Online Poker Dropped from Ballot

Posted by admin | Poker News | Saturday 29 August 2009 4:26 am

Online poker will not be part of the upcoming Massachusetts ballot. The initiative failed to meet the legal requirements to secure a place on the ballot next year, according to Attorney General Martha Coakley. The Attorney General made the ruling on Wednesday, along with barring two mortgage modification proposals for similar reasons. Should voters support the initiative of approving online poker in the sate with at least 66,593 signatures by Dec. 2 it may make it on the ballot.

Poker770 Giving Away FREE Prize Packages to the PokerNews Cup Australia

Posted by admin | Poker News | Friday 28 August 2009 10:00 pm

The land down under is buzzing with excitement as it gets geared up for the biggest poker event of the year – The PokerNews Cup Australia. And this year, like years past, there will be No-Limit to the fun you will have, especially when you win your trip for free on Poker770!

The stage is set for the 2009 PokerNews Cup Australia which will be taking place in
Melbourne, Australia at the beautiful Crown Casino.  Famous as Melbourne’s premier entertainment hot spot, the Crown Casino is located on the banks of Melbourne’s Yarra River and boasts not one but two magnificent hotels. With its riverside setting, world-class restaurants and abundant night life, guests of the Crown Casino will find everything they desire at their fingertips – including non-stop casino action. And beginning September 27th and running through October 5, 2009 the action will be hotter than ever when the PokerNews Cup kicks into high gear!

Even though this event is very close at hand, you can still get there FREE because Poker770 is offering you the chance to win your seat at the PokerNews Cup Australia!

This Sunday, September 6th, Poker770 is hosting the PokerNews Cup FreeRoll at 12:35GMT with a $22,000 prize pool! Eligibility requirements to get your seat are simple, just sign-up at Poker770 and make a minimum deposit of at least $20 and use the password: PNEWS30. The only stipulation is that you must get signed up by Friday September 4th at 15:00 GMT to qualify! This amazing FreeRoll is open to ALL players, so if you already have a Poker770 account, you can jump in the FreeRoll too! Get qualified then register as early as three hours before the FreeRoll starts by finding the 'PNews $770 Freeroll' tournament under the 'Scheduled' tab in the Poker770 lobby.

Don’t miss this opportunity because TWO lucky winners will be jetting their way to Melbourne to experience the unforgettable PokerNews Cup Australia for FREE! A whopping $22,000 in prizes will be given away with 1st place receiving a $7,500 prize package, 2nd place receiving a $5,000 prize package and 3rd place onwards splitting a massive $9,500 guaranteed cash prize pool which will be distributed according to Poker770’s standard payout structure!

The first place prize winner will receive a prize package worth $7,500 that includes:

•    $2,200 AUD Buy-In for the Main Event.
•    $550 AUD Buy-In for Event #5 – Tony G Celebrity Shootout.
•    $550 AUD Buy-In for Event #6 – NLH Six Handed tournament.
•    $2,000 for hotel accommodations for 6 nights at the Crown Promenade Hotel in Melbourne for the winner and one guest.
•    Transportation to and from the hotel included ($150 AUD)
•    Cash of up to $2,550 for your flight tickets and spending money.
•    $55 for handling costs.
•    $200 AUD to attend the evening welcome party for the winner and guest.
•    A visit to the Healesville Sanctuary animal reserve and to the DeBortolli Winery.
•    Yarra River crossing ($200 AUD)

While the Main Event is the big dance, the Tony G Celebrity Shootout Event #5 is a non-stop action packed Rumbling Rumba! Last year, Kenneth Damm took down the title and $26,583 in prize winnings as he knocked out the big names, with over 20 of them having $500 bounties on their heads. A total of 240 entrants all battled it out in a fast and furious poker war that enforced a 20-second time limit on actions, making this a high-charged turbo event! And this year’s event promises to be even more exciting and fast paced than the event was last year – and you will be there in the heat of the battle when you win your seat – FREE!

