Germany) $7,335.81
4. Insnow (Finland) $7,335.81
5. Dantes_11 (United States) $7,335.81
6. concretemike (United States) $1,852.41
7. seculin (Germany) $1,481.93
8. ThereIsNo (United States) $1,204.07
9. ulalalalalal (Switzerland) $926.21

PokerStars High Stakes Showdown

1. zangbezan24 (Canada) $50,000.00
2. $tinger 88 (United States) $30,000.00

PokerStars Sunday Million

1. IG0tDibs (United States) $188,176.68
2. downosaur (United States) $98,014.14
3. Roberta114 (Finland) $70,533.54
4. roosterfish (United States) $54,961.20
5. flyndra (Norway) $42,006.06
6. EirikS (Norway) $30,097.80
7. PokerSkill (United States) $21,591.90
8. bobbybagpipe (United States) $13,086.00
9. barbar31 (Austria) $8,113.32

Stay tuned to our poker blog for latest updates.

Poker News Source: Poker Listings

Sunday, August 5, 2007

Online Poker: Interview With James 'P0KERPR0' Campbell

Campbell Talks About What He Learned That Took Him to New Heights

Unlike many players’ screen names, which only manage to hold true half of the time (I’m talking to you, BiGsTaK$ and CrackNURAces), James “P0KERPR0” Campbell’s screen name suits him perfectly 24/7. He is among an exclusive group of players & women poker players who seem to show up at the top of every leader board out there, regardless of how the points are calculated, and he is truly the epitome of “poker pro.”

Campbell currently sits in fifth place in the Online Player of the Year (OPOY) standings. He skyrocketed up the leader board when he won the PokerStars Sunday Million tournament on April 15 this year, earning $180,000 (after a deal was made at the final table). He’s made 16 OPOY-qualified finishes aside from that, including three first-place finishes. His total winnings for 2007 from OPOY-qualified tournaments alone come to almost $400,000.

Campbell sat down for an interview with Card Player to talk about the phenomenal year he’s been having and what changes he’s made recently to achieve such success:

Shawn Patrick Green: You’re killing the online poker tournaments so far this year with four first-place finishes in Online Player of the Year-qualified tournaments alone. Does this qualify as your best year in poker?

James “P0KERPR0” Campbell: This is by far the best year. In reality, nothing’s even come close to what has happened this year. I started playing about three and a half years ago, and last year I started having success and people started knowing who I was a little bit when I started winning a few smaller tournaments. But this year has just been a breakout year as far as online success. I won the Sunday Million, the $1K Monday at Full Tilt a couple of times, the $500 buy-in at UltimateBet a couple of times, and then tons of other tournaments from there.

SPG: Have you changed your game in any ways, recently, that could have spurred your success?
JC: Yeah, absolutely. I’ve done a lot more research and studying of the game recently. In the couple of months before the World Series I joined CardRunners and that helped out a lot. I watched a lot of those videos by GreenPlastic and SBRugby. They patched up a lot of holes in my game as far as calling with hands out of position and spewing chips by playing that way. I’m also controlling the pot a lot better. So, my game has really evolved tenfold over the last year or so. Nothing in my past has come even close to this year.
SPG: And you were already a good player before. You may not have been an “amazing” player, but you were certainly a good player. So, you’re saying that sites like CardRunners helped you even though you were already pretty good, anyway?

JC: Yeah, exactly. I mean, I definitely had some success before this year, obviously. CardRunners absolutely patched up a lot of leaks in my game over the past year and it’s helped out a lot. Most of my buddies kind of got started playing poker around the same time that I did, so I never really had anyone to learn from. I’d never really been buddy-buddy with any of the online pros or talked to them on AIM and all of that stuff that a lot of them do to improve their own games. So, I never really had anyone to talk about the game with and rely upon for advice, and CardRunners actually gave me something like a different person’s mindset on how they think and their thought processes and all of that. So, it definitely helped out a lot.

SPG: You’re currently fifth in the OPOY race, 2,328 points behind Sorel “Imper1um” Mizzi. How attainable is that top spot?

JC: It’s definitely attainable, especially with the Full Tilt Online Poker Series and the WCOOP [PokerStars World Championship of Online Poker] coming up. If you have one big score in any of those big events, it’ll jump you right up there. But Sorel is a great player; he’s honestly, by far, the best online tournament player there is. I don’t think it’s really a question. I think lilholdem954 [Chad Batista] and I are close behind, and atimos (or Jovial Gent, whatever you want to call him) are close behind, but Sorel is just in a different class when it comes to online poker tournaments. He will be tough to catch.

