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Poker In The Ears welcomes Patrik Antonius

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James Hartigan and Joe Stapleton are ready to fill your head with another episode of Poker In The Ears. This week the guys welcome Finland’s all-time leading money winner, Patrik Antonius, to the podcast.

Antonius is kicking off his new poker tour in Estonia this week and he has some ideas on how to change things up. He doesn’t like the way poker has evolved, where players are getting better all the time and looking for every advantage they can take.

“All we’re trying to do is make poker better again,” the Finnish legend tells Hartigan and Stapes. “I think we’ve gotta go back and play more social, entertaining poker.”

“Hurry up, this is going to look awful on TV!”

“I personally don’t like to watch when people cover themselves with scarves and hoodies completely, it doesn’t look nice. It’s a little bit ridiculous. If you’ve never watched poker before, imagine you start watching and you’re asking, ‘What’s this guy doing? Like, what the f*ck is he doing pulling his shirt over his face?’ What we are wearing is on another level in the high rollers right now. ”

Antonius is no fan of stalling, either — it’s one thing to balance your time ranges, he says, but it’s another to slow the game down. “We all know the guy is going to bet or check but he always takes his 30 seconds. The game flow should get better.”

Check out Episode 148 of Poker In The Ears on Soundcloud, iTunes, or Spotify.The interview with Antonius starts around 37:30. And if your ears feel good, be sure to rate, review, and subscribe to the podcast.



Brand new features for PokerStars VR

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New features include Sit & Gos, the option to buy chips and compete in weekly leader boards

If you’re a PokerStars VR player, there are some new features to look forward to this week.

From today you’ll be able to:

  • Play new PokerStars VR Sit & Gos
  • Buy chips to top up your bankroll*
  • And take part in weekly leader boards

It means there’s a new competitive edge to VR poker.

Jeff Lande is the CEO of Lucky VR, PokerStars VR’s virtual reality developer. He goes through the new updates in the video below.

 

Play new VR Sit & Gos

The VR Sit & Gos will be familiar to regular PokerStars players. But if you’re new to the game, here’s a rundown of how they work.

  • They begin when all the seats are filled, or when players decide to start. There’s no waiting around – you can play when you want to play.
  • They’re played using regular, turbo, or hyper turbo structures. That means ten, five and two minute levels. You pick the VR format you prefer, to play in the time you have.
  • Buy-ins start at 5,000 chips and go all the way to 1 million. So there are games for you whether you’re new to PokerStars VR, or count yourself as a virtual high roller.

And remember, if you prefer to play for free, you still can. You’ll still enjoy weekly bankroll resets when you drop below 10,000 chips, and up to three wheel spins a day.

Play new PokerStars VR Spin & Gos, or even host your own

You’ll also be able to host your own Sit & Gos. Set up a table and invite friends. Or just open it up and see who stops by.

You get to choose the structure, the buy-in, as well as the number of players.

Buy chips to fast track your bankroll

The option to buy more chips gives you more options on how to play.

Buy chips to fast track your PokerStars VR bankroll

You can grind your way into the bigger games, or you can boost your bankroll and jump straight into Wyatt’s game, with its $1 million buy-in.

And to help with that, you can take advantage of a 100% bonus on any chips you buy. It’s like a double up before you’ve even played a hand.

Here’s how it works.

Price point Base Chips +100% sale for launch
$1.99 10,000 20,000
$4.99 50,000 100,000
$9.99 125,000 250,000
$19.99 300,000 600,000
$49.99 1,000,000 2,000,000
$99.99 5,000,000 10,000,000

Remember, it’s only available for a limited time. So start building your bankroll now.

Earn rings by topping weekly leader boards

There’s more to it than winning chips.

Each week the leader board winners for both Sit & Gos and cash games will receive exclusive winners’ rings. It’s the kind of virtual bling that marks you out as a champion in the VR world.

Weekly leader board winners could find themselves in possession of some virtual bling

Each tier of leader board awards a different type of ring.

$5k – Bronze Tier Ring
$20k – Silver Tier Ring
$100k – Gold Tier Ring
$1M – Iridescent Tier Ring

How to find out more

It’s all part of the new features on PokerStars VR and you can read more about them on the VR homepage.

There you’ll find details of how to start playing VR Sit & Gos as well as how to set up your own game.

You’ll also find details of the “no props” option, and “privacy bubble”. And of current leader boards, and what it takes to win one of those champions rings.

Don’t forget to take advantage of those bonus chips. And look out for more features on the way soon.

 


*Unfortunately in-game purchases are not available everywhere, so check your country before attempting to buy.

Those countries/States include Belgium Italy, Portugal, Singapore, Slovakia, South Africa, Switzerland and India.

That’s on top of the countries and states where we currently do not distribute PokerStars VR: China, Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Libya, Myanmar (Burma), North Korea, Sudan, Syria, Washington State (USA), Yemen, and Zimbabwe.

Book Excerpt: From the forthcoming “Fossilman's Winning Tournament Strategies” by Greg Raymer

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This summer readers are getting a chance to look at tournament strategy through a pair of poker’s most famous sunglasses with the publication of 2004 World Series of Poker Main Event champion Greg Raymer’s Fossilman’s Winning Tournament Strategies.

Already a longtime contributor to poker forums at the time of his big Main Event win, over the years since Raymer has continued to build upon his tournament strategies while adding another $2.7 million worth of tournament cashes to the $5M he won in 2004. Due out this July, Fossilman’s Winning Tournament Strategies finds Raymer drawing upon his experience as a player and coach to share a comprehensive guide to “practical tournament play.”

After starting with chapters sharing his “poker philosophy,” tournament vs. cash game strategy, ICM, game theory, pot odds, bet sizing, and other fundamentals, Raymer then covers numerous other tournament-specific concepts and issues with chapters covering playing the short stack, playing the big stack, special situations and plays, avoiding mistakes, image, tells, deal-making, and more.

Raymer also includes advice about satellite strategy, how to approach re-entry and re-buy tournaments, heads-up tournaments, strategy when playing with the big blind ante, as well as advice about playing the WSOP Main Event.

The following excerpt comes from the chapter “Tournament Equity and Goals” and highlights a specific issue that often comes up in discussions of tournament strategy. Is it okay to turn down a profitable spot now in order to wait for a potentially better one later? There are a few factors to consider when answering that question, explains Raymer.


from “Tournament Equity and Goals”

What about the idea, which you will hear often from tournament players, of passing up on a given spot that is profitable, because you believe that an even better spot will present itself later? Early in a tournament this is just silly. Let’s presume that you are a great player, with a significant edge on the field. You know from the history of tournaments you have played, that you will double your stack in a tournament before you go broke about 80% of the time. Notice we’re not talking about making the money, or winning, just the concept that if the tournament started with T20,000, that you will, with about 80% certainty, reach T40,000 or more at some point before you are eliminated. Now, you are faced with an all-in situation, where you believe you are 70% likely to win. If you call, you will double up when you win, and be eliminated when you lose. But if you fold, you know that by continuing with your normal game you will double up at some point with about 80% certainty. Does this mean you should fold this hand where you’re a 70:30 favorite?

Sorry, but if you said yes, you need to think about it some more. The real question isn’t which decision gives you the greatest chance of doubling up. If this were a $100 buy-in tournament, and you had made a bet with a friend for $10,000 that you would double up at some point in this event, then yes, you should probably fold in this spot. But ignoring such silliness, the real question isn’t which decision is most likely to double you up, but which decision, on average, makes you the most money. If you call now and lose, it is true, you will miss out on those future opportunities in this tournament where you would have gotten your chips in good, and frequently (80% of the time) doubled up to T40,000. But when you call now and win, you will have doubled up right now, AND you will still be there (70% of the time) to enjoy all of those future opportunities. You might say that if you call now and win, you have become something like an 80% favorite to triple up at some point in this tournament, because those opportunities wherein you would have won those other chips will still be there for you.