But you better hurry because time is running out – for you to win your PokerNews Cup Australia prize Package – Absolutely FREE – only at Poker770 on September 6th!

UltimateBet for Mac – UltimateBet Now Available on Apple Mac

Posted by admin | Poker News | Friday 28 August 2009 7:20 pm

Everyone agrees that Macs are great for usability, iTunes and looking pretty cool but they’ve always been lagging behind when it comes to online poker. Besides a few small sites the only recognised poker rooms compatible with Mac to this point have been industry giants PokerStars and Full Tilt Poker. Happily then fellow American site UltimateBet have just announced details of their Mac client UB Mac.

UB Mac is designed specifically to answer the needs and wants of online gamers and to deliver the ultimate online poker version for the Apple-compatible web-based program. If you’re one of the growing number of Mac devotees the world over, the launch of UB’s native downloadable Mac software means you can now be part of the ultimate online poker community without inferior parallels or other Windows on Mac emulators.

“Our company strives to make our poker room accessible to as many people as possible, and we recognize that Apple computers have a growing market share in the personal computing industry. In response to this trend we have developed an all new download poker application specifically for the Mac Operating System,” said Tokwiro Chief Operating Officer Paul Leggett. “As a Mac user, the only real limitation I have found is that a lot of poker applications will not run on the Mac OS. With UB Mac, players will enjoy the same incredible user experience that PC users currently have, and we remain committed to ongoing development of our Mac online poker client to ensure it is the best in the business.”

“A few weeks back, I got the news I’ve been waiting for…UB for Mac is ready for beta testing! I immediately downloaded the application and I was up and running in no time,” said Team UB poker pro and Anthrax guitarist Scott Ian. “I’m a Mac nerd, and most of my buddies also swear by Apple Mac; it’s been a constant frustration trying to get them to buy virtual Windows programs so they can play on UB. Well, no more virtual anything. It’s UB Mac and it’s kicking ass. It’s blazing fast on my MacBook already. Spread the word my friends, UB for Mac is here, so get on it!”

The new software allows Mac players to have access to the most popular features and functionality that UB users playing on Windows-compatible computers have, including all the ring games, satellites, single and multi-table Hold ‘em tournaments, and single player Blackjack. Along with the debut of the stellar Mac version of the UB software, comes the launch of UB’s No Download Poker Games option, which allows both PC and Mac users the ability to play at UltimateBet anytime, anywhere. Simply click and play from any internet browser, no matter where you are. It’s UB Instant Play, and it’s your ticket to the UB tables when you’re away from home and on the go, or perhaps just don’t want to download the software. The full live version of the UB Mac software will be available for download at UltimateBet.com.

Claim Your Cash Reward in September at PartyPoker

Posted by admin | Poker News | Sunday 23 August 2009 6:56 am

PartyPoker never comes up short when it comes to offering some of the best monthly promotions to be found and September will be no exception thanks to their new Cash Machine!

This brand new Cash for Points promotion allows you the option of converting your Party Points into cold hard cash. But not only that… the amount of cash you can get is unlimited! The Party Poker Cash Machine runs from September 1st until September 28th, giving you 28 full days to rake in the unlimited cash!

To get your fantastic unlimited cash reward, just play your favorite cash games or tournaments and earn 10 or more PartyPoints on at least 10 days during September 1st until September 28th. Then at the end of the promotion, Party Poker will tally the PartyPoints you collected on your 10 highest point earning days and then match the number of points you earned on the lowest earning days. You will then be awarded and rewarded – with a cash bonus of $1 for every point you earned! Play all 28 qualifying days because your cash machine bonus is only limited by the number of points you earn! For example, if your lowest day’s points total is 1,000 points, Party Poker will give you a cool $1,000! So play often and play long because the amount of cash you win is totally up to you!

