Tuesday, January 14, 2014

The Phil Hellmuth Guide to Dominating the W.S.O.P

The Phil Hellmuth Guide to Dominating the World Series of Poker

Cast your minds back to May 10, 1988, at the Binion’s Horseshoe & Casino in Downtown Las Vegas, and Lance Hilt was winning a World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet after defeating 206-players in the $1,500 Seven Card Stud Split event.

It was the only significant score in the life of Hilt. I have no idea who he is, or what became of him, but one can assume poker was not a hugely significant part of his life.

Image

In contrast, seated at that same final table was a 23-year old kid called Phil Hellmuth Jr. He was just coming off his first live tournament victory – a $200 No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) event in the Grand Sierra Resort in Reno – and he was full of confidence.

He would finish fifth for less than he won in Reno, but unlike Hilt, it would not be the only significant score of his life. Unlike Hilt, poker would be a hugely significant part of his life. Much more than that. It would be a very part of his being.

One year after that final table appearance Hellmuth would defeat the great Johnny Chan to become the youngest-ever WSOP Main Event champion. It was perfect timing for a young man who had stopped Chan from winning an unprecedented three consecutive WSOP Main Events.

He would go on to win 12 more bracelets – more than any other player on the planet – become the only player to win WSOP Main Event titles on two continents, cash in 100 WSOP events, and take over $12m off the WSOP felts.

After being indoctrinated in the Poker Hall of Fame he became arguably the most decorated player in WSOP history; and yet a large proportion of the poker community will tell you that he is useless, has major flaws when it comes to the basic fundamentals of poker, and is just lucky.

I don’t buy it.

If the collective ‘we’ believes that variance evens out over the long run, then after 32-years of professional poker, Phil Hellmuth Jr. is one of the most talented members of the poker playing fraternity the world has ever seen.

That or the U.S government is spot on in their valuation of our game, and we are all sitting down to play nothing more than roulette with cards.

After speaking to a dozen poker players who have shared table space with the WSOP legend, I have come up with a list of 10 reasons why Phil Hellmuth has managed to dominate the WSOP headlines for longer than most of you have even been born.

1. Game Selection

Most poker coaches will tell you that game selection is key if you are to survive in this game, and Phil Hellmuth Jr. knows how to pick a game that gives him an edge sharper than Ricky Gervais’s wit.

The WSOP attracts more fish than any other tournament series in the world and Hellmuth has used this to his advantage better than anyone else of his ilk.

When the world’s greatest players are competing at the highest level in the game where is Hellmuth? Why don’t we see him playing at more European Poker Tours (EPTs)? Why isn’t he playing the World Poker Tour (WPT) Alpha8?

The answer is simple. The fewer weaker players you see in the game, the less likely you are to see that Aria hat and dark sunglasses. When it comes to taking on the world’s best players, Hellmuth couldn’t give a *bleep* He has nothing to prove and just loves to eat nothing but fish.

2. Confidence

If we were to use the metaphor of the jungle, Hellmuth believes he is a flying lion that can shoot lasers out of his eyes when it comes to the Savannah of the WSOP.

It doesn’t matter if people think he’s *bleep* all that matters is that he thinks he’s the best. He owns the WSOP, and this creates an added zest to his game that very few possess.

He is one of 47 Ronin; he is King Leonidas; he is Neo in the middle of a thousand Agent Smith’s.

3. He is Under Estimated

During my conversations with his fellow professionals I have gauged the opinion that those who play with him can appreciate that he has a very high level of talent, and those that haven’t, cannot fathom how he is able to win a game of Connect 4, let alone 13-WSOP bracelets.

This tells me that it’s all about perception.

If you are going to have your name sewn into the fabric of books like Play Poker Like the Pros, and get your arse handed to you on a plate when trying to compete against the very best cash players on the most watched poker TV shows in the world, then people are going to assume you are a goal keeper short of a football team.

A lot of players believe that your qualities as a poker player are determined by your abilities in a cash game. That might be true, but the last time I looked they were not handing out WSOP bracelets for cash games.

Player’s under-estimate him, and he’s smart enough to understand this.

4. The Man Knows How to Survive

We have all laughed as the action folds around to him on the button and he folds his 4 big blinds because queen-ten off suit is not strong enough for him; but it’s this stubbornness to part with his stack that sets him apart from his peers.

Is it in line with optimum game theory?

