Posted by Ray Finkle on 23rd August 2010

I could just type out the name “Phil Ivey”, leave the rest of this post blank, and spare you the dead horse I’m about to beat going on about just how incredible a player he is.

For starters, he became the all-time leading tournament money player last year, edging out Daniel Negreanu after a storybook year at the Aussie Millions and World Series of Poker (WSOP), sitting currently with $13,531,757.

Secondly, the graph of his tracked cash game play looks like a waypoint set from Texas to New England. In just over three years at internet poker’s highest stakes, Ivey has won $19,044,447. These numbers don’t factor in the little known heads-up desecration where he filleted Texas billionaire Andy Beal like an Angus steer.

Beal was a man who struck it rich in banking and real estate. He was a certifiable mathematical genius and had a sweet tooth for poker. Between 2001-2006 at the Wynn in Las Vegas, he played limit hold’em heads-up matches with The Corporation, a syndicate formed of some of some of the greatest pros to have played the game: Doyle Brunson, Chip Reese, Todd Brunson, Ted Forrest, Jennifer Harman, Howard Lederer, Gus Hansen, Barry Greenstein, Chau Giang, Johnny Chan, Minh Ly, David Gray, Hamid Dastmalchi, among others. On May 13th, 2004, Beal earned what has been reported as the largest single day score in poker cash game history, winning $11.7 million from Reese, Harman, Hansen, and Dastmalchi. The battle was far from over.

Beal would return in 2006, claiming the entire $10 million stake The Corporation assembled from the Vegas community.  Much like a pool hustler pulling out a custom cue from its case after bombing his first couple games, The Corporation went to their bags and pulled out Ivey. The edge Beal brought to the games was agreeing upon limits that even the biggest name pros had rarely seen, leaving some of the most seasoned players unnerved. Starring into the face of $30,000/60,000 limits, which were later raised to $50,000/100,000, Ivey barely blinked. He would go on to take $16.6 from the billionaire, winning back The Corp’s initial $10 million and seeing himself well in the black. The end result was that of a JV basketball team taking on the Harlem Globetrotters. Beal has since to return back to Vegas.

Cash games aside, his tournament accolades are equally stunning. Ivey currently owns the record for most World Poker Tour (WPT) final tables, having made nine final tables out of his 11 cashes. To anyone else this would be a miraculous feat, but it just leaves you thinking “Pshhh…that crazy Phil Ivey!” His streak of seven final tables without a victory would come to an end in 2008 at the L.A. Poker Classic Championship, when he took down the trophy and $1,596,100 more to add to the money pit.

While this quickly became an article that should have been titled “Amazing Feats in Poker History”, I’m about to bring the satellite back into the WSOP orbit. Of all of his amazing achievements, two of them manage to stand out somehow on a laundry list already written in gold, underlined in platinum, and kept in a frame made of diamonds and bald eagle scalps.

Ivey is one of only four players to have had a three-bracelet year as I had mentioned in a previous “Amazing Feats in WSOP History”, joining the ranks of Ted Forrest, Phil Hellmuth, and Jeffrey Lisandro. Coupled with the fact that last year, he won two more bracelets ($2,500 no-limit 2-7 draw lowball; $2,500 split omaha hi/lo & 7 card stud hi/lo) AND final tabled the Main Event, he essentially leaps light years ahead of his three aforementioned peers, and unsurprisingly, sits alone in the glory of another incredible poker achievement.

Without a doubt, what is arguably Ivey’s finest accomplishment and can easily be considered the all-time leading achievement in WSOP Main Event history are his four top 25 finishes over the past decade of the $10,000 championship. The average Joes that dish out the buy-in watching their favorite pros on TV can only hope to cash in it. The pros playing for all the dead money can only expect to make the bubble. Nobody has done it quite like Ivey. He’s placed the following years, earning the specified amounts out of the following fields:

  • 23rd – 2002 – $40,000 – 631 players
  • 10th – 2003 – $82,700 – 839 players
  • 20th -  2005 – $304, 680 – 5619 players
  • 7th – 2009 – $1,404,002 – 6494 players

What else can be said that hasn’t already? Ivey is poker’s greatest export and has drastically increased its gross domestic product (GDP) with his glaring stare, fearless demeanor, innate abilities, and by being a man driven by the competition as much as he is the action. Records and numbers are meant to be broken and surpassed, but when people look back on the annals of poker, there will always be only one Phil Ivey.