Every new day of the promotion gives you the chance to best your lowest points in a day total and increase your cash prize, so you will want to play-play-play to make sure you earn more money! The minimum payout from the Cash Machine is $10, but if you don’t earn enough points to qualify for a Cash Machine bonus after playing for at least 10 days during the promotional period – you will still have a chance to amass some cash!

Players who fail to qualify for the Cash Machine bonus will still win – a seat in the huge $25,000 Cash Machine FreeRoll!

On Saturday October 3, 2009 the Cash Machine FreeRoll will roar to life at 12:00 ET, and with a $25,000 guaranteed prize pool – this is an amazing ‘consolation’ prize! The odds are in your favor to scoop some major cash because the only players who will be invited are those who didn’t qualify for the Cash Machine bonus during September! This is another win-win promotion from Party Poker, where no one is left out of the FREE cash give-away! One way or another you will have the chance at a pile of free money, either in the Cash Machine promo or by playing in the Cash Machine FreeRoll event!

The Cash Machine promotion runs from 00:00 ET on September 1st to 23:59 ET on September 28th and is an opt-in only promotion. Players can join in at any time during the promotion, however players who do not opt- in will not be able to claim a cash prize in this promotion. Once a player opts in all qualifying play will be accounted for the entire 28 day promotion.

Qualifying days do not have to be consecutive but players must earn points on 10 individual days during the promotion in order to claim a cash prize from the Cash Machine. All money won will be deposited in players’ accounts on September 29th.

Get ready—get set—to play at Party Poker and if you don’t have a Party Poker account then get ready to receive $50 FREE! The FREE cash is yours when you Download Party Poker here on PokerWorks and follow the instructions. Then turn that FREE cash into FREE Cash Machine Cash – only at Party Poker!

ESPN’s WSOP Coverage Review – August 25, 09

Posted by admin | Poker News | Sunday 23 August 2009 1:15 am

ESPN’s coverage of the World Series of Poker moved to Days 1C and 1D of the Main Event.  With the crowds for the two days greatly eclipsing those of the first two sessions, a number of questions hung in the air.  Would the network spend any time on the controversy surrounding the closing of registration on Day 1D?  Would it even address the wide disparity in the number of players from day to day?  Would there be some mention of the different number of levels played on the various first days?  Or would it just treat the starting field as if everyone had the same conditions from the start, and ignore the difficulties that plagued the beginning of the event?  Let’s see what transpired.

The pre-show teaser made it clear that the first hour was going to focus on Daniel Negreanu, seated at the featured table, and Phil Hellmuth, on table two.  Commentator Norman Chad did a quick comparison between the two players:  While Negreanu brings positive energy to the table, Hellmuth not so much.  While Daniel doesn’t do well in the Main Event, Hellmuth tends to do very well.  And finally, Negreanu never wears a loin cloth to the table, while Hellmuth…….  

The Poker Brat entered dressed as Caesar, surrounded by models in togas.  He walked up to the table and immediately played the hand sitting in front of him, which he folded to a flop bet from his opponent, saying that he knew the player was bluffing (he was), but that he would let him have it this time.

Jeff Lisandro was briefly featured in a piece on the Player-of-the-year race, and we got to see him in a hand where his pocket aces were played against by two players with pocket queens and Q-10.  The flop had both a Q and a 10, all the money went in from the three players, and Lisandro back doored Broadway when the turn and river were J-K, eliminating both his opponents.

It was obvious from the beginning of the hour that Negreanu was quite ill.  His nose was red, his eyes were runny and he didn’t have any of his usual joie de vivre.  His usual uncanny card-reading skills were muted at best, and his stack gradually dwindled away through a series of ill-advised calls.  He was finally eliminated when, on a flop of 10-10-7, an opponent bet out and Negreanu went all-in with pocket threes, only to run into pocket queens.  It was a lesson in how important it is to be in the best possible mental and physical state when you sit down at the table, especially if your game relies on being able to read your opponents accurately.

