UNIBET OPEN NEWS

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UNIBET OPEN PRAGUE 2010 – SATELLITES ARE LIVE!

17:03, May 17th, 2010

IMG_3830.JPGSatellites for Unibet Open Prague 2010 have started!

Secure your seat now by playing on Unibet.

Packages won through satellites are worth €2,750 and include:

• Accommodation for 4 nights
• Buy in to the event – €1500 + €150
• Spending money towards travel expenses (€350)
• Breakfast and dinner daily during the tournament 

Qualify now!

FROM FELT TO FAIRWAY – MATS RAHMN

01:12, May 11th, 2010

mats_rhamn.jpgPicking up poker at the start of the millennium, which sounds like some kind of new year’s resolution come very good, Swede Mats Rahmn has spent the last decade racking up results and joining the Unibet circuit as a popular professional player.  In 2004 he turned pro, and since then has gone on to tally up an impressive string of results, even landing himself one of those most coveted poker accessories, a WSOP bracelet (for the $1,500 No Limit event in 2006).

He’s been in attendance at every Unibet Open event since Budapest 2009, and has high praise for the London leg that year: “The production was the best by far and the tournament was run smoothly which made for a good experience.”  However, “Locationwise, Algarve was the best with perfect weather, plus a really nice hotel and bay area.”  He’s probably going to favor the beachside location of the Golden Sands event, then, as the casino has a glass wall with views out over the ocean…  His best result at a Unibet Open has been 15th, in Budapest this year, where he took down €5,520 in sight of the final.

We asked him what makes a good poker player, and he responded, “Something that´s really important which people tend to forget, is a genuine interest in the game. If you really love poker you are more likely to improve your game because you will be more interested to learn, both from playing and by talking with others about poker, than a player who just sees poker as an opportunity to make a quick dollar.”

Taking his own advice, he admits to enthusiastically taking up another game which somehow has inexplicably captured the imagination of poker players from Phil Ivey to Patrik Antonius, and spawned prop bets galore.

“I´ve just started playing golf and I really like the game. Although it´s frustrating to be really bad at something I´m hopefully improving my game rapidly and eventually end up somewhere on the fairway from time to time!”

AMBASSADOR IN RESIDENCE – UNIBET PRO MICKE NORINDER

01:15, May 7th, 2010

micke2.jpgSwedish pro and Unibet Ambassador Micke Norinder is a fixture on the live circuit, a gregarious and universally friendly figure at the table but also a player to be reckoned with.  His results over the last few years (he’s been playing professionally for five years, and for Unibet for three) have been in a variety of disciplines, leading to an equally wide variety of currencies being given back to him as he made, among other finishes, a fifth place at the Amsterdam Masterclassics in 2007, an EPT final table in Prague the same year, a WSOP Limit Hold’em shootout 11th place and 6th in the Pot Limit Omaha Event in Stockholm in 2009.

Norinder maintains that the most important factor in becoming a good poker player is, “Management, both money and feelings,” and this concise advice seems to have stood him in good stead.  His well-managed globetrotting has earned him over $300,000 in tournament winnings, however he’s yet to top the field at one of the Unibet Open events at which he’s a constant fixture.

When asked about this in particular, he said, “I’ve participated in every Unibet Open event since the start. But my statistics for day two are so bad. I think it´s better that I comment in the live-stream.”  He is a welcome addition to the live-stream commentary booth, a born talker and regular blogger, with a straight-talking attitude which makes him just that little bit more unpredictable than many pundits.  However, despite the Swedish action-generator’s willingness to explain the action on TV or comment on the poker world, it’s hard to imagine him keeping off the felt in Bulgaria for long. Although he reminisces fondly about the 2009 Portugal leg of Unibet Open: ” I think Algarve was very nice. We had a lovely boat trip and a lot of sun,” he admits to, “Looking forward to Golden Sands and Valencia this year.”

Speaking of boats, his personal passion outside of the poker arena is, unusually, just that.  “My big hobby is my boat (ship). It´s a big 43 feet Azimut with flybridge. I will spend the most of the Swedish summer in it. I like to fish.  I will try to catch a lot of fish this summer, both in the sea and at the poker table.”

