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1.Against All Odds
Introduction

Los Angeles poker classics

ESP

Bad Beat Poker

Pot-Limit Omaha

Spooky Hand

World Poker Challenge

Pot-Limit Hold'em Tournaments Foxwood's Poker
Five-Star World Poker

World Series Of Poker-2000

World Series Poker Championship



2.World Series Of Poker Hands

Youngest World Champion

World Series Poker-1999

World Series Poker-1998


World Series Poker-2002


WSOP-2002

WSOP-1995


WSOP-1994


WSOP-1998
U.S.. Poker Championship-1999

WSOP-2000

WSOP's Winner-2000
WSOP-2003

WSOP's Record-2003


"Big One" in WSOP-2003


3.World Poker Tour

WPT-2002

World Poker Tour-2002

WPT's winner-2003


WPT-2004


WPT-2003


World Poker Tournament-2003

WPT's Event-2003


Foxwood's World Poker


Amir's Big Call

4.European Poker Tour

The Poker em

Poker In Amsterdam-1998

The Poker em-2000

Late Night Poker 3-2000


WHUPC-2003

5.Reading other Player's Mail

WSOP-1992

Tournaments Of Champion-1999

A Tale Of Four Bluffs


WSOP-2001


Commerce Casino-2002

No-Limit Hold'em Event-2002

My $220,000 Pot At The World Series Of Poker

In 2002, after remaining positive thought poker a bad World Series of Poker, I was ready to win the Championship Event and the accompanying $2 million first prize.  Monday and Tuesday I played as well as I could play, and I caught a lot of big hands as well.  I went smoothly (Cadillac smooth) from $10,000 night poker up to $127,000 without ever being low on chips or even close to all-in.  I really thought that moving from 130 players down to 45 players on day three would be a walk in the park.

            Hello, Meng La! Wow, I had never met Meng “Over the Top” La before, but he was seated just to my left on day three, and believe me, this guy makes Stu Ungar look like a slow play poker card games! On the first hand, I opened for $4,000 with the Ad-Qd, and Meng raised $10,000 more.  Had I known how wild and crazy Meng La played, I would have stuffed his remaining $25,000 in the pot pronto! Instead, I made a very easy fold, and the game of cards was on.  Meng proceeded to raise or reraise me 12 times that day, and he raised, reraised, or moved all-in almost 20 times in the first two hours.  He never folded a hand once he put a chip in! How he survived that first two hours playing that fast is a mystery to me.  Usually, when someone plays that fast against me I bust them by about poker the fifth move in or so.  Be that as it may, I felt pretty certain that I would eventually bust Meng; all I needed was time.  He was a thorn in my side, but eventually his chips would look pretty rosy in my stack

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            Despite Meng’s onslaught, I still had $117,000 with 60 players left when the following hand came up.  A player I had never seen before, named Robert Varkonyi, had come to our table.  Immediately, I had a good read on him (reading people is my biggest strength in poker).  With the blinds at $1,200-$2,400 and the antes at $400 a player, Robert raised the pot limit hold'em to $8,000 to go, and I looked down at Ah-Kh.  I felt that Robert was weak, so I raised it $17,000 more.  Now Robert immediately announced, “I’m all-in.” I asked for a count, and it turned out that he had $81,400 more ($106,400 total).

            With $56,000 already in the pot, I had a decision to make, but my mind kept screaming, “He has nothing, you have to call because you know you have the best hand.” It was almost as if I really did know that he had nothing, and one part of my mind said, “Now is the time, when you’re a 2.2-to-1 favorite.” (I thought he had A-something).  After less than a minute, I called, and he flipped up Qc-10c as if he were proud of his hand!  For the $220,000 pot, I thought I was only a 2-to-1 favorite (actually, it turns out that I was only a 3-to-2 favorite here).  What had I done?  I had avoided all big pots for three days, and now I was only a 3-to-2 favorite for the money.  If I had kept that $81,000 (plus the $11,000 more that I still had left after Robert), then I believe I would have easily made the final 45 players, and probably without playing a big pot.  In fact, I may have flopped a set against someone with top pair, and been a huge favorite in a big pot limit omaha, or perhaps I would have made a flush and had my opponent drawing dead.

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            So here’s the final analysis: I made a bad call, even though I was sure he was bluffing.  But where do you draw the line?  Do you fold when you feel you’re 2.5-to-1 favorite and the pot’s laying you 7 to 4?  My call was bad because I could still have won the tourney handily losing the pot to Robert, I had made coming back from $11,000 very difficult.

            I don’t like Robert’s play here at all.  Why would he risk all of his money with no hand against someone who is known for reading players well?  Why not wait a mere 10 minutes for a better hand or a better spot?  To me, he had an easy fold, but moved all-in instead.  Robert made some blunders along the way, but he made up for it with the beautiful way he played the final table, and he won the 2002 WSOP.

           I love the fact that anyone can play in the WSOP.  I love the fact that they keep the field open.  But with open field come more obstacles to winning.  In 2002, for the third year in a row, I was the last World Champion remaining in WSOP, but that doesn’t pay the rent.  I do wish I had waited until I had someone drawing almost dead before I committed most of my stack to a pot.  I wish the flop hadn’t come down A-Q-10 for Robert to beat my Ah-Kh with his Qc-10c and two pair.  I just wish winning seven card the WSOP wasn’t so hard!

            But then wouldn’t be the WSOP, would it?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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6.From The Other Side Of Table
WSOP-1974
Commerce Casino-1999


WSOP-1999WSOP-1999

WPT-2003

Bellagio Poker


Ladies World Championship


High Limit Action in houston

Commerce Casino's California-1999

Party Poker Million-2002

WSOP's Winner-2002

WSOP Seven-Card Stud-2000

Foxwood's Casino

Pot-Limit Hold'em Event

World Heads-Up Poker Tour

United States Poker Championship

7.Poker Hollywood Style

Chinese Poker

Bicycle Club Casino

Rounder's
Celebrity Poker
Hustler Casino



8.Cheesehead Poker

Poker in Madison
Bluffing

Sportsmen Club


Pot-Limit Hold'em At Nora's Bar

Big Game in Wisconsin


A GOLF STORY


ULTIMATEBET HAND


CHAMPION OF THE YEAR AWARD


TOP MOMENTS IN POKER


THE NEXT POKER WAVE