Meanwhile, Hellmuth had an up-and-down first session.  He was bluffed out of a pot when the board showed four diamonds, with his opponent needling him that he learned by reading Hellmuth’s book.  He flopped a nut straight with J-8, and raised all-in with it, causing his opponents to muck.  He had a couple of mini-meltdowns, when first, his raise with pocket jacks was called by a player with K-8 suited, who then flopped a king and rivered another, bringing a barrage of insults from Hellmuth, and next, when he flopped yet another straight with J-8, only to have his opponent river a four-flush.  All in all, it was business as usual for the Poker Brat.

The two players that were featured in the second hour were 2008 Player of the Year Erick Lindgren and defending Main Event champion Peter Eastgate (supposedly, Phil Ivey refused to sit at the featured table, having been up all night playing in the big game at the Bellagio, although this was not mentioned on the telecast).  The only reference to the crowds on day 1D was the pronouncement that, for the first time, the Main Event had sold out, turning away hundreds of players.  Talk about making lemonade out of lemons!

Despite Ivey’s absence at the televised tables, it was clear that ESPN was going to begin building his story as early as possible, in anticipation of his presence in the November Nine.  A short feature included lavish praise from such notable pros as Daniel Negreanu, Chris Ferguson, Howard Lederer, Mike Matusow, and 8-time bracelet winner Erik Seidel, who compared Ivey to Roger Federer, Tiger Woods and Michael Jordan.  During the hour, we saw Ivey eliminate a player with A-A over K-K, and bully his table a couple of times, on his way to a big first day stack.

Meanwhile, the featured table showed Lindgren playing the underwhelming style that plagued him throughout the 2009 WSOP.  Interestingly, during the first hour, a few minutes were spent on the side bets Negreanu and Lindgren had made before the series, where they challenged all comers to two-man team total Player-of-the-Year points bets.  The only player they refused to go up against was Ivey, but Barry Greenstein chose to pair up with Jeff Lisandro, who only wound up winning three bracelets!  As Lindgren commented, “Good choice.”  Although Negreanu was his usual gracious self in refusing to slam his partner, Lindgren made it clear that he had let the two of them down, and, depending on how the Main Event finished up, the two of them were possibly on the hook for as much as a million dollars.

The hand that best summed up Lindgren’s hour on camera saw two limpers already in the pot with pocket eights and A-7 offsuit.  When Lindgren CALLED with pocket aces, it wound up creating a five-way pot when the blinds called.  After a J-5-5 flop, Lindgren CHECKED even though the hand was checked to him in position!  After a king on the turn, the player with A-7 took a stab at the pot, and then made an even bigger bet on the river, causing Lindgren to fold much the best hand.  The commentators were stunned by Lindgren’s choice to invite a multi-way pot with aces, and his overall passive play of the hand.

Eastgate, on the other hand, had an hour filled with some luck (rivering three-of-a-kind when he was way behind), a lot of playing from behind, and finally, a great read with pocket kings against a possible flush board, when his opponent made a big raise on the river with a busted draw.  He was active, he was somewhat unpredictable, and he survived to continue his defense of the crown.

Next week’s show will move on to Day 2, and we’ve been promised a feature table line-up including both Greg Raymer and Jason Alexander, as the comedian tries to extend the “summer of George”.  I’ll be back next week with the review.  See you then.

*Read Clearspine’s Blog*

Big Hand at SportsBook Worth $10,000 Opportunity

Posted by admin | Poker News | Saturday 22 August 2009 9:07 pm

Very few poker players ever get to the point where they’re playing for $10,000 in a hand.  But at SportsBook Poker, any hand could be worth a shot at $10k since they are currently giving away major cash in their Big Bucks promotion.  All you have to do is play at the BIG BUCKS cash game tables, and you’ll be eligible to win your way into a private tournament where $10,000 is up for grabs.