Only at very end, when you are down to the last few players, should you consider passing on a profitable but risky spot, in order to wait for a better spot that you are confident is going to come along. Here is a common example. You are down to three players in the tournament, and your two opponents are both very passive and relatively tight players. It is obvious they are not used to playing short-handed, and do not understand that they need to play a wider range of starting hands than when the table was full. As a result, you have been able to raise preflop, and steal the blinds and antes frequently, and you believe that you will be able to continue doing so, even when it gets down to heads-up play. Now, you raise again, and one of the opponents moves all-in. You actually have a very strong hand this time, and even when carefully doing the ICM/tournament math, you know it is profitable to call. But should you? Maybe not. If these opponents are going to let you slowly grind them down, one blind at a time, with a very high certainty, then why play a huge pot, even when you are a significant favorite to win? This is a time where you can go beyond the math, and realize that the more profitable play might be to fold. In essence, what you are doing here is giving up on a call that is clearly correct as a Game Theory Optimal play, and pursuing your Game Theory Exploitative strategy of grinding the players down instead.

However, when it is still early in the tournament, it simply won’t be more profitable to pass on risky hands where you have the advantage. With so many players still left in the field, you can’t know that you will be able to win using conservative strategies. Even if the opponents you’re facing now would permit this as a reasonable possibility, you will be facing many other opponents as you proceed in the tournament, and it is highly unlikely they are all going to let you grind them down slowly and surely. Early in an event there is so far to go, and so many chips yet to be won, that there is always a lot of risk awaiting you. As such, it simply won’t be profitable to avoid risk early simply for the sake of avoiding risk. If the situation you find yourself in involves a lot of risk, but also gives you a significant edge, then it is a risk you should take if you want to maximize your long-term profits.


Fossilman’s Winning Tournament Strategies is available for pre-order in paperback and as an e-book at D&B Poker.

D&B Publishing (using the imprint D&B Poker) was created by Dan Addelman and Byron Jacobs 15 years ago. Since then it has become one of the leading publishers of poker books with titles by Phil Hellmuth, Jonathan Little, Mike Sexton, Chris Moorman, Dr. Patricia Cardner, Lance Bradley, Martin Harris and more, all of which are available at D&B Poker.

This week on PokerStars

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Catch up on all of this week’s PokerStars Blog content…

  • Lex Live highlights
  • Brand new features for PokerStars VR
  • Book Excerpt: From the forthcoming “Fossilman’s Winning Tournament Strategies” by Greg Raymer

Plus:

• Patrik Antonius wants you to hurry up already…


LEX LIVE HIGHLIGHTS

Last week we brought you all the action from Namur in Belgium where the inaugural Lex Live festival played out. Danny de Vos took down the Main Event for just under €30K, but there were countless highlights away from the felt too, as Lex Veldhuis’s Twitch community came together (in real life) for the first time.

Check out the video below, then take a look through our content from Lex Live.

ALL OUR CONTENT FROM LEX LIVE:

LEX VELDHUIS INTERVIEW | DANNY DE VOS WINS MAIN EVENT FOR €29,300 | TAKE THE PUB QUIZ

DAY 2 COVERAGE | FU FRIDAY FLIP | DAY 1C RECAP | CROAKS INTERVIEW | PARTY TIME VIDEO

DAY 1B RECAP | MEET THE QUALIFIERS | VIDEO FROM DAY 1A


BRAND NEW FEATURES FOR POKERSTARS VR

Some brand spanking features have been added to PokerStars VR today, allowing you to:

  • Play new PokerStars VR Sit & Gos
  • Buy chips to top up your bankroll*
  • And take part in weekly leader boards

Click here for more info on PokerStars VR.

*Unfortunately in-game purchases are not available everywhere, so check your country before attempting to buy.


LEARN FROM THE FOSSILMAN

"Fossilman's Winning Tournament Strategies" by Greg Raymer

This summer readers are getting a chance to look at tournament strategy through a pair of poker’s most famous sunglasses with the publication of 2004 World Series of Poker Main Event champion Greg Raymer’s Fossilman’s Winning Tournament Strategies.

This week we bring you an excerpt from that forthcoming release, in which Raymer highlights a specific issue that often comes up in discussions of tournament strategy: is it okay to turn down a profitable spot now in order to wait for a potentially better one later?

Read that excerpt here.


POKER IN THE EARS W/ PATRIK ANTONIUS

With his inaugural Patrik Antonius Poker Challenge (PAPC) running all week, James and Joe caught up the Finnish poker legend to talk about the evolution of poker, stalling, and more.

Have a great weekend!


Ready to sign up for PokerStars? Click here to get an account.


Lex Veldhuis wins GPI Streamer of the Year

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There was a point five years ago at which people couldn’t even figure out exactly what it meant to be a poker streamer, and then once folks figured it out, they had a hard time deciding if such thing was even worthy of recognition.

That time is long past, and now the level of competition in the streaming community is as tough as it’s ever been. So, while it may be no surprise who won the Global Poker Index’s Global Poker Award for Streamer of the Year, it was no easy road either.

Up against the toughest possible nominees, Jeff Gross, Jaime Staples, and Jason Somerville, PokerStars’ own Lex Veldhuis came out on top.

 

Veldhuis was not in Vegas for his victory, so he counted on Daniel Negreanu to give his acceptance speech. You can watch that in the video above.

Congratulations, Lex. You earned this one.

 

WEEKEND REVIEW: All the big results

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A recap of the major results from this weekend on PokerStars…

• Austria’s “Matze 90451” wins the Sunday Million for $107K

• High Roller Club victories for Roman “Romeopro” Romanovsky and Scott “Aggro Santos” Margereson

• Top 5 High Roller Club scores

• Top 5 results from the weekend majors.


“Matze 90451” WINS THE SUNDAY MILLION ($107K)

The biggest multi-table tournament winner of the weekend once again came from the $109 Sunday Million, which yesterday attracted 10,316 entries to create a $1,031,600 prize pool.

After 14 hours and 23 minutes of action it was Austria’s “Matze 90451” who came out on top to bank $107,737 after no deal was made. Canada’s “Boss BL” was the runner-up for $77,457.


WORLD #1 “RomeOpro” WINS SUNDAY HR

Roman "RomeOpro" Romanovsky

Roman “RomeOpro” Romanovsky

Roman “RomeOpro” Romanovsky is currently ranked as the no.1 online tournament player in the world, according to PocketFives. That position should be safe for at least another week after Romanovsky took down one of online poker’s most prestigious tournaments: the $2,100 Sunday HR.

This week the tournament got 129 entries made up of many of the world’s best players. The final table was stacked, featuring Rui “RuinF” Ferreira, Bartlomiej “bartek901” Machon, Adrian “Amadi_017” Mateos, and Team PokerStars Pro Igor Kurganov.

Romanovsky added $56,549 to his bankroll after his victory against runner-up finisher Ferreira.


HRC TITLE FOR SCOTT “AGGRO SANTOS” MARGERESON

Another familiar face on the High Roller Club winner’s sheet was Scott “Aggro Santos” Margereson, who took down the $530 Sunday 500 for $31,323.

Scott “Aggro Santos” Margereson

Margereson is a fixture in the high roller live scene but has been playing (and crushing) online for years. He’s actually one of the only multiple-time Sunday Million winners, and because of that we recently featured him in our “Who’ll win the Anniversary Sunday Million?” piece.


TOP 5 RESULTS FROM THE HIGH ROLLER CLUB

TOURNAMENT PLAYER COUNTRY PRIZE
High Roller Club: $1,050 Sunday Warm-Up [8-Max], $175K Gtd  twirlpro Hungary  $57,754.87
High Roller Club: $2,100 Sunday HR, $200K Gtd  RomeOpro Ukraine  $56,549.97
High Roller Club: $530 Bounty Builder HR [Progressive KO], $400K Gtd  anonymstruts Sweden  $46,755.22
High Roller Club: $1,050 Sunday Supersonic [6-Max, Hyper-Turbo], $175K Gtd  nikolaaa1234 Bulgaria  $41,099.23
High Roller Club: $530 Sunday 500, $115K Gtd  Aggro Santos Mexico  $31,323.14

TOP 5 RESULTS FROM THE WEEKEND MAJORS

TOURNAMENT PLAYER COUNTRY PRIZE
$109 SUNDAY MILLION, $1,000,000 Gtd Matze 90451 Austria  $107,737.84
$215 Sunday Warm-Up, $175K Gtd  DonPiatniK Hungary  $35,210.03
$215 Sunday Supersonic [6-Max, Hyper-Turbo], $115K Gtd  teckidtq Canada  $25,733.04
$22 Mini Sunday Million, $175K Gtd  kassirus888 Russia  $23,650.45
$55 Sunday Marathon, $100K Gtd  Storimos Poland  $16,638.73

Spin of the Day: "I came a long way and I was really happy about it"

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Everybody remembers their first big win. For Eric, a 58-year-old husband and father of two from Rotterdam, Netherlands, the memory is just a few days old.