SPG: Yeah, that’s for sure. Well, he’s ahead by a lot of points, but people have been having big spurts of cashes, lately. Lilholdem954, for instance, had a sick run last month that pushed him all the way into sixth place, so …
JC: Right, exactly. Same thing with him [lilholdem954], he’s another really good player. If anything, you can go on a heater for a couple of months … he’s [Sorel Mizzi] definitely not out of the picture, but I definitely want that number one spot, so I’ll give him a run for his money. It will be tough to catch him because I don’t see him slowing down anytime soon. If I get a nice heater at the right time, you never know, especially with the next month of poker ahead of us.

SPG: You had two cashes so far in this year’s World Series, an 87th-place finish [for $6,667] in a $1,500 no-limit hold’em event and a 480th place [$25,101] in the main event. How many events did you played in?

JC: I played in about five or six and then the main event, so six or seven events, total. I was happy with my play, for the most part. I definitely changed my perception on the World Series from the year before. Before I would play almost too tight from what I’m accustomed to playing and not really gambling or trying to pick the spots where you have to in order to win the tournament; I was playing more to just move up the ladder. This year, I really had some huge pots early on in just about every tournament I was in where it could make me or break me, and things didn’t end up going my way. In the main event I had a few things go my way and then one big pot at the end that didn’t, but hopefully I’ll be able to burst into the live poker scene within the next year. I plan on playing a lot of live events in the next year or so.

SPG: Do you still prefer playing online poker to live, then, or would you rather play live, now?

JC: I still like playing online a lot more. Online you have the convenience of staying at your house and you don’t have to go anywhere. And you can just play so many more games at once, so you get such a better value for your money, whereas you can play for a couple of days in a [live] $10K buy-in main event and not make the money. So, with the financial aspects and as a preference for my personal life, I like online. It’s nice to be able to lounge around in your sweat pants, or whatever, and open up your computer and play as much as you want.

SPG: Turbo tournaments are becoming increasingly popular, lately. Do you play in any of those?

JC: Oh yeah, I love turbo tournaments. I don’t play them too often, though. I mostly just play the bigger-buy-in tournaments online, now. I feel comfortable buying into all of those, and I don’t really mess around with the smaller tournaments. But there’re a few good turbo tournaments that I like to play in. It’s fun because it’s all about your position rather than your cards. Basically, it turns into a lot of shoving and reshoving or stealing and restealing, so it makes it fun and entertaining, to say the least.

SPG: What kind of advice can you give for those tournaments?

JC: You have to play turbos a lot more aggressively than regular tournaments, obviously, because the blinds go up so much more quickly. In the turbos you have to do a lot more restealing because the blinds end up getting so big and people end up raising so much in position that those resteals become that much more valuable. In order to win any of those turbos, you’re going to have to make a lot more resteals, regardless of what your cards look like.

SPG: What do you think about the notion of defending your big blind?

JC: I was never really that big on protecting my big blind, actually. Some players are really bad about it and if they have chips in the pot they don’t like to fold. But usually if you’re in the big blind, you’re playing your hand out of position, and that’s probably the biggest leak in my game that CardRunners ended up showing me. I now fold a lot more hands out of the blinds just because it’s so hard to play a hand out of position. You need miracle flops to end up being profitable in that situation, so I’m not a big defender of my blinds, really at all. Play route 66 poker.

SPG: There’s actually a lot of stuff like that, where it’s a “move” that’s become so common that you almost shouldn’t do it anymore. Do you agree with that?

JC: I agree with that, absolutely. I think the button or cutoff raise are becoming so much more apparent, and everyone is basically raising almost any two cards from those two positions. And people are constantly restealing out of the blinds. I mean, I will repop out of the blinds, but I’m never one to just call and play a hand out of the position. I’d rather just make a reraise, or resteal if you want to call it that, and take down the pot without having to see the flop rather than see the flop out of position and playing the hand like that.

SPG: When I started playing poker, the big thing was to raise on the button with pretty much anything, and then that evolved into raising on the button or the cutoff because the button-raise was too obvious. Is it just a natural progression? Is it pretty much worthless to do either, at this point [laughing]?

JC: Oh, yeah. The new thing is that under the gun is like the button, now, they say. Everyone is raising from under the gun with suited connectors or anything just to make it look more powerful than it is. And people are under-the-gun stealing, believe it or not, with suited connectors or really any two cards. So, the game is definitely evolving on a yearly or even monthly basis. It constantly changes, so you need to be constantly changing your own game and switching things up so that your opponents don’t have any reads on you.