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Posted by Ray Finkle on 10th August 2010

The 41st Annual World Series of Poker Main Event coverage kicks off tonight at 8 p.m. and 9 p.m. EST on ESPN. Lon McEachern and Norman Chad, poker’s Statler and Waldorf, call the play-by-play as cameras take us through the second largest field in Main Event history: a staggering 7,319 players vying for a first prize of $8,944,138.

The 2010 season is already off to a great start right out of the gates, seeing the year-over-year ratings increase 15% during the season-opening broadcast of the inaugural $50,000 Poker Player’s Championship. A stacked list of players comprised the final table, battling for the $1,559,046 first place prize and Chip Reese Memorial Trophy, headlined by brothers Michael and Robert Mizrachi. The duo marked the third time in WSOP history that two related players made the same final table. The other occureneces were when brother-sister combo Annie Duke and Howard Lederer would place 6th and 9th, respectively, in a 1995 $1,500 pot-limit hold’em event, and when brothers Ross and Barney Boatman placed 7th and 9th in a 2002 $1,500 pot-limit Omaha event.

Playing like the IRS had a gun to his head, Michael Mizrachi was a site to behold this year: out of five cashes, he final tabled four of them, eventually winning week one’s Poker Player’s Championship broadcast and reaching poker’s coveted November Nine. He may have taken home over a million dollars with his Chip Reese trophy, but stands to take home much, much more with a top finish at the final table of the Main Event. He currently sits in 7th place with 14,450,000 in chips.

The week two broadcast aired coverage of the Tournament of Champions (TOC) return to the WSOP. An invitational field of 27 brought out some of the greatest names in the game, vying for the $1,000,000 freeroll prize pool, and saw a table brimming with familiar faces: Howard Lederer, Johnny Chan, Annie Duke, Barry Greenstein, Joe Hachem, Daniel Negreanu, Jennifer Harman, Huck Seed, and T.J. Cloutier. Seeing Cloutier’s less than triumphant return to ESPN cameras looking like a distressed, dilapidated carcass gave me the same feeling I get when watching Layne Staley on Alice and Chains: MTV Unplugged. His gaunt, aged figure was worn like a man who squandered his millions away on his demons, and was a depressing reminder during the first hour of coverage how there is nothing worse in this world than wasted talent.

Insert two hours of poker millionaire banter, an obnoxious Howard Lederer relishing in camera time he hasn’t seen since 2003, stupid retrospective segments, some fantastic plays by Johnny Chan, and a luckbox Huck Seed seemingly hitting every out he needed, and you have yourself an ESPN broadcast. Seed would later emerge the victor after beating Lederer heads-up for the title, taking home $500,000 and the TOC trophy.

What will the Main Event coverage have in store for us tonight outside of all-in moments sponsored by beef jerky and antiperspirants? Tune in and find out.

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Posted by Ray Finkle on 31st July 2010

3braceletsThree bracelets–that’s how many the following players won in a single year at the World Series of Poker (WSOP). Zero–that’s how many you have won in your lifetime. One in a year is a dream for most people shelling out the thousands of dollars for an entry fee. Two in a year is a dream for any pro. Three in a year? Well only Jeffrey Lisandro, Ted Forrest, Phil Hellmuth, and Phil Ivey could tell you how that feels.

It was no surprise when Jeffrey Lisandro went on to win the 2009 Player of the Year a little over a year ago. With his victories in the $1,500 seven-card stud, the $2,500 razz, and the $10,000 seven-card stud hi/lo events, he solidified himself as a mixed game force to be reckoned with. If you don’t know the man behind the accomplishment, his most recognizable moment before calendars turned to 2009 was deep into the 2006 WSOP Main Event. He almost had fisticuffs with pro Prahlad Friedman after he accused him of stealing a missing ante that ESPN over-the-table cameras would later replay later show him posting. Lisandro would eventually take 16th place.