When he isn’t working as a process operator or spending time with his family, Eric plays about a half-hour each day as “RR idecky” on PokerStars. Eric considers himself a recreational player, but at the same time he takes the game seriously. Last week he was playing a small cash game when a message popped up on his screen: his Spin of the Day had earned him a ticket to a freeroll.

“I usually play small money sit and go’s, from 25 cents to $1.50, and $.01/$.02 cash games,” Eric told PokerStars Blog. “I was happy to win a ticket for a $5,000 multi-table tournament. I do not often get the opportunity to play big MTT’s because they last too long, but this one began within a few minutes so I was able to play.”

Eric’s game plan was the classic tight-aggressive approach: play few hands, but play them hard. “At first I tried to last at least an hour,” he said. “After that I wanted to end in the money. With a lot of patience some good calls and luck I made it to the final table. There I tried to survive as long as possible.”

One by one the rest of the players at the table were eliminated until Eric found himself heads-up. “It gave me a very good feeling about the way I played. In the heads up I really did not care if I would win or lose, I came a long way and was really happy about it.”

The game went back and forth from there and eventually Eric finished in second place, winning several hundred dollars — easily the biggest score of his days playing poker.

Studying with PokerStars School prepared Eric to run deep in the Spin of the Day freeroll.

Just as valuable is how his experience in the Spin Of The Day freeroll helped to solidify some concepts that previously had only been theoretical for him.

“During the tournament I saw a lot of things that were explained in poker courses at PokerStars School,” said Eric. “This gives me the confidence that I was doing the right thing. PokerStars School already taught me a lot about the way poker is played and now I only need time to play.”

Eric now has a bankroll that will let him explore other games outside of his comfort zone, and to play in the occasional MTT as well. And it’s all because he logged to play for a just a few minutes.


There’s still time to win with our Spin of the Day promotion. Check out all the details here and get in on the action before April 14th!

The idiot's guide to the UFC

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November 12, 1993 was the first time the world laid eyes on the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC). What was then a barbaric spectacle, pushed as fights that could end only “by knockout, submission or death,” has become a multi-billion dollar organization featuring brilliant athletes, huge sponsorships, massive broadcast deals and year-round drug testing.

The UFC, its trademark Octagon and many of the fighters within it are now a part of the pop culture lexicon. While boxing has produced global sports icons, stars such as Conor McGregor and Ronda Rousey could only be the product of mixed martial arts and the UFC’s blend of sport and spectacle.

Just as the stars inside the cage are unique products of the sport, it’s difficult to imagine another league or organization having a figurehead like Dana White.

UFC President White is a pitbull when upset and is quick to drop an “f-bomb” in his angriest or happiest moments. This has made him a beloved figure to many in the MMA community and established him as the face of the UFC regardless of what controversy he may stir up.

The branding of the UFC revolves around this mixture of pageantry and raw, unfiltered emotion. But behind the simplicity of “it’s just fighting” is a sport filled with rules and techniques unfamiliar to the untrained eye.

Let’s take a look at what you need to know if you’re new to the world of the UFC.

The Rules

The UFC follows the Unified Rules of Mixed Martial Arts, a set of rules adopted by the Association of Boxing Commissions. Local athletic commissions oversee events except in locations that do not have an established sanctioning body, in these cases the UFC oversees the event themselves while adhering to the unified rules.

Fights comprise three, five-minute rounds, with the exception of so-called “main events” and title fights, which take place over five, five-minute rounds.

The fights are scored by three judges who utilize a “10-point must system.” Under this scoring system, the winner of each round must be awarded 10 points (unless there is a rule violation) while the loser of the round is awarded nine or fewer points depending on the level of dominance displayed over the course of five minutes. In the event a round has no clear winner, a judge may score a round 10-10.

If neither man is knocked out or submitted, the judges’ scores are totaled and a winner is declared. If all three judges favor one fighter, it’s considered unanimous; a split decision means one of the three judges disagreed with the other two. (A draw is also possible, if the points total is even.)

Rules of the bout tend to focus on what fighters may not do. They cannot:

  • Bite
  • Headbutt
  • Gouge the eyes
  • Pull hair
  • Fishhook (ie, putting ones fingers in an opponent’s mouth or nose)
  • Grab the fence with fingers or toes
  • Strike to the groin
  • Throw a downward “12-6” elbow strike
  • Kick or knee the head of a downed opponent
  • Manipulate small joints (fingers or toes)
  • Spike an opponent on their head or neck

The full list of possible infractions is slightly longer, and includes a prohibition against pinching, for example. It’s true: You may kick an opponent in the head, you may attempt to extend their limbs so far they break or cut the blood flow off to their brain with various chokes … but you must not pinch.

Fouls may result in warnings, point deductions or disqualifications at the referee’s discretion.

Fights also take place in designated weight classes. Fighters weigh in the day before the fights, often putting themselves through a grueling process of dehydration before stepping on the scales to make weight. Once their weight is official, they begin rehydrating and often step in the cage much heavier than they were a little over 24 hours prior.

In non-title fights, there is a one pound weight allowance. So, for example, a fighter may weigh in at 171 pounds for a welterweight (170 pound) bout. That one pound allowance does not exist in title fights.

When a fighter fails to make weight their opponent may choose to not go ahead with the fight. However, the standard procedure is 20 percent of the offending fighter’s pay (30 percent in egregious cases) is forfeited to their opponent and the fight goes ahead as planned.

Knockouts and Submissions

Knockouts and submissions aren’t only emphatic ways to achieve victory, they’re an opportunity to take home a $50,000 “Performance of the Night” bonus from the UFC.

A knockout is arguably the most visceral moment in sports. A punch, elbow, knee or kick dropping a man or woman to the canvas is not hard to figure out and we understand it on some sort of instinctual level.

A technical knockout (TKO) occurs when a fighter cannot intelligently defend against incoming attacks, resulting in the referee calling a halt to the action in the interest of safety. These finishes can feel unsatisfying at times — especially when the losing fighter appears to want to continue fighting — but are necessary to prevent long-term injury.


Attention UFC and poker fans everywhere

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If you’re a UFC fan, this is going to be of interest to you.

Double that if you also love poker.

Today PokerStars is launching new UFC-branded Spin & Go’s.

They’re part of the exclusive global poker partnership between PokerStars and the UFC, the world’s premier mixed martial arts organisation.

There’s a lot to say about it, and you can read on to learn more of that below.

But here’s what you can look forward to.

  • You can play new UFC-themed Spin & Go’s with top prizes in the millions
  • You can win branded merchandise and exclusive UFC experiences
  • You’ll get to meet and greet your poker and UFC heroes 

It makes today the start of an action-filled 2019.

What are new UFC Spin & Go’s?

Spin & Go’s are three player poker tournaments.

They have a hyper-turbo structure which means levels are short and action filled. They’re quick. Whether that’s Henry Cejudo quick or Amanda Nunes quick is up to you.

The best part?

The spin at the start of the game. That’s what determines the prize pool.

New UFC Spin & Go’s are now available on PokerStars

It can be double the buy-in (remember, UFC Spin & Go’s are winner-take-all). Or you could watch it spin up by the thousands, cranking up the drama in the process. Again, whether that’s Junior dos Santos drama or Nate Diaz drama, is down to you.

And that goes for any game, whatever the buy-in.

You might be a first timer making your debut in a $0.25 UFC Spin & Go, with a top prize in the thousands.

Or you might be playing $5 and $25 games, with first prizes tapping out at $2 million and $3 million.

