I Stock 000016829352 X SmallTo those without a full time interest in golf, Watson is something of an exception in the golfing world. A left hander, he rejected golf lessons as a boy and has a style of play considered unconventional when compared to the top pros, who analyse every aspect of their game with mathematical precision.

The sporting headlines were dominated by events from Georgia this past weekend, when American Bubba Watson strode into the Augusta Clubhouse, tears in his eyes, to be presented with golf’s greatest prize the green jacket, awarded to all winners of The Masters

The Green jacket is to golf what a World Series bracelet is to poker. Not all great players will ever win one, and certainly there are great players that haven’t. But like the winner’s bracelet in poker it will always be something others strive towards, and winning it ensures the respect of peers.
The similarities between golf and poker go further than just the rewards, and that the two pursuits boast similar aspects (those ‘unconventional styles’ and that ‘mathematical precision’ sounds eerily like poker-speak).

Each pursuit takes a lifetime to master; Watson started as a small boy and stories of poker champions playing penny poker on their grandmother’s knee are plentiful. Each game is played by millions around the world, while only a handful ever goes on to win the most sought after prizes.
On a professional level the similarities go even further.

Just as in poker tournaments, where the winner of one event may not even reach the money in the next, it’s often the case in golf, with the winner of one event sometimes hardly figuring in the next major tournament, or the opposite, coming out of knowehere to win a major title.

Darren Clarke came out of nowhere to win The Open Championship in 2011, but had won only one event in the eight years prior. Conversely, Robert Varkonyi won the World Series main event in 2002 but has yet to repeat that success on a big stage. Regardless, he is still considered to be among the best players in the game.

Just as Bubba Watson may not win his next event, neither may Raul Mestre after winning the IFP World Championship. It’s not a fault, just the nature of the game, and something golfers and poker players learn to live with.

As Celina Lin, a successful poker player, once said of their profession, after being eliminated from a major event; “we travel the world getting knocked out of tournaments.”

It’s all part of the job for players like Lin, just as it is for Watson, both of whom grow used to departing tournaments early while at the same time accumulating lucrative winnings.

In fact Watson himself could have been mistaken for a poker player speaking after his win. “As of less than two years ago, I didn’t have a win,” he said. “Now I’ve got four. My goal, my dream has always been to have ten wins. This is a step in the right direction.”

For spectators prepared to stay up until past 3am at the Rio Hotel in Las Vegas last Friday, there was a treat for purists as Event #3 concluded after three days of play.

A field of 622 players had taken part but as Thursday night became Friday morning just two remained to contest the Seven Card Stud High Low Split-8 or better event, one of the more intricate variations of poker that divides each pot between the player with the “high” hand (the best hand) and the “low” hand (the worst), with the 8-card serving as the dividing line.

Head-to-head were Cory Zeidman and Chris Bjorin, Zeidman ultimately going on to win his first bracelet after eight WSOP cashes in his 15 year career.

Chris Bjorin

Chris Bjorin

But for Bjorin, one of the game’s old guard and most respected players, it was a another near miss, the third runner-up finish of his career at the World Series, which started back in 1989.

From Sweden, but a resident of London, Bjorin was playing the game before the internet boom, before the Rounders boom, even before the television boom, back in a time when hold’em was not the only game available in poker rooms across the land. His combined achievements include two WSOP bracelets, earned in pot limit Omaha back in 1997 and no-limit hold’em in 2000, and the reputation of one of the game’s most consistently successful grinders, particularly in games such as Stud.

Seven Card Stud takes place away from the limelight. In the past Stud final tables at the WSOP have been played on a regular table, without spectators or fanfare, with a lone tournament official waiting patiently to make it official when play ends.

It’s also not a game given to spectacular action like hold’em can generate. Stud is a game that relies on patience, memory and skill. It’s difficult and hard work, just like anything worth doing, and as such is finding a growing player base among new young players such as Shaun Deeb and Xuan Liu, taking their success in hold’em to the Stud tables.

For Zeidman and Bjorin it was a long slog into the night, hours that they’ve no doubt grown accustomed to over the past 20 years. Zeidman had the lead heads-up before Bjorin, hand-by-hand, clawed him back, levelling the scores. But he was unable to get ahead of Zeidman who, as chip leader entering the final, kept his lead to the end.

A great event featuring some great players. Look out for Bjorin in other events over the summer.