Back in 1993, when you were still in your PJs playing Street Fighter II Turbo and Zombies Ate My Neighbors, Ted Forrest was making his comeuppances in the pokersphere. Playing tic-tac-toe with gold bracelets back when the WSOP was but a glisten in the poker boom’s eye, he won the $1,500 limit omaha hi/lo, $1,500 razz, and the $5,000 seven card stud events. Over a decade later in 2004, he would go on to earn bracelets #4 and #5, netting yet another multi-bracelet series when he won the $1,500 stud and no-limit hold’em events. Calling that impressive is saying the very least.

As if to say “anything you can do I can do better”, Phil Hellmuth went on to win three bracelets for himself in 1993: the $1,500 and $2,500 no-limit hold’em events, as well as staking his flag atop the field in the $5,000 limit hold’em. Already established as a world champion by that point, this feat would be the beginning of a bloated career steeped in high standard and tears of self-pity, then dried out with shining vanity.

Who better to round the list off than Phil Ivey, aka the Michael Jordan of the felt. The training wheels came off during his breakout year in 2002, when he won the $1,500 seven card stud, $2,500 seven card stud hi/lo, and the $2,000 S.H.O.E. (stud, hold’em, omaha hi/lo, stud h/l) events. These wins helped him afford a down payment on the cement foundation of his money pit, which he has been shoveling prize pools into ever since. His three-bracelet year was made all the more impressive recently in 2009, where he not only had his second multi-bracelet series ($2,500 omaha & stud hi/lo mixed, $2,500 no-limit deuce to seven lowball), but final tabled the Main Event. If players didn’t know of Ivey then, they certainly recognize his name now.

Do you see a trend though with most of these events? They’re mixed game tourneys, which bring drastically smaller fields and are only played by variant specialists. I’d make the defense that Hellmuth’s jewelry came from all hold’em events and those naturally have larger fields, but not in 1993, when there were only 63 players in his $5k event. Ted Forrest’s $5k stud win only saw a turnout of 57. Some of the greatest stud players in the world, yes, but a turnout that rivals that of town’s police charity hold’em tourney. That’s not to take away from any speakable accomplishment these players have earned with their victories or throughout their lifetimes, but I ask you this: is it harder to win three bracelets at events with an average field of 150 or cruise deep into a field of 2,000+?  I guess we’ll never know because they’re too busy doing both.

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Posted by Ray Finkle on 24th July 2010

mike_matusow_01Welcome to the second part of a multi-part series I like to call “Amazing Feats in World Series of Poker History”, where I take a look back at past years and amazing accomplishments throughout the history of the World Series of Poker (WSOP).

Known aptly as “The Mouth”, you either love or hate Mike Matusow. His demeanor represents a man who has ridden the ups and bottoms of poker. With a snappy attitude, constantly varying degrees of self-confidence, and a bi-polar table image, Matusow never fails to wear his emotions on his sleeve, or on the felt. Regardless of public opinion and his tumultuous personal life, the man can play poker. Pretty damn well, too.

His first appearance at a Main Event final table took place in 2001, going out in 6th for $239,765; it wouldn’t be his last. If Matusow is synonymous with one thing outside of insanity, it’s an undeniable consistency at the WSOP Main Event. Sure, he’s a three-time bracelet winner with wins in a 1999 $3,500 no-limit hold’em event, a 2002 $5,000 limit omaha hi/lo event, and a 2008 $5,000 rebuy no-limit 2-7 draw event, but these are these events we didn’t see.

Matusow became a household name in 2004, when he suffered an emotional defeat at the hands of Grey Raymer, his table antagonist. For an entire two episodes, ESPN cameras were fixed on Mike turning the screw into Raymer, who sat silently and weathered the berating for plays Matusow found insultingly questionable.

It was Raymer who would have the last laugh, crippling “The Mouth” after he made a gutsy and phenomenal call for most of his chips against Raymer’s all-in shove on a flush draw board. The flush would hit on the turn, leaving Matusow exclaiming to the table, “I play to win.”