Besides playing at the BIG BUCKS tables, the only other requirement you need to meet for this private tournament is getting a 4 of a kind or better in one of these cash games.  After you get a 4 of a kind or better, simply e-mail the hand number and User ID to SportsBook at BigBucks@Sportsbook.com.  Once SportsBook has confirmed your 4 of a kind or better hand, you will be entered into the Big Bucks final which is slated to take place on September 1st at 10 pm ET.  

What’s really cool is that the fewer people there are entered in the tournament, the bigger slice you’ll be taking of the $10,000.  The only thing left to do before playing at the Big Bucks tables is signing up at SportsBook Poker through PokerWorks.  Signing up through PokerWorks will enable you to take advantage of the 100% deposit bonus up to $1,000.  

If you sign up for SportsBook Poker, you’ll also be eligible to participate in the $250,000 Guaranteed tournament that is held every month.  The winner of the $250k tourney always walks away with at least $50,000, and oftentimes more.  The next $250,000 Guaranteed takes place on August 30th so you’ll want to sign up ASAP to get into this as well.

The $250k Guaranteed and the Big Bucks promotion isn’t the only thing going on at SportsBook though since they are also giving out $7,000 English Poker Open prize packages.  The inaugural English Poker Open will be held in Nottingham, England and there is a guaranteed prize pool of $1 million.  The final qualifier to win the $7k EPO prize packages will be held on August 30th so that’s just another reason to sign up for SportsBook as soon as you can.  There will be plenty of poker satellites and qualifiers running until then; some of the satellites are as cheap as just a few dollars!

If you’d rather stick to ring games then there is plenty of incentive to do that too since SportsBook awards $50,000 in bonus money each month to players.  Every Weekly Gold Card race pays the top 50 placers and the top person earns $1,000.  To place in the top 50, you just need to play in ring games and pick up the Gold Cards that randomly appear amongst your hole cards.  After you start collecting the Gold Cards, just go to the Rewards tab and check the standings to see where you’re at.  If you collect the most Gold Cards for the week then you could be in for an extra $1,000!

Poker Brat to host Charity Event

Posted by admin | Poker News | Monday 17 August 2009 5:53 am

Phil “Poker Brat” Hellmuth has announced that he will resurrect his role as host for a charity poker event. The Hold’em for Heroes charity tournament will be held to raise money for the families of police officers who have lost their lives in the line of duty. The charity that supports these folks is the Taser Foundation for Fallen Officers. This is the fifth year of the charity tournament, to be held November 19-21. Last year the event was deemed very successful as it raised more than half a million dollars.

Season six structure debuts at EPT Kyiv

Posted by admin | Poker News | Sunday 16 August 2009 11:21 pm

The sixth season of the PokerStars European Poker Tour features a new deep-stacked structure.The sixth season of the PokerStars European Poker Tour kicked off in Kyiv, Ukraine this week with a brand new structure aimed at giving players more play.

During the tour’s first five seasons the 10,000 chip starting stacks and rapidly increasing blinds had been widely criticized as being too fast a structure to be considered a deep-stacked event.

In response, EPT founder John Duthie, Tournament Director Thomas Kremser and Winamax pro and 2007 EPT Prague champion Arnaud Mattern helped design a new structure featuring 30k stacks, adjusted blind increases and 15 minutes added to the normal 60-minute levels after Day 1.

The new structure was rolled out first at the Season 5 Grand Final and Mattern says it definitely had the desired effect.

“I was sitting next to Thomas Kremser on the plane to Kyiv,” Mattern said from the Ukranian capital.

“We discussed the Monte Carlo Grand Final, where the new structure was first tested, and agreed that things went according to plan in every regard: How long the days lasted, how fast the players got knocked out, how interesting the play was at the TV table compared to previous tournaments, etcetera.

“The final table lasted for six hours – not too long, and it showcased good quality of play.”

Mattern said the structure was designed to ensure that losing a few pots early doesn’t mean losing a chance at an EPT title and that’s exactly the way things played out on the first day in Kyiv.