Either way you get action, excitement, and a potential big payday. And like a round in a UFC fight, all in the space of a few minutes.

First stop UFC 236 in Atlanta, then on to Rio

Off the tables, you’ll also spot PokerStars on the canvas of the Octagon™ at UFC 236 in Atlanta on April 13, 2019 and again at UFC 237 in Rio on May 11, 2019.

And from there, all major UFC Pay-Per-View events throughout the year.

It’s an exciting time for UFC and poker fans.

 

 

“UFC is the perfect pick for PokerStars,” said Christopher Coyne, Chief Marketing Officer, Stars Interactive.

“Our plan is to thrill as far and wide as possible with games, promotions, content and competitions that trigger passions and enhance the overall experience at PokerStars. We’ve so much in store. This is just the beginning.”

But don’t just take our word for it.

“It’s been great to work on exciting, new and innovative ideas alongside PokerStars since our exclusive partnership went live,” said Paul Asencio, UFC Senior Vice President, Global Partnerships. “UFC Spin & Go is a great example of how PokerStars are integrating our brand into their world and bringing exciting new products to our fans.”

Exclusive prizes and UFC experiences to be won

We’ll have more details of giveaways and competitions in the coming weeks.

But what we can say is you’ll have the chance to experience the UFC close-up. That goes for whether you’re a long-time fight fan, or getting your first glimpse at the Octagon™.

And it all starts soon.

PokerStars is launching a major UFC ticket and VIP experience giveaway for Brazilian fans ahead of UFC 237, one of the MMA world’s biggest cards, which takes place in Rio next month.

We plan to be there to celebrate.

Want to join us?

The keep an eye out for special promotions across social media, and here on the PokerStars Blog.

Start playing UFC Spin & Go’s in minutes

For now, you can start playing UFC Spin & Go’s within minutes on PokerStars. And for as little as $0.25 (call it our equivalent of Strawweight).

You’ll need a PokerStars account, which you can open in just a few clicks. Get started here.

Follow the prompts and find these new games in the UFC Spin & Go Tab. From there you can select games, and take a seat.

And if you need a little help, a few words of encouragement from your own corner (think John Kavanagh or Greg Jackson), then PokerStars School will teach you how to play, and win, as you start your UFC Spin & Go career.

So, that’s fast-paced action, with all the drama and excitement you expect in poker and UFC.

And this is just the start.

Click here for full Terms & Conditions.

 

The battle begins today

PokerStars School takes on satellite strategy

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Whether you’re looking to qualify for a big tournament like the Sunday Million or tackling small-stakes cash games, there’s no better place to refine your poker strategies than PokerStars School. Have a look at what’s in store for you at PS School this week.


Sunday Million 13th Anniversary

Barry Carter wants to help you win a seat in the Sunday Million 13th Anniversary

Poker Satellite Strategy

With the Sunday Million 13th Anniversary coming up this weekend, EPT Monte Carlo coming up later this month, and SCOOP lurking right around the corner, mid-April is a great time to focus on winning your way into a tournament with major money up for grabs. Good thing that Barry Carter is on the scene to help you brush up on your satellite strategy!

This week Carter offers some tips on the nightly $15 buy-in, 100-seat Mega Satellites to the Sunday Million. Given that this tournament sports a $10 million guaranteed prize pool, this could be some of the most profitable advice you’ll read this month:

The closer these mega satellites are to the day of the tournament, the softer they will be. You can safely assume that the last chance satellite on April 14 will be way softer than the satellite on April 4. Not only do the last chance satellites attract more “weekend warriors” but the better players in these $15 satellites will have already qualified so won’t be in the field when you play the last chance.

Read the whole thing here.


Winners Wall: Working in the poker gold mine

After being introduced to poker a year ago, Chris “Mr.Balzter” Baltzer transitioned from play money to real money last September, rushing through the PokerStars School Beginners Bankroll Challenge to earn freeroll tickets.

This week on the Winners Wall, Chris “Mr.Baltzer” Baltzer shares how he used PokerStars School to become a winning player

“At the end of December after three months and 100,000 hands I had blown through my 50 buy-in bankroll at $2 NL,” he says. “This is when I decided to create (or copy) a more focused study plan.”

Enter PokerStars School. Between hundreds of hours of free content in the video archives and Pete Clarke’s Twitch streams, Baltzer says he’d found a “gold mine.”

“It’s been three months and 150,000 hands,” says Baltzer, “and I’m happy to say I’ve recouped my initial bankroll twice over and I’m winning at 6bb/100.”

Get the full story, including links to the resources Baltzer used to streamline his game, right here.


Win a $0.25 ticket to a new UFC Spin & Go in this week’s PokerStars School Question of the Week

Question of the Week: Poker players in the UFC Octagon?

This week’s Question of the Week in the PokerStars School forum ties into the new partnership between PokerStars and UFC. To win one of 100 $0.25 UFC Spin & Go tickets, just answer this question in at least 25 words:

If you could see two poker players battling it out in the UFC Octagon, who would they be and why?

The best answers as chosen by the PokerStars School moderation team will win. Go here to submit your answer for a chance at winning as much as $2,500 in a matter of minutes.


Other new PokerStars School content you might enjoy

• Video: Playing a final table
• Twitch: ZOOM Poker with Pete
• Strategy: Tips for winning a seat to the Sunday Million
• Winners Wall: Finding the Time to Master Poker


Open a PokerStars account today and start learning from PokerStars School. Click here to get started, and then click here to register for PokerStars School.

Sunday Millions Timeline: 13 yrs. of the Milly

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For the last 13 years, the Sunday Million on PokerStars has been a permanent fixture on online poker players’ schedules, the frequent focus of the Sunday “grind.”  This Sunday will be no different, with tens of thousands of players taking part in the 13th Anniversary Sunday Million.

There’s a $10 million guarantee for the $215 buy-in event, with the first prize also guaranteed to be at least $1 million. Play begins at Sunday, April 14 at 13:00 ET, with late registration (and the option to re-enter up to three times) available for just over five hours until 18:05 ET.

Counting the most recent Sunday Million won by ”Matze 90451,” the “Milly” has run 614 times on PokerStars over the last 13 years, with more than 4.8 million entries (no shinola)!


MORE ON THE ANNIVERSARY SUNDAY MILLION:
WHO’LL WIN: PART 1, PART 2 | STRATEGY ADVICE | QUALIFY FOR FREE
ANNOUNCEMENT | SAVE THE DATE: APRIL 14, 1pm (ET)


For many online poker players, a big score or victory in the Sunday Million has provided a career highlight. The tournament has given us a lot of memorable moments as well, as shown by the following look back through the Sunday Million timeline.

March 5, 2006 – “aaaaaaaa” is the first SM winner

PokerStars had been up and running about four-and-a-half years when the first Sunday Million took place, with 5,893 players joining the $215 buy-in event to build a prize pool of $1,178,600. The first player to win a Sunday Million had a username that also comes first in an alphabetically-arranged list of winners — “aaaaaaaa”, who after just over eight hours of play won the last hand to claim a $173,843.50 first prize.

June 25, 2006 – the SM gets its name

The first few big Sunday tournaments weren’t technically called the “Sunday Million.” That label didn’t appear in the PokerStars lobby until late June 2006 for a $1,050 buy-in version of the event, won by ”FlopSpanker” who took away a $262,151.50 first prize. Occasionally during the first couple of years of the SM, the buy-in was boosted either $530 or $1,050, the last time being late 2008.

March 11, 2007 – 1st anniversary, 1st 10,000-plus field

PokerStars marked the first year of Sunday Millions with an anniversary event, upping the guarantee to $1.5 million. The field for the first SM anniversary event was 10,508 strong, pushing the prize pool up over $2.1 millIon — another first for the SM to crack $2M. Of the more than 1,300 cashers, winner ”Zeddor” seized the largest prize of $271,106.40.

May 24, 2009 – Jesper “KipsterDK” Hougaard becomes first two-time Sunday Million winner

Jesper "KipsterDK" Hougaard

Jesper “KipsterDK” Hougaard

In 2008, Danish pro Jesper Hougaard became the first poker player to win bracelets at both the World Series of Poker and at the World Series of Poker Europe, accomplishing the feat by winning no-limit hold’em events in Vegas and then again in London that same year.