He would leave a distraught train wreck of a man just one hand later when his AK lost crushingly to AQ via a three-out Q on the river, sending him packing with what little pride he had left in 87th place for $20,000.

The knockout would only light a fire up under his ass, and Matusow returned in 2005 with something to prove. Culminating yet another deep run in the Main Event, Matusow would shrug off the daunting task of pushing and shoving his way through 5,619 players, making it to the final nine. His appearance proved to be short lived, after being crippled during what is certifiably the most insane hand (video 1) to have and ever be witnessed at a Main Event final table, the first hand no less. Soon after, he would lose his remaining chips (video 2) when his 10-10 lost to the A-J of the unknown Steve Dannenmann, ending up in 9th place for $1,000,000.

Made all the more impressive, Matusow would go on to beat Hoyt Corkins heads-up a few months later to take down the WSOP Tournament of Champions, netting another $1,000,000 payday and becoming the first player in poker history to win multiple million dollar scores in the same year.

In 2008, Matusow’s name would grace yet another top finish at the Main Event, being eliminated in 30th place for $193,000. Another disappointingly close yet fantastic deep run for “The Mouth”, it would go on to be the crowning achievement of his career: his fourth top 100 run through the massive $10,000 championship field. The impressive feat is only rivaled by one other man today: Phil Ivey.

In total, Matusow’s winnings sit comfortably at $7,318,350, $3,140,713 of which are from his cashes in the WSOP alone. Scrutinized for his antics but accepted for his knowledge of the game, Matusow is a staple that holds together televised poker as we know it. It would be one thing if he was just a mouth. It’s another thing to be a mouth that cashes the checks.

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Posted by Ray Finkle on 22nd July 2010

harringtonWelcome to the first part of a multi-part series I like to call “Amazing Feats in World Series of Poker History”, where I take a look back at past years and amazing accomplishments throughout the history of the World Series of Poker (WSOP). Who better to christen this felted ship than “Action” Dan Harrington. If you don’t know of the name by now, you are an idiot. Made famous for his insightful Harrington on Hold’em book series, which is arguably the most valuable poker asset for a no-limit hold’em player, he would go on to achieve the impossible: back-to-back Main Event final tables.

Harrington’s rise to greatness began back in 1987, when he  placed 6th out of 152 players in the first of the Main Events later won by Johnny Chan back-to-back. Forward to 1995, when in only his second cash ever at the WSOP, he outlasted a 285 person Main Event field to take down the Main Event and take home heaping stacks of hundos in the amount of $1,000,000. He would defend his title nobly the following year in 1996, finishing 17th for $23,400.

While the debate is always made that older players couldn’t hold their own in fields of present day, Harrington knocked the cynics right out of their seats with what is considered by some to be the greatest feat in WSOP history.

The year of Moneymaker in 2003 saw Harrington returning to the Main Event final table, a place he had called home through the mid-90s. His run through the 895 players in the field came to an end in 3rd place when Moneymaker raised enough to put Harrington all-in on a 2d-6d-10d flop. Harrington called holding the second nut flush draw and a pair of sixes with Kd6s, Moneymaker the 10-9 offsuit. Moneymaker’s pair of tens would hold, and Harrington would ride off into the Vegas sunset, $650,000 the richer. Moneymaker would ride on to win the bracelet, a monkey he was never able to brush off his back in all the years of mediocre accomplishments following the explosion he set off with his poker boom.

The turnout of 2004 would speak volumes regarding the impact Moneymaker had on WSOP registration, as showcased by the first Main Event field for the first time being in the thousands (2,576). It would also speak volumes of the man who published his own take on hold’em. His elimination in 2003 would prove to be a short ride into the sunset.

A field triple the size of the previous year played no obstacle for Harrington, who inconceivably made it to booth the 2003 and 2004 Main Event final tables, an accomplishment not thought feasible and one that is statistically improbable. He would later place 4th after uncharacteristically bluffing all-in against David Williams’ two-pair for $1,500,000. Regardless of never capturing a championship in either final table appearance, such an illustrious feat was proof that he had already won before he even sat down to play.