“I lost several small pots to fall from 30,000 to 23,000,” he said. “Well, it wasn’t a big deal. The table was soft. There was no reason to panic. With the previous structure, I would have been left with 3,000, a tough position to go back from.

'I fixed the whole thing in order to secure myself a second EPT win.'

“Today, I was still well in contention. I kept seeing flops until I found opportunities to chip back.”

Arnaud ended Day 1a with 54,700 in chips and although things have not gone that well for him since, now headed in the tournament’s third day with one of the shortest stacks, he believes the structure still holds advantages for seasoned pros.

“I would say that I’m happy with the structure I helped create,” he said. “In theory, pros should get an advantage from it. But it’s not a given.

“To perform well in this kind of structure, you have to be expert at all stages of a tournament: deep stack, medium stack and short-stack. During the course of this long tournament you’ll face all of those situations and have to put your A-game on at all times.

“Some good players are great with a short and medium stack, but they can’t handle a big one. Others are amazing at playing deep-stacked poker, but start making tons of mistakes when they get short.”

EPT Kyiv heads into Day 3 Friday with 71 of the 296 starters remaining.

The leader board is littered with relatively unknown Russians, including overnight chip leader Vitaly Tolokonnika.

But Arnaud still joked about the new structure paying dividends throughout the rest of the season.

“I fixed the whole thing in order to secure myself a second EPT win,” he laughed.

The PokerStars EPT moves on to Barcelona next Sept. 4-9 before heading to London Oct 2-7.

Ben Grundy – Homegrown Poker Millionaires| Ben Grundy

Posted by admin | Poker News | Sunday 16 August 2009 7:45 pm
 
2008 was an insane year. I went 28 days without a losing session

Ben Grundy is a quiet poker phenomenon. In April he posted profits of $550,000, taking his online winnings since January 2006 to over $5.2m. That’s almost as much as the Devilfish, the highest English live tournament earner of all time, has earned from tournaments in his lifetime.

For 2008 alone, the 31-year old managed to rack up over $2.5m. Just a quick glance at his graph from January 2006 to January 2009 (plotting 180,000 hands over 889 days) shows t an amazing level of consistency. So just how did the Milkybarkid become one of the most successful British poker millionaires?

Acorns and Oaks

Grundy’s early online steps started back in 2002 and as he acknowledges, they really were just dabblings. ‘I used to deposit £300 and I’d either double it and cash out or lose it. I never really took it too seriously. I was just having a punt online, that sort of thing,’ he says.

That’s not to say that he was green. Grundy had always been more of a live game player, frequenting the casinos in his hometown of Cardiff when he was 18 and playing cash games and tournaments throughout his time at university. When he moved to London, he was a regular at the now obsolete Starkeys in Russell Square and of course the Vic. ‘I played the £250 or £500 Omaha game,’ he recalls. ‘I’ve always done really well in Omaha – I’ve been playing since I was 11.’

These live game skills gave him a solid grounding and by the time he started taking online more seriously in 2004, he was depositing £20,000 in his Betfair account and playing $100 sit&gos and medium-stakes pot-limit Omaha games. ‘I was making maybe £4,000 or £5,000 a month just playing $2/$5 and $5/$10.’

Despite these decent stats, the year proved to be only marginally profitable due to the fact that he’d have ‘massive winning runs and equally as bad losing runs’. At the time, he hypothesised on his blog that perhaps his online experience had been a waste of time. ‘I really do have a love-hate relationship with online poker,’ he wrote. ‘I know that it is probably the easiest area in poker to make consistent money but I often lack focus or choose games that I shouldn’t be playing.’

A New Start

Going into 2005, Grundy resolved that he would no longer try and be a jack of all trades by playing MTTs, sit&gos and limit hold’em and instead he’d stick to what he knew best – pot-limit Omaha, no-limit hold’em cash and satellites into big events. It had an immediate effect. His online profit for January was $4,540 for 17 hours of play, equating to $267.06 per hour.