He couldn’t care less. For every single person who tells him that he should do things differently he has $18m reasons why he can’t be arsed listening.

The man wrote the book on how to fold a hand. Perhaps, it’s true that he plays a short stack no better than Verne Troyer plays basketball, but it’s this instinct to survive that will see him consistently go deeper than Linda Lovelace.

He is the master at playing small pot poker against weaker players, avoids big pots like the pox and like the Stranglers once sang, “he’s always hanging around.”

5. He’s Different

“Great thing about poker is that we play VASTLY different styles but there is more than one way to win at this beautiful game.” Tweets Daniel Negreanu.

There are very few players who have the same style as Phil Hellmuth and it’s something that he’s not often given credit for. He bucks the trend. When the kids in school were wearing skinny ties I reckon Hellmuth had a great big fat one.

He doesn’t play a ‘normal’ style of poker and this is why everyone says he has weak fundamentals. What he does do is play an extremely good style of poker when he comes up against weaker players, and knows how to avoid those that are better than him.

The better players will say he is too predictable, but he can also baffle the *bleep* out of people, because he doesn’t do what he is supposed to do.

6. He Preys on the Weak

When Phil Hellmuth Jr. gets angry he goes for a walk to find a midget so he can give it a good kick-in.

This man doesn’t pick fights with people unless he has knows he is going to win more often than lose. He’s your typical schoolyard bully. The guy who picks on the weak players and runs a mile when anybody fights back.

This was the most consistent reply that I got when I spoke to the poker masses. He was viewed as being the master of finding and exploiting weaknesses in those with skinny arms and a punch with about as much weight behind it as a gnats fart.

The WSOP is full of the weak and inviting Phil Hellmuth Jr. is the equivalent of inviting a lion to a gazelle’s bondage sex party.

7. Passion

There is a reason that Hellmuth rants and raves better than anyone in the game, and that’s because he has more passion than anyone else.

It’s a contentious issue, because calling someone ‘an idiot’ while another player keeps his pipes closed, doesn’t always mean one has more passion than the other; but in this case I really believe Hellmuth has more of the good stuff than most.

I will always remember his famous rant against Cristian Dragomir in the 2008 WSOP. Chino Rheem tries to calm things down by saying to Hellmuth, “Ok he sucked out on you, I understand, but this is poker.”

Hellmuth looked at Chino Rheem and said, “To you, this is poker man, but to me this is my life.”

There are a lot of players with more skill than Hellmuth, but I’m not so sure they stack up when it comes to wearing your heart on your sleeve.

8. The Mouth

Hellmuth would never have become as famous as he is today without his outbursts. If it wasn’t for the endorsements that allowed him to play at the highest level in the game, he may have drifted away like so many before him.

Fortunately, he had a mouth that burned with as much fire as John McEnroe, and he quickly became a marketing dream. Every soap opera needs a strong villain and Hellmuth was cast perfectly.

Hellmuth’s mouth attracts players like a Beyoncé music video attracts male eyeballs. Everyone wants to take a shot at him and in a way he’s like the Venus fly trap. Players get so involved with him that before you know it they are stuck. They try to flap those wings, but they just can’t escape, and slowly, but surely, he eats them alive.

9. The Family Man

I don’t think I have ever spoken to a man as devoted as Phil Hellmuth when it comes to his family. He is a missus Hellmuth nut, and one of the reasons that he hasn’t traversed the globe in the search of more titles is because of his love for his children.

This love has given him a strong foundation, and he has used that to his advantage. He does not succumb to the temptations that poker can provide. He is as focused off the felt as he is on the felt, and he knows win or lose he still has his family to fall back on.

10. Self-Awareness

After playing the game for so long I believe Hellmuth understands his strengths and weaknesses better than you know. Sometimes he can come across as a man who has lost a few marbles, but it’s very difficult to understand if you are viewing the real Hellmuth, or the one that parades around in front of the camera?

Take his late arrivals at live tournaments as an example.

Some people believe that he does this to be ‘cool’. Like the kids, with the upturned collars and slick back hair who turn up late for the dance, never set foot on the floor, and expect to be snogging the girl from beneath someone’s coat when the smooch songs are blaring out of the speakers.

Then there others that believe he understands that deep stacked, post flop poker is not his thing, and that he turns up late because it is the smart thing for him to do.