Between now and then, Harrington would go on to place 2nd at the World Poker Tour Season 4 Doyle Brunson North American Championship for $620,730 while going on to win the the World Poker Tour (WPT) Season 6 Legends of Poker Championship for $1,634,865. With his largest victory to date, he joined Joe Hachem, Doyle Brunson, Scotty Nguyen, and Carlos Mortensen as one of the only WSOP Main Event champions with WPT bracelets.

A resume laced with consistently deep runs against large fields highlighted by achieving back-to-back final tables stands as a testament for Harrington’s stance on old age against young guns. $6,111,422 in winnings later, Harrington forever stands at the pinnacle of poker achievements. Hell, he put the flag at the summit.

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Posted by Ray Finkle on 20th July 2010

bruce-buffer-01Cris Angel, Carrot Top, Bruce Buffer–these names now ring through the prestigious halls of the Luxor together as one, charming tourists with the allure of things named after people making you go, “Hey, I know that name!”

Fresh off the heels of “The Ivey Room” being christened in May at the ARIA Resort and Casino at CityCenter, Luxor officials wanted to find somebody who could match the allure and poker prestige behind the centerpiece of the largest construction project in the history of the United States. Who better than Bruce Buffer?

The veteran voice of the Octagon, the UFC’s Buffer has made a living off of being the brother of the other Vegas guy who yells things famously at boxing events at the MGM Grande for millions of dollars. You know, Michael Buffer? As of earlier this month, he now he has another claim to fame: the Bruce Buffer Poker Room at the Luxor.

Accompanied by the Bruce Buffer High-Stakes Poker Lounge and the “Buffer Zone Retail Shop”, where visitors can purchase all their favorite Buffer-laced textiles brought to you by shameless partnerships with major MMA clothing labels, staying at the Luxor has now become 0.87% more appealing.

As if having the Luxor’s poker room named after you and adorned with gimmicky UFC memorabilia wasn’t enough to cement a legacy, Bruce Buffer said, “Itttttttttttttt’s timeeeeeeeeeeeee…for me to cash in the World Series of Poker Main Event.” And that is just what he did. A familiar face to World Series of Poker Main Event cameras on ESPN, you’ll be seeing a lot more of him this year, after Buffer made it to 478th place and cashed for $27,519.

You can catch Buffer doing what he does best on August 1st when he steps into the Octagon for UFC on Versus: Jones vs Matyushenko. Check your local listings.

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Posted by CarbonPoker on 13th July 2010

Shannon-ElizabethWell, I literally just got home from Vegas. The drive is never too bad, just not ever something I look forward to doing alone. The best reward though was walking in the door tonight and being greeted by my beautiful babies-Winnie, Katie, Boomer and Casper. Katie and Winnie are the criers. They whimper and whine when they’re happy to see you-it’s the cutest thing. They definitely know how to make you feel loved. So I spent a lot of time sitting and petting them-telling them how much I missed them. My friend Sloane lives downstairs and takes care of them when I’m gone. It’s the perfect situation because they never mind too much when I leave because it doesn’t alter their routine at all. In fact, all of them but Winnie are downstairs with Sloane now. They basically said, “Hi mom! Welcome home-we missed you and love you. Well…we’re going back downstairs now to crash-been a long day.” I love my babies and missed them dearly!

I wish this had been a better World Series for me. I guess the reality is that I’m an actress who plays poker-not a poker player who acts. So I still have a lot to learn, and if nothing else this series really motivated me to want to improve my game…a lot! So even though my real focus being home will be acting, my secret part time focus will be improving my game. It’s time that I try some new things and practice some new strategies. I’ve been reading a great book (that I swore to someone I’d never reveal the name of) and I’ve been talking over hands with players I look up to. So my future will hold a lot of practice, both online and in the casinos here. That is, depending on how busy I am with my acting, directing and producing. I have some pitch meetings this week, starting tomorrow. I also need to do another big rewrite on one of the scripts I’m producing. So-the entertainment industry comes first-yet-I really already just want to go play some more poker. It’s sick, right?! I should want a break after the month in Vegas I just had…but I don’t. I guess that’s how I know I’ll get better. It’s something I really want and know I will find a way to make happen.