With a bankroll now touching the £50k mark, Grundy realised he could now do what he’d threatened to do the year before – wind down his IT company and go pro. ‘It’s a risk I know but a calculated one,’ he divulged in his blog. ‘My bankroll is probably half of what I’d like it to be but if I go skint I can just get back to the real world and get a job again.’

He didn’t have to worry about his bankroll for long. Two months later he won a €14,000 package to the EPT Grand Final in Monte Carlo and recorded his best live result yet when he finished seventh overall, cashing for over $105k. ‘I handed in my notice that week,’ he says.

Shortly after, Betfair made Grundy their first officially ’sponsored pro’, which freed up his entire bankrollfor online cash games and saved him the hefty expenses which accompanied travelling the live tournament circuit. He began to smash the £10/£20 pot-limit Omaha tables and honed the ultra-aggressive style that he is renowned for today. ‘I developed a new ultra-aggressive pre-flop tactic where I would raise with about 40% of hands pre-flop and call a lot more before the flop as well’, he says. ‘Hands like 5-6-7-9 were an instant raise and sometimes a re-raise pre-flop.’

By September he had racked up over £41k from his online play – already more than his original monetary aim of £40k for the entire year. The month brought more good news as Betfair introduced ’six-pac’ (six-handed_ PLO tables, a development which Grundy wholly welcomed. ‘I was used to ten-handed but am definitely much better when there are less players on the table,’ he says. ‘I’m just better at putting people on hands, I make better decisions and know when to float and when to value bet.’ 

Although he took the worst battering of his online career in October, losing £10,000 over two days, he rallied and finished the year easily hitting his £40,000 profit mark. He set the bar high for 2006 – he wanted to hit £150,000.

On The Up

Despite a rocky start in January where he suffered five £10,000+ losses over five consecutive sessions, Grundy had almost completed his goal by June. But perhaps more importantly he had learned things about his own playing style that would set the tone for the future. He realised that he was not a natural multi-tabler and that anything more than four tables was a -EV decision.

Instead he decided he would stick to two PLO tables and possibly one no-limit hold’em table at one time. It’s a strategy that he has employed ever since. ‘I play so aggressively and play so many hands that I forget what the action is if I try to play over four or five. It’s all massively important to what I do after the flop so I lose my focus.’

He also discovered the benefits of PokerTracker and explains how he would sometimes ‘spend a few hours studying my most frequent opponents statistics and replaying numerous hands’. Although he no longer pores over the numbers, Grundy says that PokerTracker still plays an important role in his game. ‘I import all the hands and have a look occasionally but I’m more interested in who I win or lose against and trying to work out who’s who. People change their IDs all the time. PokerTracker is good because it allows you to see who the winners and losers are.’

This period of play was also significant in that he proved that he could play out of a downswing by putting in massive amounts of volume. It might not have been a ‘by-the book’ solution but it was certainly effective. In one session in April 2006 he put in a 24-hour stint where he was down £10,000 at one point but finished £28,000 in the black. Nowadays such marathons are rare but Grundy still believes that he plays more than most players. ‘If I have nothing else on, I play from 11am and finish at 7pm. I prefer to play in the day and have the evenings off. If I do feel like playing at 11pm then I’ll play till 5am.’

Playing High-stakes

With the first half of 2006 turning out so well, Grundy cut down his online hours, heading over to the WSOP and hitting various stops on the EPT. When he returned to the fray during the final quarter of the year, he decided to take a shot at the higher games like $100/$200 and $200/$400 PLO (the highest at the time) with the separate six-figure bankroll that he had spun up on Full Tilt.

After three sessions, his run-ins with players like David Benyamine, Durrrr and Phil Ivey had been solid – yielding $129k – but he was very mindful of the fact that should he lose it all, he would drop down to his normal games.

