This Sunday’s episode of High Stakes Poker (HSP) saw a visibly anguished Daniel Negreanu, a stark contrast to the usually jovial, upbeat ambassador of tournament poker.
Of all the players across the six seasons of HSP, nobody has had the run of bad luck that has left behind the deflated confidence and financially flattened corpse known to the world as Negreanu. Consistently ahead and then always down and out soon to follow, Negreanu’s appearances across all six seasons have served as a reminder that even the best players in the world aren’t immune to the bad cards and statistical improbabilities of the often frustrating and defeating game known as poker.
Last episode saw Negreanu heads up against his chipstack antagonist, Mike “The Mouth” Matusow. Before the hour’s end, the two butted heads all-in for two of the largest pots of the season. Each time saw Daniel reaching into his satchel to grab more chips, a first if not for the history of the show, a definitely for Negreanu.
Running it twice for a pot of $329,200
The $496,800 nail in the coffin
It is really amazing that after losing hundreds of thousands on High Stakes Poker, Negreanu agrees to keep coming back for more. What’s even more amazing is that he hasn’t thrown himself off the penthouse suite of the Golden Nugget.
Through his tenure on GSN, last night culminated Daniel’s inability to win on the show, ever. Add to that losing to quads on three separate occasions after flopping the nuts or owning the best hand pre-flop, and you’re left thanking yourself you don’t have the money to play the highest limits. Gabe Kaplan says it best: “It really is extraordinary how unlucky Daniel Negreanu is on High Stakes Poker.”
Remember this face? It was the ying to Gabe Kaplan’s yang in season’s one through five of High Stakes Poker on GSN. Much to the disdain of the fans (yours truly) and the internet faithful, who protested and even started a petition to get him back in the announcing booth, A.J. Benza saw his contract end along with the last straddle bet of season five. The show must go on, as Freddie Mercury once eloquently sang it, and in Benza’s absence, that is exactly just what High Stakes Poker Season Six did. According to network ratings, the under carriage set remodel, the fresh cast wax, and that new host smell has paid off and in spades (PUN INTENDED!?!?!?!?!?!?!).
The best evening in televised poker has just gotten better, and you won’t have to choose between two shows like the mother at the end of Good Son.
Hellmuth gets felted, Ivey gets richer, more Europeans in one place than the World Cup—High Stakes Poker is back on the Game Show Network (GSN).