Soon after that Hougaard earned another landmark double when while playing as ”KipsterDK” on PokerStars he became the first player to win the Sunday Million twice — initially in late April 2008, then again in May 2009. “I had experience being in the situation,” Hougaard told PokerStars Blog afterwards while describing reaching the Sunday Million final table a second time. And that experience paid off in a big way.

Since then the “two-timer” club has swelled to 16 players — with one other player having since exceeded that feat (see below).

July 2008-April 2011 – The Sunday More-Than-a-Million

Throughout its history the SM has always featured at least a seven-figure guarantee, though for a time the guarantee was upped to $1.5 million, and was even $2M and $2.5M on occasion. Those increased guarantees helped create record-breaking fields for the Sunday Million, such as on January 10, 2010 when 19,377 played to create a $3,875,400 prize pool, with ”OX45AL” winning a then-record first prize of $550,011.29.

February 21, 2010 – 36,000-plus play, $7.2M prize pool

The first really big SM anniversary event was to mark four years’ worth of Millys. For the 4th Anniversary the tournament sported a $4M guarantee, but when 36,169 participated the prize pool rose to a whopping $7,233,800. The appropriately-named ”RichieRichZH” won that one, earning a first-ever seven-figure SM first prize of $1,141,510.31.

March 6, 2011 – 5th Anniversary draws 59,128

Those records lasted a year, then came the Sunday Million 5th Anniversary event that drew 59,128 players (!) to create a $11,825,600 prize pool (!!). A big nine-way chop in the end meant the biggest cash prize of $844,209.87 went to third-place finisher ”wrzr123”. Meanwhile winner Luke “Bdbeatslayer” Vrabel earned both a $671K payday and a Lamborghini Gallardo for his effort.

December 18, 2011 – The largest online poker tournament ever

To mark the 10th anniversary of PokerStars going online, a special edition of the Sunday Million arrived with an eye-popping $10 million guarantee. All-time marks were established not just for the Sunday Million, but for all of online poker, with 62,116 players participating to build a $12,432,200 prize pool. That made it the largest online poker tournament in history, establishing records that wouldn’t be broken for nearly seven years.

Of that field, 7,682 players cashed (a figure closer to the total entrants for a typical SM), and ”First-Eagle” soared to victory to claim a $1,146,574.65 first prize following a three-way chop at the final table.

Sunday Million 10th Anniversary final table

From 62,116 to 9: The final table of the Sunday Million 10th Anniversary event

March 20, 2016 – “a.urli” tops 55K to win SM 10th Anniversary

Subsequent Sunday Million anniversaries were marked by gradually increasing guarantees matching the year being celebrated — e.g., the 6th anniversary had a $6M guarantee, the 7th a $7M one, and so on. Thus when the 10th anniversary arrived in 2016, a $10 million guarantee helped attract a 55,059-player field that actually built an $11M prize pool. From that big crowd ”a.urli” emerged as the champion to take home $970K after a four-way chop.

February 2 & April 22, 2018 – the SM Anniversary runs it twice

A year ago for the 12th anniversary PokerStars decided to “run it twice” after an initial staging of the event featured another record in the form of a big $1.2 million overlay. After Luis ”Hulk9950” Felipe topped a 43,795-entry field to win the first one, ”Daenarys T” was the best out of 56,310 to win “Take 2” for which the prize pool was more than $11.26M.

December 16, 2018 – Artem “veeea” Vezhenkov wins the Sunday Million for a 3rd time

Artem "veeea" Vezhenkov

Artem “veeea” Vezhenkov

Russian player Artem Vezhenkov, better known as “veeea” online, first won the Sunday Million in November 2015, then won it again to join the two-timer club in July 2017.

Then near the end of 2018 he made himself a club all of his own by winning the SM a third time, a feat that he alone has accomplished. In those three tournaments, Vezhenhov bested fields totaling 16,715 players to earn three first-prizes adding up to $491,700.

January 27, 2019 – SM buy-in change

After nearly 13 years, the buy-in for the Sunday Million was changed from $215 to $109, a move made in order to make the tournament more accessible for players. The famous $1 million guaranteed remained, of course, and in the weeks since the fields have averaged around 12,000 entries (about twice the typical field sizes of the SM).

That said, those playing the big event this Sunday should take note — the buy-in for this Sunday’s 13th Anniversary event is $215, a nod to the SM’s long tradition.

Here’s hoping anniversary #13 for the Sunday Million million proves a lucky one for you!

APPT Korea: Obara leads last 21 in SHR

Sow good: the rise and rise of Kalidou Sow

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PokerStars today unveiled Kalidou Sow as the newest recruit to the most prestigious poker team on the planet. It is the latest step on a long journey for the 38-year-old, starting from humble upbringings in Paris, France. Here we look back on how Sow got here, and how he managed to wow the poker world during his rise to the top.

Kalidou Sow timeline:

  • December 2, 1980: Born Paris, France.
  • Early life: Takes up basketball at age 5 and dreams of becoming a professional, but an injury sustained during a game reduces mobility and rules out chances of becoming an elite athlete. Instead works a number of jobs, including as the owner of a VIP car rental business, before transitioning into the renewable energy sector. During this period, suffers life-threatening injuries and third-degree burns in a car accident while driving home from a nightclub.
  • 2011-12: Learns poker in home games with friends and begins to play cash games in Paris casinos. Eventually transitions to tournaments.
  • March 2013: Records first major tournament cash, finishing eighth in €1,800 High Roller tournament at Marrakech Open, Morocco.
  • June 2013: Visits Las Vegas during World Series of Poker time, cashes once in Wynn Classic $500 event.
  • January 2014: Records first cash on PokerStars France Poker Series (FPS) in Deauville.
  • February 2015: Records first five-figure tournament score, finishing second in €800 FPS Deepstack event in Deauville for €14,590.
  • December 2015: Wins €72,000 for third place in FPS Main Event at Enghien-les-Bains, Paris.
  • June 2016: First outright tournament win, in €500 event at Barierre Poker Tour, Toulouse.
  • December 2016: Wins Belgian Poker Challenge High Roller in Namur for €41,460.
  • December 2017: Wins PokerStars Championship Prague Main Event, beating Jason Wheeler heads up and taking €675,000 after two-way deal.
  • January 2018: Wins PokerStars Festival London Main Event for £121,803 and Platinum Pass to PokerStars Players Championship (PSPC).
  • February 2018: Wins Winamax Poker Tour High Roller in Paris, for €100,000, his third consecutive major tournament title.
  • January 2019: Leads Team France to the PSPC €25,000 Main Event in the Bahamas, won by fellow PokerStars ambassador Ramon Collilas.
  • April 2019: Joins Team PokerStars Pro.

Kalidou Sow in his own words

On his upbringing: “I didn’t grow up in very easy conditions. My competitive spirit, plus the environment where I grew up, that mix has made me who I am. I knew from a young age that if I wanted something, I had to get it myself.”

On his car accident: “My life was different then. It was a time when I was a bit crazy. I was coming back from a club, I fell asleep at the wheel and ended up rolling. I was very lucky. I got third degree burns. It could have been much worse.”

On his maturity: “The impact of the accident made me think. Inevitably it changed me. I was crazier before, now I am more measured.”

On fatherhood: “I think that it has changed my life more than my accident. I think that’s what makes me the man I am today.”

On cash vs. tournament poker: “Cash games suit me less because I don’t see the point. I’m a competitor. I prefer tournaments.”

Sow rises to the top in Prague

On PokerStars Championship Prague success: “It’s very prestigious so it’s a dream to win it. When you see so many great players who haven’t won it, I realise how fortunate I am to be in this position.”

On the PokerStars Festival London Main Event: “I like this tournament a lot. There are a lot of crazy recreational players. I’ve played slowly, and the hands kept coming like boom, boom boom. I’ve been keeping risk down to a minimum because I think I have an edge on these players.”

On winning a Platinum Pass: “I am walking on water, I am floating on air.”