SPG: Do you think heads-up play or a full table requires more skill to play well at?

JC: Definitely heads-up play. I mean, it’s just such a different game. Full-table play is pretty standard. I love playing shorthanded because that’s when you really get to see more about the game. It’s a lot more betting, a lot more aggression, and a lot better of a game. And that goes even further for heads up. I’ve actually really worked a lot on my heads-up game because that’s really where the money’s at, even in multitable poker tournaments. For instance, the Sunday Million that I won a few months back was $200,000 for first and $100,000 for second, and that’s a lot of money if you can get yourself into that situation. So, if you wind up winning tournaments, it ends up being almost double what you’d get for second place. I’ve been fortunate this year, especially, to be able to close tournaments. If I get to a final table, I’m probably in a pretty good position to win it. That’s probably been my greatest asset this year.

SPG: So you don’t think there’s any merit to the argument that when it’s heads up it’s just one person, so you only have to get reads on or spot patterns for one person, whereas with 10 people you have to keep your eye on the entire table and notice everything?

JC: Heads up you’re definitely playing the person a lot more than you’re playing the cards. At a 10-person table you can only do so much because there are so many hands out there that eventually somebody will have a hand. When you’re playing heads-up it’s all about aggression and playing the player. A lot of times, when you’re playing heads up, your cards really don’t make that much of a difference, whereas at a 10-man table you have to really play your cards and you can’t get too out of control. In heads up you can pretty much do anything you want. Download poker wallpapers.

SPG: Do you think it makes sense to buy into a satellite for a tournament if you could buy into it directly comfortably within your bankroll, or are they just a waste of time and money at that point?

JC: No, I actually love the satellites. Even before I first started coming up playing poker, I had a smaller bankroll and satellites were always great and I was always playing satellites into the Sunday majors across the board on all of the sites. Now I feel comfortable enough, obviously, where $200, $500, or $1,000 buy-in tournaments don’t really take too big of a hit on my bankroll, so I don’t play in those satellites anymore. But I still always satellite into the World Series events or, for instance, into the $2,500 WCOOP or the $2,500 FTOPS events coming up. And then, obviously, all of the $5K or $10K buy-in live tournaments, I try to satellite into those before I buy in directly. But, worst comes to worst, I feel comfortable enough buying directly into the $10K tournaments, now.

SPG: All right, well thank you for your time, James. I appreciate your talking with me.

Poker News Source: Card Player

Thursday, August 2, 2007

World Poker Tour "Legends of Poker" Event Begins Tomorrow

The WPT "Legend's of Poker" event begins tomorrow and is one of the tournaments featured in the Bodog Player's Choice package. (Bodog Beat Image)

The preliminary events for the World Poker Tour's "Legends of Poker" event begin tommorrow at the Bicycle Casino in Los Angeles. The $10,000 buy-in championship event begins on August 25th and will culminate with the televised WPT final table. Women poker players.

Last year's champion Joe Pelton beat out a 460-person field and a final table that included big name poker pros and previous WPT champions Hoyt Corkins and Scotty Nguyen. For the win he took home an impressive $1,602,670 first-place prize. Play route 66 poker.

This year's tournament should draw the same numbers and have a similar prizepool. So, if you want the opportunity to become the next WPT millionaire, head over to Bodog.com where you can qualify to win a "Player's Choice" package.

Online poker qualifier winners of these packages are given the choice to enter any land-based poker tournament with a $10,000 or less buy-in, including the "Legends of Poker" event at the Bicycle Casino, and receive cool gear, bonus contracts and incentives to play while they kick back with first-rate service, hang out with poker legends and bask in TV celebrity.

Poker News Source: Bodog Poker

Sunday, July 29, 2007

Give them all a hand

Computers can defeat man at chess - but not poker. Yet, writes John Markoff.

In a match of wits between man and machine last week, a software program running on an ordinary laptop computer played a close poker tournament but lost to two well-known human poker professionals.

The contest, which was billed as the "First Man-Machine Poker Championship" and which offered prize money totalling $US50,000 ($57,000), pitted Phil Laak and Ali Eslami against a program written by a team of artificial intelligence researchers from the University of Alberta. They gave it a name probably no gambler would ever choose: Polaris.