When he tells the world he is the greatest he is sending a psychological message to the fish that he feeds off. This is no accident. It’s all part of the Hellmuth master plan.

A plan that has seen him become the most decorated poker player in WSOP history, and he still looks like he has another 40-good years still left in the tank.

I summing up I remind you that anyone can win a poker tournament. It’s why we love the game so much. But if we start believing that you can be that lucky over a 30-year stretch, then we have a serious flaw in the construct of our beautiful game.

If there was a study to determine what traits made up a long term winner in the game of poker, then the first player to fall under the knife would be Phil Hellmuth Jr., and do you know what would happen as the blade sliced through that thick skin of his?

Chips and cards would spew all over the floor.

Friday, January 10, 2014

The PCA Main Event Hits its $10m Guarantee

The PCA Main Event hits its $10m guarantee as 710 players managed to survive terrible American weather conditions to make it to the Bahamas for the second starting flight in the $10,000 Main Event.

The organizers of the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure (PCA) can afford to take that lounger down a notch, and kick off those blue suede shoes, after a chunky showing on Day 1B means the $10,000,000 guarantee has been met in the $10,000 Main Event.

shankar-pillai-pca-chip-leader

David Carrion, PCA & Latam Director of Live Operations, told PokerStars: “Because of the weather, we were a little bit concerned about the numbers – not so much because of the guarantee, but because we want to give players a fantastic event. So we are thrilled we have topped 1,000 players and I know there are still players arriving after three days of trying to get here.”

710 players attended Day 1B and when you add that to the Day 1A total of 295 players, that means the current player count stands at 1,005 players – with late registration still open up until the start of Day 2.

448 players managed to beg, steal and borrow their way through the second starting flight field, and the World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet winner Shankar Pillai finished at the top with 173,900 chips, giving him the chip lead proper when Day 2 starts.

Pillai has amassed over $700,000 in live tournament earnings, in a career that stretches back to 2007, and most of his scores have come in the WSOP with the highlight being the bracelet he won in 2007 when he saved the shoe cupboard of Beth Shak some added stress after beating her in heads-up action to capture the $527,829 first prize in a $3,000 No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) event that saw Phil Hellmuth make a 6th place showing.

With 184 players surviving Day 1A we now have at least 632 players in the seat draw for Day 2, so let’s take a look who will be in that draw and who will be thinking about their trip to Australia.

Players who got through included Vanessa Selbst, Jonathan Duhamel, Joe Cada, Daniel Negreanu, Jason Mercier, Greg Merson, Fabian Quoss, Dan Smith and Noah Boeken; and those that were left eating sand included the former champion Harrison Gimbel, 2012 runner-up Kyle Julius, ElkY, Barry Greenstein, Paul Volpe, Michael Mizrachi, Andy Frankenberger, Dan Kelly, Jason Koon, Martin Finger and Bryn Kenney.

Kenney will no doubt brush off his disappointment (not that I have ever seen him disappointed) and shun the beach for the online grind just as he did when he was eliminated from the $100,000 Super High Roller (SHR).

According to PokerNews reporter Bruno Santos. Kenney dusted off his SHR disappointment to take $188,800 away from the PokerStars 2-7 Triple Draw tables; most of which came from the pockets of Eugene “oogee” Yanayt.

Thursday, January 09, 2014

Fabian Quoss Wins the 2014 PCA High Roller Event

The ever-dramatic first event of the 2014 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure has officially reached a conclusion. Despite it being a new year, the German domination continues as Fabian Quoss was able to defeat Dan Shak heads up to take home the title as well as $1,629,940 in prize money.

Typically, final tables on the European Poker Tour are eight-handed, but due to an exciting double elimination to conclude Day 2, this final table began with just seven. Shak held the chip lead coming into the final table with Team PokerStars Pro Vanessa Selbst right on his heels. Also present at the final table was $1,000,000 Big One for One Drop champion Antonio Esfandiari, 2013 One Drop High Roller champion Tony Gregg, Matt Glantz, and 2013 Global Poker Index Player of the Year Ole Schemion.

Schemion and Gregg entered the day very short on chips, and on the second hand both of them saw their tournament come to an end. At 30,000/60,000/10,000, Schemion was under the gun and opened with a ship all in for 260,000. Gregg then moved all in over the top for 390,000. Quoss called and the rest of the table folded.