On his wife: “She always wants to come with me to events and I say ‘No, no, no.’ But OK! You can come with me to the PCA, my dear.”

Of joining Team PokerStars: “I am living the dream. My competitiveness has always pushed me to look for opportunities. 2018 was a great year and I am looking forward to what 2019 brings wearing the PokerStars patch.”

Kalidou Sow in pictures:

(Swipe left/right to see gallery)

'Amazing, amazing!' Kalidou Sow joins Team PokerStars

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Every now and then, a poker player emerges on the tournament scene with star quality so clearly apparent that it becomes only a matter of time before they find a PokerStars patch on their sleeve. Such was the case in December 2017, when Kalidou Sow led, and then won, the PokerStars Championship Prague Main Event, earning €675,000 for his efforts. But that was only the start.

Today, Sow’s journey took another significant — and somehow inevitable — step as he was unveiled as the latest member of Team PokerStars. Between then and now, he’s won another major title on the PokerStars circuit, he’s led Team France to the PokerStars Players Championship (the biggest €25,000 buy-in tournament ever played), and he’s become a fixture on the international circuit while rubbing shoulders with the best in the world.

Sow will wear the patch for the first time in Monte Carlo

“To become an ambassador for PokerStars, it’s a dream for me,” the 38-year-old from Paris, France, said. “Amazing, amazing.”

As he joined a roster that includes the all-time great Daniel Negreanu, as well as the champion of the PSPC, Ramon Colillas, Sow added: “My competitiveness has always pushed me to look for opportunities. 2018 was a great year and I am looking forward to what 2019 brings wearing the PokerStars patch.”

Sow will continue to play online at PokerStars (he’s “KalidouSow” on PokerStars.com and “Kalsow1” on PokerStars.fr) as well as at live events across the world, including a new series of PokerStars-sponsored live events throughout France where he will compete and socialise with fans and players.


MORE ABOUT KALIDOU SOW:
CAREER TIMELINE AND QUOTES | PRAGUE CHAMPION | PSF LONDON WINNER


Despite only taking up poker recreationally in his early 30s, Sow offered further proof that the game can offer a hasty route to wish fulfillment. He won a Platinum Pass to the PSPC after taking down the PokerStars Festival London in January 2018, his second major title in consecutive months, and sat down to play in the Bahamas for a $26 million prize pool.

“Absolutely love the addition of Kalidou Sow to the team,” said Negreanu, Sow’s new teammate. “His backstory captivated me when he won his Platinum Pass after winning back-to-back events. His life story is very inspiring and he is easy to root for. I’m a fan!”

Eric Hollreiser, PokerStars Director of Poker Marketing, followed up saying: “Kalidou embodies what the game is all about with his friendly, approachable demeanour, his thoughtful interaction with his opponents at the poker table, and a level of cool you don’t see every day. The buzz around him continued long after his initial Platinum Pass win and we’re excited to see where his journey will take him as we welcome him as an ambassador for PokerStars.”

Sow will wear a PokerStars patch for the first time at EPT Monte Carlo at the end of this month.


Holloway aims for redemption against Poirier

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On February 4, 2012, Max Holloway made his UFC debut as a 20-year-old prospect with a 4-0 record from fighting in other, less prestigious organizations. Less than four minutes after his fight started at UFC 143, the man from Hawaii had tasted defeat for the first time as a professional.

The man who handed Holloway (20-4 MMA, 16-4 UFC) that submission defeat was Dustin Poirier (24-5 MMA, 16-4 UFC), a bigger, older, stronger fighter who had already fought in a trio of UFC bouts and entered the bout with an 11-1 record.

 

The two are scheduled to meet again on April 13 at UFC 236 from State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Ga. Much has changed since they first faced one another more than seven years ago — not least their relative standings within the sport. Although it was Poirier who declared “I’m here to be a champion,” after defeating Holloway in their first go-round, it’s Holloway who made it first. He is the current UFC featherweight champion and this month’s bout will decide the interim lightweight championship.

Bouncing back and falling again

Following the loss to Poirier, Holloway — the then-youngest fighter on the UFC roster — spent 2012 figuring out life in the Octagon, rattling off three straight wins. The culmination of his first UFC year was a hard-fought split decision victory over 25-fight veteran Leonard Garcia.

In less than a year, Holloway stepped into the Octagon four times, proving he belonged on the biggest stage. He put himself in position to fight bigger names and to continue climbing the featherweight ladder.

The next 12 months were more difficult, however. First, Holloway faced Dennis Bermudez at UFC 160 and lost a split decision. While the decision was controversial — every media outlet tracked by MMADecisions.com awarded the fight to Holloway — the defeated fighter revealed a pragmatic side to his character.

“I’ve got no excuses,” Holloway said following the loss. “I’m going to come back stronger than ever. I’m not going to cry about it. It is what it is.”

Things did not improve in his next fight. At UFC Fight Night 26, Holloway faced off with Conor McGregor. Now an international superstar, McGregor was only stepping into the Octagon for the second time in his career.

The fight took place in Boston, where a wild Irish-American crowd was fully supportive of the brash Dublin native McGregor. Fueled by that support, McGregor dominated Holloway almost every minute of the bout despite suffering a torn ACL in the second round.

The unanimous decision loss brought Holloway’s 2013 to a close with an 0-2 record and his standing in the UFC uncertain.

The streak

The waters of the UFC are rough and fighters who can’t win consistently have a tendency to find themselves back fighting on the regional circuit. Entering 2014, Holloway was acutely aware of this.

“I’m going through a tough time right now, but that was last year, and this is the first card of 2014,” Holloway told MMAjunkie Radio ahead of a UFC Fight Night 34 bout with Will Chope. “I’m trying to start the year off with a bang.”

He added: “I’m here to win. I want to win. I don’t want to be a .500 fighter in the UFC. I want to be known as one of the greatest when my career is up. I was trying to rush things. I keep forgetting that I’m only 22-years-old. I just need to slow things down and take little baby steps.”

Holloway rattled off four wins in 2014.

And another four in 2015.

In addition to an eight-fight winning streak over those two years, Holloway was beginning to add some big scalps to his resume, including Jeremy Stephens, Cub Swanson and Charles Oliveira — all fighters who had proven their skills time and again in the UFC.

Holloway was growing not only in confidence but growing into his body and adding new skills. Defensive deficiencies on display against McGregor seemed to be gone and he was physically stronger, more accurate with his strikes and more diverse in his attack.

The belt and the legend

In 2016, Holloway fought Ricardo Lamas at UFC 199 and won easily, taking his winning streak to nine consecutive bouts. The fight also featured one of the iconic moments of Holloway’s career as he and Lamas agreed to stand and trade wild shots for 10 seconds as the crowd erupted.

A championship fight seemed likely on the back of the streak, but Holloway said he was ready for anything. “If I’ve got to go to 10, I’ll go for 10,” he said.

McGregor had won the featherweight championship and moved up in weight to capture the lightweight title as well. During that time, legendary Brazilian Jose Aldo won the interim featherweight title.

When UFC 206’s main event of Daniel Cormier vs. Anthony Johnson fell through due to an injury to Cormier, a bout between Holloway and former UFC lightweight champion Anthony Pettis was bumped to the main event. And to make it a little more attractive, the UFC stripped McGregor of his championship due to his pursuits at higher weights, made Aldo the “full champion” of the division and put the interim belt on the line between Holloway and Pettis.

Holloway’s chance at gold finally arrived on December 10, 2016 and he did not disappoint.

Despite Pettis missing weight and thus being ineligible himself to win the vacant interim title, Holloway scored a third round TKO to capture the championship.

“We’re trying to fight Aldo, so I thought I’d call him Waldo – Jose Waldo,” Holloway said in the cage after his win. “Hashtag Jose Waldo, and tell him meet me in Brooklyn in February. Let’s get the real one!

“This is my ticket to Jose Waldo. Let me know when you guys find him. I’ll be waiting.”

Aldo was no stranger to streaks of his own, having won 18 straight fights over the best featherweights in the world before running into a McGregor punch only 12 seconds into their wildly anticipated fight in 2015.