 

Leo Margets Blog 2may12

Ladies event winner Leo Margets

The PokerStars European Poker Tour concluded last night with various events to finish the season with the lavish Monaco backdrop. With six-max events and high rollers to conclude, it was easy to miss one particular tournament that some believe shouldn’t even take place in the first place.

The Grand Final ladies event featured 35 players each paying €1,000 to play, making it one of the largest women only events anywhere. After two days of play it was won by Leo Margets of Spain, who beat Victoria Coren heads-up to the first prize of €16,850.

Ladies events are something of a talking point across the poker world, dividing players between those who see them simply as a way of encouraging women to take up the game, and those who regard them as an unnecessary addition to the calendar. It’s certainly a fair point that poker is a game of mental dexterity, a mind sport, rather than something that should be divided by genetics.

Indeed, it’s even a legal issue in some countries. In France, the staging of a women only event must be balanced with the scheduling of a men’s only event. In countries not so stringent on their equal opportunity law, it’s not uncommon to see men playing ladies events, even going so far as to wear a
dress to make their point, although that could be considered going too far.

But their remains a demand, from the World Series to the European Poker Tour, with the tournaments serving as a useful introduction for women entering the poker world; it goes without saying that poker is a male dominated game and “ladies only” can be a big draw for women.

Certainly Margets will think so, a professional player looking to make a living regardless of how a tournament is administered. Both she and Coren are already accomplished players, comfortable in any environment, with the results to prove it.

As well as an EPT title, Coren has earned more than $1.5 million as a poker player while Margets has earnings of more than $700,000, notably finishing in 27th place in the 2009 World Series main event. Both players were also among those invited to play the IFP World Championships in 2011 where
Coren took the silver medal.

The debate will continue on the need for ladies only event, but while players like Margets and Coren continue to win, they may not be in a much of a rush to declare their outlook one way or another.

Mother’s Day is celebrated on different days and dates around the world, a day when sons and daughters, as well as the odd thoughtful husband, show their appreciation of “mum” by letting her put her feet up, as Dad does the dishes, the kids make breakfast and the dog fetches the TV remote.

Most commonly, Mother’s Day takes place on the second Sunday in May, which makes that today. So, as a tribute to all the poker mothers out there, be they players themselves or simply the loyal parents who cheer on their husbands, sons and daughters from the rail, here’s to you. Have a great Mother’s Day.

Steve Paul Pca

Steve Paul congratulated by his sister and mother after reaching the PCA final table.

Susan Lauter Wpt S4

Susan Lauter hugs her bracelet winning son Michael Mizrachi.

Jamie Gold Wsop06

WSOP Main Event winner Jamie Gold gets a hug from his mother.

Laptop Small 7may12When poker reached the internet a decade ago the gamers and maths whizzes that began turning their new found talents into careers raised a few eyebrows among the existing poker fraternity.

These players had learned their trade over years of hard work in live card rooms (paying significant amounts of money on their “education” in the process), and were suspicious of these new internet geeks who were competing against them in high stakes events having paid only a few dollars for their seat in an online satellite. They were clever, talented, a little socially awkward, and completely different to the old guard.

But these new pioneers had crammed in the equivalent apprenticeship playing online; on multiple tables, playing thousands of hands each day. They were often derided and exploited in a live poker environment (the term “internet qualifier” was almost an insult before it became simply cost effective), unable to compete when face to face with an old-timer who had been playing poker before they were born (something they would point out to the 21 year old who had just eliminated them).

But these geeks were about to change the very nature of poker, a new generation that used their minds in ways that turned words, previously reserved for insult, into new terms of endearment.

It’s not just in poker.

On television, geeks have been in the ascendant on both sides of the Atlantic. In the United States shows such as The Big Bang Theory tell the geek’s side of the story, reshaping the cool, good looking poster boys of yesteryear. In the United Kingdom, Sherlock made logic and mental dexterity into the stuff of popular culture, although some may lay the credit at the feet of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.All share the same winning trait; heroes characterised above all by their intelligence, and if that means they do extremely well at school, talk about Battlestar Gallactica and implied odds all the time, then so be it. Either way, suddenly it was cool to be clever.

It’s worth pointing out that geeks have perhaps been with us for generations. The older generations of players didn’t simply fade away, in fact many of the pre-internet players kept their seat at the top table; adapting their game, just as the internet players had.

The world of Mind Sports is one that the intellect will thrive in, and that means poker, where new players brought to the game find the mental challenge appealing, a task that with the right application can be conquered.