PEDRO GUEDES THE LOT – Q&A WITH €500 EVENT WINNER

20:36, May 1st, 2010

pedro_guedes.jpgPedro Guedes, winner of the €500 side event at Unibet Open Budapest in March for €16,200, tells Unibet about his start in poker, first place finish in Hungary, and how he got from one to the other (via the beach…)

How and when did you first start to play poker?

I started to play poker about two years ago in the company of friends but I was not really aware of the rules at the time. At the moment I am having lessons with a player from the Unibet Team Pro from Portugal André “Wade” Santos.

What was your first big live tournament?

I had previously participated in a tournament in Estoril (Portugal) last year where I lost with pocket aces! But I have to say that the biggest one was Unibet Open in Budapest because the competition was tough but always passionate – especially for people that like adrenaline.

What was the reaction at home when they heard that you had won the side event?

They were happy for the excellent result. My wife knew how many hours of study I have dedicated to the game and that I was really determined to get a good result on the tournament.

On average, how many hours do you play on a daily/weekly basis? Any good results?

I play a bit every day because all my friends play as well. As for results, nothing special, but I definitely have lots of fun!

What is more exciting – the poker game or the winnings?

First of all I have to say playing poker and studying other players – that can always be unpredictable. Obviously it is very rewarding to reach some ITMs [cash].

What tournaments do you like the most? Online or live?

Well when it comes to Unibet Open it is very difficult not to like it because you will breathe poker 24 hours a day with the sound of chips going on the background. But I think in online poker you can feel your maximum potential when you manage to beat a field of 2000 to 3000 players. Online you are able to find all varieties of poker every day at anytime.

What is your opinion on Unibet’s live tournaments?

I would definitely recommend them, not only for the money but also because you are able to interact at the table and make friends with players from other countries.  The entire tournament is made with players in mind and all is at hand so we can relax and play.

Which player are you most afraid of live and online?

Well… I would have to say myself because we can play against other opponents all the time on the same table for 2 to 3 hours but we have to always be very concerned about our actions all the time.

Do you adopt an alternative image for live tournaments?

I usually wear glasses and headphones so I can isolate myself in my world, without ever losing any bit of what is going on at the table. Of course at home I do not wear glasses and the hat.

At which website do you like to play?

Unibet. The graphics are very simple and quick and the level and variety of players is accessible and relaxed.

What is your nick?

GBROTHER

Why did you choose that nick?

It means G for Guedes brother.

Do you think poker is a game of skill or luck?

Skill at 99% and 1% luck because you will need to get more chips in a crucial part of the tournament when you push your stack to the middle of the table. Without strategy and knowledge of the game and your opponents you end up not lasting very long.

You set an example for the younger generation – what advice can you give them?

If they are starting on poker then start playing in play money and study the game a bit. Today there is always good advice on how to play on most of the online rooms. Always play with moderation and peace. When the weather is good play at the beach!

GLIMNE OF HOPE – A LIFELONG LOVE AFFAIR WITH GAMES

23:04, April 21st, 2010

Dan Glimne has so many strings to his gaming bow it’s practically a harp.  The Swedish poker expert, author, gaming pundit and inventor can be found commentating on the action, travelling the world in search of gaming experiences from Cuba to Hong Kong, or sat at the felt putting theory into practise at Unibet Open.

danglimne-1_edit_smaller.jpgHaving played five Unibet Open tournaments so far, he has yet to make his mark on the leaderboards, although he’s enjoyed previous success at the WSOP and Master Classics of Poker (at which he came third in 2005 for over €35,000).  He has, however, been known to go deep in a side event or two on the tour, most recently and perhaps unexpectedly the Maria Poker Ladies’ Event at Unibet Open Budapest in March, where he finished as runner-up!