In UFC 212 in June 2017, Holloway finally got his chance against Aldo. In the post-McGregor era, the fight represented a chance for the featherweight division to have one true champion and a new identity.

Fighting in front of Aldo’s Brazilian fans in Rio de Janeiro, Holloway slowly turned up the heat. Combination after combination began to land and in the third round the referee was forced to stop the fight. Holloway was now the undisputed king of the featherweights.

 

Aldo and Holloway met for a rematch in December but the result was the same: Holloway won by a third round TKO, making him one of only three men to beat Aldo in his career and the only man to defeat him twice.

Holloway attempted to follow McGregor’s path of jumping to a lightweight title fight at UFC 223, filling in on less than a week’s notice with no training camp when Tony Ferguson was injured and withdrew from a bout with Khabib Nurmagomedov. The day of the weigh-ins the New York State Athletic Commission pulled Holloway from the bout due to the short notice weight cut being too much.

Next up was a UFC 226 bout with Brian Ortega, but Holloway was forced to pull out when he began exhibiting “concussion-like symptoms” days ahead of the fight.

The bout with Ortega eventually took place at UFC 231, more than a year since Holloway’s previous bout. No “ring rust” was apparent, though, as Holloway battered Ortega, landing a record 290 strikes in the fight and running his win streak to 13.

Moving up

While the attempt to jump to lightweight didn’t work out at UFC 223, Holloway will now make the jump at UFC 236 and attempt to gain revenge over the man who spoiled his Octagon debut while collecting yet another championship.

Poirier is no easy out, but Holloway’s sights have been set on bigger game or, at least, bigger paydays. He and McGregor have spent plenty of time trash-talking one another on Twitter, and might one day settle it in the Octagon.

 

And while Holloway knows McGregor is where the big money is, he has also poked at the possibility of a future lightweight unification bout with full champ Khabib Nurmagomedov, the unbeaten fighter from Dagestan, Russia. Nurmagomedov stopped McGregor in his last bout before both camps engaged in a wild post-fight brawl.

“Khabib said he wanted to fight me, but he wanted me to prove myself,” Holloway said at a recent press conference ahead of UFC 236. “I got Dustin. April 13, I decided to prove myself. I’m going to go out there and prove myself, and when he’s ready to come back, I’ll be ready.”

If he gets past Poirier to become a two-division champion, Holloway will have decisions to make. Will he return to featherweight to defend his crown or vacate and remain at 155 and await a showdown with division king Nurmagomedov?

“At the end of the day, first things first, I got Dustin Poirier, and we’ll talk to the UFC after that,” Holloway said. “I don’t think Frankie [Edgar] or Jose [Aldo] deserve a champ that’s not willing to defend for a year. After this one I could go back down in the summer. That would be fun. But first things first, April 13.”

Poker stereotypes: Have you met them all?

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Whether you are playing online poker or a live poker tournament, you will encounter players using a wide range of styles, drawing on whatever strategy suits them best. But wherever you go, players tend to fall into types. It doesn’t matter if you are playing in Las Vegas, London, Brazil or cyberspace, you’re sure to come across the table captain, an action junkie, a silent assassin, or the bad beat magnet.

Here we take a look at some of these individuals, united by their love of poker.

The Table Captain

Table captains ensure a smooth-running game. They are sticklers for poker rules and etiquette. The table captain is often the elder at the table, who moderates the discussion and will try to change the subject if things get a little too boisterous. It’s their decades of wisdom that puts them in a universal position of respect and power. The best table captains are encouraging like a coach, but many run a tight ship, so don’t get on their bad side. The captain can be as traditionally powerful as a high-end attorney or as unlikely as a listless lunch lady in primary school. Captains are often amateur jurists who will enthusiastically adjudicate low-level disagreements, especially about sports trivia.

The Happy Noob

You can spot a beginner from a mile away. They are glowing and proudly wearing poker schwag. They often use recently-learned lingo. Most of all, they absolutely love the game and are not shy about it. No one loves poker more than noobs. Everyone remembers the honeymoon period when they fell in love with poker for the first time and want to play it every waking moment. It’s always fun to play with new players because their excitement is real and infectious. As the saying goes, “Ignorance is bliss.”

The Action Junkie

Every profitable table has someone who induces the action. The action junkie can be a loose-playing whale with deep pockets who enjoys splashing around chips or an adrenaline junkie who craves intensity. Instead of jumping out of airplanes, they’re raising your big blind. Once in a while you encounter an opponent who is outright crazy, thriving on chaos.

The Know-It-All Chatterbox

The American TV sitcom Cheers had Cliff Clavin, a know-it-all mail carrier who often irked the fellow bar patrons with obscure history lessons and long-winded stories about nothing. Sure, sometimes the person who knows random trivia (e.g. who scored the most goals in the 1978 World Cup) can be mildly entertaining during a boring session. However, it can become utter torture to sit next to an insufferable know-it-all who will not shut up. When the table discussion delves into genealogy and the names of every direwolf from Game of Thrones, it’s the ideal time to put on those headphones or mute the chatbox.

The Wannabe Pro

It’s important to have goals and aspirations, especially in poker. The wannabe pro isn’t quite there yet. Maybe they will never fully realize their dreams, or simply don’t have all the proper off-the-felt skills to get there. They are not hard to miss. They know every line of dialogue from Rounders.

Maybe one day they’ll be good enough to join this game…

They talk a good game, stream all their online sessions, favorite Daniel Negreanu’s tweets, and dress like the pros you see on TV. Style only takes you so far, especially at the poker table. Substance pays the bills.

The Silent Assassin

The opposite of a wannabe or poseur is an actual pro. These are the professional snipers who knock you out of a tournament before you ever see it coming. Like special forces, they are highly skilled and often operate in the shadows. They swiftly move in and out of danger zones with precision. They are the opposite of James Bond. You won’t find them in a tuxedo, but most likely in a hoodie. They seek to blend in without drawing attention to themselves.

Beware the shark that hides in plain sight

They never waste energy in the chatbox and thrive on anonymity because nothing is more dangerous than a shark that hides in plain sight.

The Bad Beat Bens and Beckys

Bad beats are a part of poker. They happen all the time. If you cannot handle a bad beat, then you should not be playing poker. The best players in the world have a Zen-like attitude and try to forget bad beats as soon as they happen. Pros can take a wicked beat in their stride and remain focused on the task at hand. When you live in the present and focus on the moment, you will not be terrorized by that nasty one-outer you took five hands earlier thanks to the super-loose Swede in seat 1. It’s tough enough to maintain your own mental stability at the tables, but it can be torture sitting next to a bad beat magnet. Unfortunately, no one likes to sit next to a constant complainer. Poker rooms all over the world have their share of Bad Beat Bens and Beckys. They have a long list of bad beats and past grievances that they will be happy to share with you. Don’t be a Bad Beat Becky!

The Jaded Vet

The jaded vet is often the jokester at the table, but their jokes are drenched in sarcasm and deeply-rooted poker trauma. They have a constant dreary disposition about the world and always get their pocket aces cracked. The vets have been around the block enough times that they’ve seen everything. They played cards back in the outlaw days and knew Devilfish on a first-name basis. They experienced multiple poker booms and could regale you with tales about going busto to robusto and back again. Nothing impresses a jaded vet, especially the young kid from Germany who binked another high roller for millions. There’s a fine line between a jaded vet and a hater. At some point you ask the lifers, “If you hate poker so much, why are you still playing?” They will respond, “I ask myself that same question every day!”

Paranoid Android

Like the Nirvana song says, “Just because you’re not paranoid, don’t mean they’re not after you.” There’s always one person in the poker room who has watched one too many online conspiracy videos. They’re constantly talking about reptilian shapeshifters and the Illuminati. So, it’s not uncommon for those tin-foil-hat wearing players to spout absurd theories at the tables about why online poker is rigged and how many motherships are hiding behind the dark side of the moon.

What does it take to win the Sunday Million?

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The 13th anniversary of the Sunday Million takes place this weekend (14th April, ), and trust us, it’s going to be a big one.

There’s a massive $10M guaranteed in the prize pool, and whoever takes it down is guaranteed a minimum first-place prize of $1M.