Quoss: {10-Spades}{10-Clubs}
Gregg: {A-Diamonds}{9-Clubs}
Schemion: {K-Diamonds}{4-Diamonds}

Neither of the short stacks improved on the {Q-Diamonds}{2-Hearts}{2-Spades}{2-Diamonds}{9-Spades} board and Quoss collected the remaining chips of both players. Just a few short hands later, short-stacked Glantz saw his tournament come to a close. Glantz's final hand began when Esfandiari opened to 160,000 from under the gun with {A-Clubs}{7-Hearts}. Glantz then moved all in over the top for 320,000 total with {J-Spades}{10-Hearts} and it folded over to Selbst in the small blind. She re-raised the action to 605,000 with {A-Hearts}{J-Hearts} and Esfandiari folded.

Glantz was dominated heading to the community cards and did not improve as the board came down {3-Diamonds}{5-Clubs}{7-Clubs}{7-Spades}{K-Spades}. He collected $445,520 for his fifth-place finish.

After some exciting four-handed play, the match came to a head during a confrontation between Selbst and Esfandiari. At 40,000/80,000/10,000, Selbst opened with a raise to 160,000. Esfandiari three-bet to 430,000, and Selbst four-bet him all in for about 1.9 million. Esfandiari called and the hands were revealed to show that the two were racing for the Magician's tournament life.

Selbst: {A-Clubs}{K-Diamonds}
Esfandiari: {9-Clubs}{9-Hearts}

The flop fell {2-Hearts}{4-Diamonds}{5-Diamonds} and Esfandiari kept his lead. Selbst picked up additional outs, however, as she could make a wheel with a trey. It was not needed, however, as the {A-Diamonds} spiked the turn and put Selbst in a dominating position. The {5-Clubs} bricked off on the river for Esfandiari and he was forced to settle for a fourth place finish.

Three-handed play saw much drama as large amounts of chips exchanged hands several times and the chip lead was constantly changing. In what began a dramatic series of hands, Selbst lost a fair sized hand to Shak. Immediately following that, Selbst was able to double back through Shak and take a huge chip lead.
Selbst busted in third place, earning $760,640Selbst busted in third place, earning $760,640

Soon after though, Selbst lost a large chunk of those chips when she turned top two pair against Quoss' turned Broadway straight. Quoss scored a full double and crippled Selbst. Shortly thereafter, she moved all in for her last roughly two million from the button with {K-Hearts}{9-Clubs}. Quoss called from the big blind with {A-Hearts}{4-Hearts} and the Super High Roller was suddenly five cards away from heads up play. The {6-Diamonds}{2-Clubs}{3-Clubs} flop was of no help to Selbst, and she was still hunting for a king or a nine heading to the final two streets. The {4-Spades} hit fourth street and the {3-Spades} fifth, sending Selbst home as the third-place finisher for a payday of $760,640.

Following Selbst's elimination, Quoss and Shak took a dinner break before returning to the felt to determine a champion. Quoss continuously applied pressure during the bout and the match finally came to a head after about an hour of play. On the final hand, Quoss limped from the button and Shak checked his option to a {10-Diamonds}{7-Clubs}{Q-Spades} flop. Shak check-called a bet of 200,000 and the {9-Diamonds} fell on fourth street. Shak checked again and Quoss fired out 425,000. Shak moved all in for 2.275 million and Quoss snapped him off.

Quoss: {8-Spades}{6-Hearts}
Shak: {J-Hearts}{10-Clubs}

Quoss was in the lead with a straight and was looking to dodge an eight or a king heading to the river. The dealer produced the {A-Clubs} as the final card and Shak was eliminated as the runner-up. Quoss seized the victory and the title of Super High Roller champion!

Full Result

1st Fabian ' fabstinho' Quoss $1,629,940

2nd Dan Shak $1,178,980

3rd Vanessa Selbst $760,640

4th Antonio Esfandiari $575,920

5th Matt Glantz $445,520

6th Tony Gregg $347,720

7th ' olekonjole' $277,080

Tuesday, January 07, 2014

Niklas Heinecker Online Poker's Biggest Winner of 2013

The race to become the biggest online winner of 2013 was a contentious affair for nearly nine months. Both Alexander “PostFlopAction” Kostritsyn and Kyle “cottonseed1” Hendon both held the lead at one point before inexplicably opting out of being tracked — a phenomenon addressed in a recent op-ed titled The Problems of Opting Out from Online Tracking.