Poker is thought to be a more difficult challenge for software designers than, say, chess. Computer scientists have to develop different strategies and algorithms to deal with the uncertainties introduced by the hidden cards held by each player, as well as difficult-to-quantify risk-taking behaviour such as bluffing. Play $500 match poker bonus.

Jonathan Schaeffer of the Canadian university's computer science department launched the poker-playing research effort 16 years ago. He said the advances being made in the development of poker-playing software are likely to be more applicable in the real world than chess research.

The version of poker used in the match last Monday and Tuesday at the annual meeting of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence was Texas Hold 'Em heads-up no-limit poker, a two-player game. After four rounds of 500 hands each, lasting about four hours, the player with the most money would be the winner.

The contest had to be designed to accommodate the computer. To counter the luck of the draw, the human players & women poker players were put in separate rooms. The hand dealt to the human was identical to the hand dealt to the computer.

The format also eliminated the aspect of conventional poker called the tell - the subtle physical clues that may permit a player to make accurate guesses about an opponent's cards.

The human team reached a draw in the first round, even though their total winnings were slightly less than those of the computer. The match rules specified that small differences were not considered significant because of statistical variation. On Monday night, the second round went to Polaris. Play online poker.

However, during the third round on Tuesday afternoon, the human team rebounded when the Polaris team's shift in strategy backfired. They used a version of the program that was supposed to add a level of adaptability and "learning". Play route 66 poker.

Laak and Eslami won the final round handily.

Poker News
Source: The Age

Monday, July 23, 2007

Everest Poker Announces Location for Everest Poker Avalanche Tournament Final Round

Everest Poker www.everestpoker.com today announced the final location of its months-long Everest Poker Avalanche tournament. The Everest Poker Avalanche, a $1,000,000 guaranteed hold 'em poker tournament that began several months ago, will reach its climax aboard a cruise ship in the Mediterranean.

"We really wanted to make the last round of the game special, and this certainly fits the bill," said Jonathan May, Everest Poker's property manager. "I can't imagine a better way to finish a long tournament like this.

The 10 players and their guests will cruise in style from Athens, Greece to Turkey, stopping at islands such as Mykonos and Rhodes. The final table will be played in the casino on board, which has been reserved solely for this event. The final winner of the Avalanche tournament is guaranteed at least $200,000. Download poker wallpapers.

Spanning nine months, the Everest Poker Avalanche involves both online poker play as well as live poker games. The tournament features a three-round structure that allows players & women poker players at all levels to join in. Round 1 satellites are designed for players looking for little up-front risk: buy-ins are $3+.30 or $11+1. Round 2 satellites are ideal for players that are more confident in their ability and wish to save time - the buy-in is $56+5.

For players with big bankrolls that want to skip right to the top, Everest Poker is offering two choices: monthly Round 3 satellite events such as the event being held on 30 June, 2007 with a $530+30 buy-in as well as direct entrance to the Online Avalanche Finale for $5000+300. The Avalanche Online Final will be held on September 15, 2007, at 15:00 GMT, and will stop when ten players remain. These ten finalists will win a trip to play the live final table on our Mediterranean cruise, where their share of $1 million awaits them. Stay tuned to our poker blog for more updates.

Poker News Source: eMedia Wire

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

College dropout Khan cashes in, proves doubters wrong

Hevad Khan goes by the nickname "RaiNKhaN," which he adapted from a violent video game and jazzed up with extra capital letters.

"I got 'Rain' from Mortal Combat. One of the characters is named Rain. … And Khan is my last name, so I just kind of combined then together," says the 22-year-old college dropout from Poughkeepsie, N.Y.

Now, Khan can be called something else, a finalist at the World Series of Poker's Main Event. He made the nine-player final table that began play Tuesday at the Rio Hotel and Casino, and he was among six survivors still in contention for the top prize of $8.25 million.

But just over four hours into the final table, Khan became the fourth player at the final table to be eliminated by chip leader Jerry Yang. Four contenders remained with Yang holding a massive stack of more than $70 million in chips.

Yang held a pair of jacks. Khan went all in with the ace and queen of spades. On the last of five community cards, Khan need an ace or queen to win. He didn't get it. Play route 66 poker.

"I guess it's just his (Yang's) day. What are you going to do? I wish the best of luck to all of them," said the smiling Khan, who wins $956,243 for placing sixth.

"You can't complain. Most people lose money at the end of the trip."

At 6 feet 5 with a neatly trimmed beard, he has danced around and shouted in joy after winning pots. Eliminated a year ago on his first day in his try at the World Series, he's been enjoying every moment of this run in a tournament that began with 6,358 players & women poker players.