Sounds good, right? We can only imagine what it’s like to win such a big tournament.

Luckily for us, we spoke with a few people who don’t have to imagine.

Here, some previous winners of the Milly share their thoughts on what it takes to take it down, how you can prepare, and how to put yourself in the best position to do well.

Heed their advice!


Paul Vas Nunes

Paul Vas Nunes

PAUL VAS NUNES (“pvas2”)

Paul Vas Nunes is a two-time Sunday Million champ, taking it down in both 2010 ($233,944) and again seven years later in 2017 ($152,804).

Vas Nunes: ”Treat [the Sunday Million] like a normal tournament in the early stages. There will be a lot of less experienced players at every table, so you shouldn’t shy away from playing your usual hands just because this is a bigger tournament than you usually play.

“A lot of other players will also be scared of busting early, so take advantage of this to chip up at every profitable opportunity. You can always re enter if it goes wrong!

“If you make it in to the money then stop looking at the pay jumps because they will be quite small for a long time. It’s very tough to get to the last few tables of a tournament with thousands or tens of thousands of players, and that is where the money starts to be good or life changing. Nobody will care when you tell them you came 412th and lost with kings to queen-nine off suit for your last five big blinds, so once you’ve made the money really try to run up a big stack and make it deep. You will fail a large amount of the time but so will thousands of other players. There’s always next year!”

MORE ABOUT VAS NUNES: SUNDAY MILLION WIN RECAP | MILLY INTERVIEWWSOP INTERVIEW


MORE ON THE ANNIVERSARY SUNDAY MILLION: TIMELINE
WHO’LL WIN: PART 1PART 2 | STRATEGY ADVICE | QUALIFY FOR FREE
ANNOUNCEMENT | SAVE THE DATE: APRIL 14, 1pm (ET)


Paul "behindme93" Jurcuta

Paul “behindme93” Jurcuta

PAUL JURCUTA (“behindme93”)

Romania’s Paul Jurcuta won the Sunday Million in October 2018 for $131,018, and his biggest career score. Jurcuta overcame a tough final table which included the only three-time Milly winner, Artem “veeea” Vezhenkov, plus Luke “LFMagic” Fields.

Jurcuta: “First off, I think that every person who registers in the anniversary Sunday Million should enjoy playing it. It is a great celebration that PokerStars offers to us.

“Do not think about the money when you play it. Just observe your opponents’ moves at your table, try to adjust to them, stay calm and focus.

“Play every hand to your best ability and never forget your love for the game. Have fun and good luck!”

Read about Jurcuta’s Milly win here.


Anton Wigg

Anton Wigg

ANTON WIGG (“AnteSvante”)

Anton Wigg’s poker career has gone from strength to strength since he won the Sunday Million back in 2009 for $213,459 and his largest online cash. Since then the Swede has won an EPT Main Event (Copenhagen in 2010 for $672K), a bunch of other PokerStars majors, and become a fixture in the live high roller world.

Wigg: “I’d say coming prepared for a long grind is key. Make sure you are comfortable and with as few distractions as possible. Focus on trying to figure out what your opponents are doing and how you can use that information to your advantage.

“Hey, you might even learn a trick or two to put in your toolbox! Best of luck and don’t forget to have fun!”

MORE ABOUT WIGG: SUNDAY MILLION WIN RECAP | EPT COPENHAGEN VICTORY


Chad "ihaterivers" Walker

Chad “ihaterivers” Walker

CHAD WALKER (“ihaterivers”)

Chad Walker finished eighth in the Sunday Million in the summer of 2015, then returned just over a year later and took it down for $194,371. With WCOOP final tables also under his belt, this guy knows a thing or two about playing big events. For him, it’s all about having fun.

Walker: “My best advice for beginner poker players is to just have fun and enjoy the ride. If you are enjoying yourself, you will play with more confidence and usually play better because of it. If having fun doesn’t help you play better, at least you had fun doing it!”

Read about Walker’s Milly win here.


Ready to sign up for PokerStars? Click here to get an account.


Super Sozya claims APPT Korea SHR title

A collapsed bowel, a fake belt and a title fight

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Less than 24 hours before he set to defend his UFC middleweight championship for the first time at UFC 234, Robert Whittaker was in emergency surgery to address an intestinal hernia and a twisted and collapsed bowel.

His scheduled opponent, former Ultimate Fighter reality show winner Kelvin Gastelum (15-3 MMA, 10-3 UFC), decided to keep himself in the spotlight despite his main event opportunity falling apart. Gastelum borrowed flyweight champion Henry Cejudo’s title belt, slung it over his shoulder and told anyone who would listen he was the new middleweight champ.

“This is my belt,” Gastelum told a crowd of reporters at the event in Melbourne. “I earned this. I showed up, traveled thousands and thousands of miles from home, made the weight. In my world, the wrestling world, if the guy shows up and makes the weight, for some reason cancels the bout, the guy forfeits the match. I win. I am the champion.”

The stunt was not warmly received by fans and fellow fighters, even drawing out MMA’s biggest star to comment.

“Why is that worm holding the 185lb belt?” former two-division champ Conor McGregor tweeted. “There are worms crawling on his skin! It was absolutely ludicrous to even consider allowing him to compete. Let alone now walk around the arena shaking our fans hands. Someone sort this, this instant. And sterilize that belt. Immediately.”

Israel Adesanya’s (16-0 MMA, 5-0 UFC) middleweight bout with MMA legend Anderson Silva was promoted to the main event of UFC 234 following Whittaker’s surgery. Adesanya defeated the game but overmatched former 2,457-day middleweight champ to score the biggest win of his career.

Moments after the fight, Adesanya turned his attention to Gastelum at cageside. “Kelvin, put that belt down,” he said. “Seriously.”

Adesanya would continue to address the belt situation during the post-fight press conference.

“This ain’t wrestling, this ain’t high school wrestling,” Adesanya said. “This is MMA. This is the UFC. Those rules don’t apply here. But, let me see, he has a point. He does have a point but I think sit it out, fight Rob (Whittaker) and the winner can fight me.”

Adesanya’s proposed plan of a Gastelum/Whittaker championship winner facing him in the next title fight was not to be.

Instead, the Nigerian-born fighter was being pitched a short-turnaround fight against Gastelum for the interim middleweight championship at UFC 236 on April 13 at State Farm Arena in Atlanta.

“Before I left Melbourne, within two days they offered me this fight, and I said, ‘Just let me breathe for a second, let me get out of Melbourne and just chill,’” Adesanya said at a press conference ahead of UFC 236. “I think within the next day I was like, ‘Yup, sign me up. I’ll do the fight.’ Interim or not interim, at the end of the day we had a deal.”

While the UFC 236 fight will be Adesanya’s sixth trip to the Octagon in just 14 months, Gastelum has only fought once since November 2018. The dip in inactivity was a big motivating factor for Gastelum also agreeing to the bout despite an almost ironic disappointment in the fight not being for the “real belt”.

“It’s for a world title but at the same time it is kind of like a number one contender spot with a little prize,” Gastelum said during a media luncheon ahead of this Saturday’s event. “That’s kind of how I think. It’s a little bittersweet that I’m not fighting for the undisputed title against Rob in Australia. At the end of the day, this has been the longest layoff of my career and I just wanted to get in there and fight.”

Gastelum also said he doesn’t feel Adesanya has properly worked his way to a title shot in his brief UFC career despite a #5 spot in the UFC middleweight rankings.

“I don’t think he’s been through the fire that I’ve been through,” Gastelum said. “He hasn’t fought the quality of opponents that I have.

“Obviously, he’s fought some great fighters, but the top five guys, anyone of those top five guys can be the champion, and I don’t think he’s fought those kind of guys.”

Adesanya has won every fight in his professional career, and the name value of each win has increased with each trip to the Octagon, culminating in the decision win over Silva.

Win after win, fight seemingly on top of fight, Adesanya has established a momentum unlike anyone in the UFC. And he seems to believe that’s a force strong enough to lead him to the interim championship.

“Momentum’s a powerful force, and it keeps on rolling,” Adesanya said at the pre-event press conference. “I’m going to roll over Kelvin.”

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