From there it was time for Viktor “Isildur1” Blom to top the leaderboard. The Swede’s volatile playing style saw him quickly swing from up more than $3 million to down on the year, which opened the door for Niklas “ragen70” Heinecker to take the lead. The young German, who finished sixth in 2012 with $1,640,967 in winnings, never looked back as he went on to win $6,190,599 in 65,577 hands this year.
Biggest Online Winners of 2013

Player Sessions Hands Winnings Profit Per Hand

Niklas “ragen70” Heinecker 506 65,577 $6,190,599 $94.40
Ben “Bttech86” Tollerene 1,358 117,730 $2,996,585 $25.45
Alex “IReadYrSoul” Millar 300 32,976 $2,036,159 $61.75
Hac “trex313” Dang 846 80,869 $1,886,417 $23.33
“no_Ola” 1,167 107,674 $1,849,293 $17.17
“Odd_Oddsen”* 2,083 113,199 $1,805,454 $15.95
Patrik “FinddaGrind” Antonius 901 62,441 $1,764,977 $28,27
“Tight-Man1” 154 13,157 $1,1448,413 $110.09
“proudlikeagoat” 256 26,817 $1,391,472 $51.89
Isaac “luvtheWNBA” Haxton 297 26,571 $1,051,218 $39.56

*Indicates PokerStars

According to HighStakesDB, Heinecker avoided the virtual felt for the first three months of the year, and when he finally logged on in April he began by dropping a couple hundred grand. He hit a small heater in May and June, but proceeded to give it all back in July. It was at that point he kicked things into high gear and began adding millions to his bankroll.

Most of his winnings — $4.19 million to be exact — came from the draw games, while $2.15 million more came from no-limit hold’em. He also added a small $32,540 playing 8-game and actually lost $166,300 playing limit hold’em.

Here’s a month-by-month look at Heinecker’s running total:
Heinecker’s Race to the Top

HeineckerHeinecker

Month Heinecker
January $0
February $0
March $0
April -$225,330
May +$464,650
June +$578,340
July -$34,880
August $2.28 million
September $2.93 million
October $3.21 million
November $5.37 million
December $6.19 million


Here are some other odds and ends regarding the online winners of 2013:

Tom “durrrr” Dwan who recently parted ways with Full Tilt Poker, finished the year with $750,625 in profit that came from 68,144 hands over 643 sessions.
”Odd_Oddsen”, who did an interview with PokerNews earlier this year, was the biggest winner on PokerStars. Moreover, he also won on FTP to bring his yearly winnings up to $3,654,747.
Ben “Sauce1234” Sulsky, who was 2012’s biggest online winner, was the sixth-biggest loser after dropping $1,473,088 in 64,259 hands over 597 sessions.

Speaking of the losers, no one had a worse year than Gus Hansen, who lost a heart-wrenching $8,461,472. Hansen nearly doubled his volume from 2012 when he was the second-biggest loser after dropping $3,204,539 in 63,686 hands over 414 sessions on FTP (he was actually the year’s biggest loser if you combined his $1,093,446 loss on PokerStars), but as you can see it did him little good. The “Great Dane” is now online poker’s all-time biggest loser with $14,891,778 in losses.

Speaking of all-time players, Phil Ivey is online poker’s biggest winner of all time with $19,242,744 in profit. That’d be even more if not for a detrimental 2013 when he lost $2,441,773 in 76,301 hands over 1,098 sessions.
Biggest Online Losers of 2013

Gus HansenGus Hansen

Player Sessions Hands Losses Loss Per Hand
Gus Hansen 1,627 171,743 $8,461,472 -$49.27
“MalACEsia” 292 42,742 $3,773,524 -$88.29
“samrostan” 757 82,945 $3,467,195 -$41.80
Phil “Polarizing” Ivey 1,098 76,301 $2,441,773 -$32.00
“punting-peddler” 870 89,273 $1,714,545 -$19.21
Ben “Sauce1234” Sulsky 597 64,259 $1,473,088 -$22.92
“patpatpanda” 824 83,494 $1,330,885 -$15.94
Scott “mastrblastr” Seiver 115 13,750 $1,220,399 -$88.76
Rui Cao 374 44,208 $1,064,351 -$24.08
“davin77” 1,380 140,368 $1,037,057 -$7.39