The highlight of my series was the Ante Up For Africa charity tournament that happens right before the main event starts.

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Posted by BungalowOfCards on 12th July 2010

burgessUnfortunately the first of Carbon’s Day 3 hopefuls has bowed out after a valiant effort to battle through his short stack wows from Day 1C and 2B.  Corey Boggess–better known as AbrahamBinkin at Carbon’s tables–won his first ever $12,500 WSOP package via the monthly CarbonPoker MTT Leaderboard promotion.

After being down to as few as 4,000 chips going into the evening session on Day 1C, Corey (pictured here with Shannon Elizabeth at the CarbonPoker WSOP Party) managed to stay positive and come out blazing at the table. With a quick double up thanks to his AK holding steady against pocket 10′s, Corey managed to keep the stack growing even when he intelligently released his pocket King’s after an Ace came on the flop.

The double-ups continued into the evening and past the dinner break when Corey’s AK out flopped KK and left him with just over 46,000 in chips. After reaching as high as 132,000, Corey managed to hover around 66,000 for much of the night with blinds at 400/800. Unfortunately though it was his turn to get rivered by a 2-outer and so Corey was faced with the challenge of entering Day 3 with only 38,000 chips.

AbrahamBinkin Bust Out Hand Day 3:

• Blinds – 500 / 1,000
• Aggressive Player in early position makes it 3,500
• Action folds round to SB
• SB folds after some thinking
• Corey in the BB, pushes for final 29,000 chips
• Raiser snap calls Corey’s All-in
• Corey shows JJ and Raiser reveals AcKh
• Flop and turn is a rainbow, all low cards
• The a King on the dreaded river

Congratulations Corey on an outstanding performance to turn that chip’n'chair from Day 1 into 1 of 3 Carbon players surviving till Day 3.  Good luck in the next MTT Leaderboard grand final and look forward to seeing you Down Under for the Aussie Millions!

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Posted by BungalowOfCards on 12th July 2010

World Series of Poker stepsHeading into the Day 2s of the World Series of Poker’s Main Event, a couple things were clear about Carbon’s many players: a) they had done very well to get as far as they had; and b) they were not about to stop there.

True to form, several of CarbonPoker’s players stuck it out through another grueling day and will be looking to build on their success today as Day 3 starts.  The full list is:

Michael Reed 215k

Gabriel Diaz – 110k

Corey Boggess 38k

Michael continues to be Carbon’s brightest light, adding to his stack from Day 2 to leave him in a comfortable 85th spot going into the day.  Unfortunately, brand new signing Shannon Elizabeth was unable to find an opportunity to spin her 10,000 chips into a larger stack on Day 2B, and was busted out.

Another Carbon regular, Steve Goosen, is also still kicking after two tough days, and is sitting at a terrific 240,000.

Day 3 is the first day that all remaining players—a substantial 2,557 still have chips to their name—will be playing together.  Stay tuned for updates and some stories from our players as the day progresses.

All the best luck to our remaining CarbonPoker representatives – make us proud out there!

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Posted by CarbonPoker on 9th July 2010

wsop tablesCarbonPoker’s team of online players are lighting up the felts at the $10K Texas Hold’em Main Event of the WSOP. We are proud to announce the following players have survived Day 1, and are still in the hunt for glory (and cash).

Shannon Elizabeth – 10,600

Nick Gibson – 52,875

Gabriel Diaz – 27,800

Gustavo Vazquez – 20,825

Corey Boggess – 12,650

Michael Reed – 142,125

Steve Goosen and Elliot Smith (CarbonPoker regulars) are also through to Day 2 action of the biggest poker tournament in the world.

We’re proud of all of these players and wish them the best of luck going forward – bring back a bracelet to CarbonPoker!

This year’s Main Event started with 7,319 players – the second largest poker tournament ever held (behind the 2006 WSOP Main Event of 8,773 players).

All of these players equals a massive prizepool of over $68million. The final winner will take home a cool $8.9million.

Good luck to all of our CarbonPoker players. Day 2A of the tournament kicks off today at 12pm PST and Day 2B will be tomorrow at the same time.

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