Into 2007, Grundy decided to try and make $100/$200 his regular game but ran into a wall resulting in one of the biggest downswings of his career. ‘I lost 80% of my bankroll and was down to about £30k. I just kept depositing and wasn’t in the right frame of mind to play at all.’

Although he staged a recovery in May, losing one too many $100k pots had taught him that being rolled for a game doesn’t necessarily mean you have to play it. He has retained the same mentality today and understands more than anyone the need to separate ego from winning poker.

‘I could easily play $200/$400 or $500/$1000. I just don’t see the need,’ he says. ‘I could probably sell percentages and do it. But I just think that if I can beat $50/$100 on my own money, why am I going to sell off 70% to go and play bigger. It’s only for the ego of saying, I’m playing $500/$1000. I just play comfortably within my bankroll.’

Return Of The Kid

As soon as he returned to his standard $25/$50 PLO games, Grundy got used to winning again, recording over $100k for one day’s play. Come the end of the year, his PLO game had netted him over $1m. Were it not for substantial losses in no-limit hold’em heads-up cash at the start, he says that ‘a very good year would have been an amazing one’.

As he had in previous years, Grundy set out some objectives for 2008, with his highest priority being to, ‘practice better bankroll management and game selection’. For bankroll management, he enlisted the help of staking site Badbeat. ‘That installed discipline in me which I didn’t have before. They were giving me $100k every day but across three sites. If I lost $50k then I quit on the day.’

For Grundy, better game selection meant being smarter in situations where he could actively choose who to play. ‘I might be tired and think I’ll leave them alone today.  If I see four people waiting at a heads-up table and I want to play two of them, I’ll choose the two worst ones, I won’t just randomly select.’

He also decided to concentrate on PLO heads-up games, specifically at the $50/$100 level. In conjunction with Badbeat’s enforced stop-loss, there was a dramatic effect on his bankroll. By July he was up to $2m, a million dollars more than he set out to win at the start of 2008. Heads-up PLO had always seemed to be the natural choice for Grundy because it combined constant aggression with his favourite poker variant.

It continues to be his dominant game. ‘I raise the button over 90% of the time and I rarely fold even to button raises,’ he says of his strategy. ‘Heads-up I play 85% of hands. I probably win 60% of hands against 90% of opponents. There are only two players that I play that are more aggressive than me. I’m quite happy – if I think my opponent is weak – to bet, bet, bet with complete air.’

Grundy finished the year an astounding $2.6m in profit, easily the best result in four years of online poker and taking him to the coveted millionaire status. Suffice to say that he looks back at 2008 with fond memories. ‘That was an insane year. I think I went 28 days without a losing session.’

Future Shock

It’s now five years since Grundy made the decision to go pro and he reveals how he probably could never have predicted going from making £9.50 an hour to taking stabs at the $500/$1k games on Full Tilt. ‘It’s hard because the value of money changes and you have to keep your feet on the ground as much as you can.’ That’s why he’ll probably never make the nosebleed stakes his regular game. ‘It would be fun to have a go but I’d only risk a few hundred thousand dollars. I get really down when I lose £70k-£100k in a few days. I’d have to have $20m to play it I think.’

He is pretty much set for life and admits that his motivation to play winds down every day. ‘I’m not desperate to get out of it yet but I can see a point when I might be. I don’t need the money and could do something different. I’d love to win an Omaha bracelet though – that would be awesome.’

Gaubert the Victor in Gold Strike World Poker Open

Posted by admin | Poker News | Tuesday 11 August 2009 4:41 am

The Gold Strike World Poker Open ended with a new champion as Jeremy “thechemist83” Gaubert took down the Tunica event. The WPO event was held at the Gold Strike casino in Mississippi as the online poker pro cleaned house, taking charge of the $5,150 buy-in event. His take home prize was $192,953 in cash, nearly twice that of runner up Steve Hamontree, who took home $109,400. The third place finisher was no stranger to final tables, the legendary Chris Moneymakerm who bettered lesser known but still big name Chad Brown, who took fourth.

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