"I can tell you man, all the days leading up to today, I had a lot of intense situations. I played with great players," he said before the start of play Tuesday.

"All of my experiences kind of combined into a fearless kind of attitude that I had to finish strong. I'm just thankful that I managed to make the final table … as opposed to getting something like 15th or 16th. And lot of really good players weren't able to make it." Play $500 match poker bonus.

Khan attended the State University of New York, Albany, for 3½ years before leaving to concentrate on poker. A half dozen of his college buddies are here to cheer him on.

"It's been my dream to come out here," he said. "I've had the people back home who had doubted me, who said he's making a bad choice by quitting school. But I'm so focused on what I believe in. It doesn't matter if it's poker, if it's professional back flipping or jumping jacks, I'm going to put my mind to it. I'm not going to miss a back flip."

Khan honed his game playing online poker — extensively. He says he has a computer screen monitor and that he's regularly played more than 30 poker games at once. He says his all-time high is 43 games at once.

But this is face-to-face poker. Khan's strategy?

"I don't have a strategy. I'm going to go into this preparing and ready to adapt to the situation that's at hand," he said. "I'm not going to go out there directly with a plan of action because the way things have been going, how good these players are, I really feel like if I set a plan of action they're so good that they may be able anticipate it." Stay tuned to our poker blog for more updates.

Poker News Source: USA Today

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

How Poker's World Series Purse Went From $700K to $12 Million

Anthony Holden is a British author and classical music critic who has written biographies of Shakespeare, Tchaikovsky, Laurence Olivier and Prince Charles. He's also a poker addict.

Almost two decades ago, Holden spent a year as a professional poker player and turned the experience into a charming memoir called ``Big Deal.'' Now he's written an equally entertaining sequel, ``Bigger Deal: A Year Inside the Poker Room,'' which chronicles the game's explosive growth into a worldwide phenomenon on television and the Internet. Play route 66 poker.

When Holden played in his first World Series of Poker in 1988, 167 players & women poker players competed for the winner's purse of $700,000. In last year's main event, former Hollywood talent agent Jamie Gold outlasted a field of 8,773 to capture the top prize of $12 million.

An estimated 80 million people play poker regularly, making it the world's most popular game.

``Where once it was a seedy, disreputable pursuit peopled by shifty characters, poker is now not just respectable but fashionable, even chic,'' Holden writes in his breezy, ingratiating style.

The game has attracted a slew of celebrities, including James Woods, Tobey Maguire, Ben Affleck, Leonardo DiCaprio and Matt Damon, who starred in the classic 1998 poker film ``Rounders.'' But Holden is more interested in professionals with colorful nicknames like Chris ``Jesus'' Ferguson and Mike ``The Mouth'' Matusow, plus entrepreneurs such as World Poker Tour founder Steve Lipscomb, who turned the game into a hot TV commodity by developing a camera that shows a player's hidden ``hole'' cards. Download poker wallpapers.

Moneymaker's Millions

Holden also tells the improbable story of Chris Moneymaker, a Tennessee accountant who won the $2.5 million first prize at the 2003 World Series of Poker. The suitably named champion gained entry into the event by winning an online tournament -- a seat in the World Series usually costs $10,000 -- and then shocked everyone by winning, triggering an online poker boom of players hoping to duplicate Moneymaker's fairy-tale success.

Moneymaker and his online brethren have dramatically changed the game. They tend to use more aggressive -- some would say reckless -- tactics and their sheer numbers have ballooned the World Series into an unpredictable event that is now often won by a relative unknown.

``The colossal impact on the game of online poker can be summarized in one terrifying statistic,'' Holden writes. ``A teenager anywhere in the world, unable to play (legally) in an American casino until he or she is 21, can play more hands in six months than septuagenarian Doyle Brunson, the world's most respected player, has in his lifetime.''

Holden's exploration of the new poker world takes him to Yale for a ``lecture'' on the game, the Caribbean for a poker cruise, a fantasy poker camp run by brainy professionals Howard Lederer and his sister Annie Duke, and poker tournaments in Monaco, Barcelona, Atlantic City and, of course, Las Vegas.

The book bogs down at times, especially in Holden's chapter on the obscure World Cup of Poker. More often than not, though, ``Bigger Deal'' pays off like a royal flush.

``Bigger Deal'' is published by Simon & Schuster (291 pages, $26.)

Poker News Source: Bloomberg

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