When asked what he thought it took to succeed in poker these days, he replied, “Mental discipline, and a willingness to absorb new ideas and constantly improve your game. Winning at Texas hold’em ten years ago, live or online, was no problem; but these days the competition is fierce and everyone studies poker theory.”  He’s been playing long enough to have an overview of the game’s development too – as he recounts with almost glamorous underworld detail, “I still remember the illegal so-called “black clubs” in Sweden, where you had to knock on secret doors and identify yourself before stepping into those smoke-filled rooms…”  Playing seriously for 20 years, Glimne recalls a time before the present boom which has been so beneficial for students of the game, making online celebrities out of its top players (his opinion on who Isildur1 may or may not be is also floating around the internet).

In between appearing on the live mike, Glimne recently made a series of short videos called Dan Glimne’s Poker Curiosities for Unibet Open in Budapest, relaying in his inimitable style (and Swedish accent) stories from Binion’s in Vegas, the early greats, apocryphal tales and that Sting worked in a funeral parlour before moving into music (part of his Curiosities Part 3 – What Players Did Before They Went Pro…).  His interest in all aspects of the game of poker is infectious and doesn’t stop at the door of the cardroom.  In his own words:

“I have been in the games industry in the wide sense for thirty years now, writing books, working as a consultant in the casino sector, and inventing board and card games with over 1.5 million sold in over twenty countries. Apart from poker I play mainly mahjong (one World Championship and two European Championships, apart from playing the brutal cash game form of the game in Hong Kong clubs), Othello (third in the Swedish Championship) and a variety of others for pleasure. And I collect pretty much everything in the way of dice and dice-related objects, which has led to some pretty interesting encounters with – among other people – witch doctors in South Africa and santeria priests in Cuba. One day, when I am ready, that collection will be put on exhibit in a museum. I guess I would have to say that gaming is a life-long love affair for me!”

DAY AND NIGHT – 48 HOUR CASH GAME TESTS THE BEST

04:51, April 16th, 2010

London’s Les Ambassadeurs Casino was the host this week of one of the most gruelling poker games ever committed to film – the non-stop 48 hour high stakes cash session known as The Big Game.  Homegrown favourites like Neil Channing, Roland de Wolfe, Luke Schwartz and Andrew Feldman took on a wide selection of very well-known trans-Atlantic competitors, like Phil Laak, David ‘Viffer’ Peat, Isaac Haxton, Justin Bonomo and Jennifer Tilly.  Wild cards were thrown into the deck in the form of several satellite and freeroll entrants, who quickly found that £5,000 was a short stack indeed on a table where players occasionally found themselves with 1000 big blinds.  Meanwhile a stream of pros and high-stakes regulars waited patiently on the list for their turn at the felt and on camera – some for over a day as the stamina of the original lineup was put to the test.

Although many may have come with the inkling to stay and play continuously for two days straight, only one actually managed it, and he was also the biggest winner in the game.  David ‘Viffer’ Peat will be instantly recognised by High Stakes Poker viewers (and he’s come across Laak in that context too) and from the very first hand he stepped on the gas and ran the tank dry to the final card dealt.  His continual activity and fearless style soon left the ever-changing lineup with a big headache, and despite suffering some hefty setbacks he came out nearly £150,000 ahead.

The initial sit-down favoured by the players was either £10k or £20k (the latter being the max, the blinds starting at £25/£50 but soon escalating with the inevitable straddles), and it was quickly apparent that no dust was going to gather on those chips.  The first to take a big lead was Jennifer Tilly, who was unfazed by Viffer’s constant pressure and finished her nine-hour session with £33,000 more than she sat down with.  She topped the leaderboard of winners for most of the time the game ran, joined by formidable female opponent Laurence Grondin whose £20k profit announced her arrival to players to whom she was a worryingly unknown quantity.

There was a twist in the tail for everyone who wanted to keep their seat for long, however.  In a reality-TV style endeavour to mix it up, every few hours all the players in the Big Game had to vote on which of them to send to the rail, winner or loser, and welcome a new face.  Recent arrivals were immune from eviction, as was the most aggressive player in the preceding session.  This meant that Viffer was never in danger of losing his permanent place, but it did mean that a succession of people found themselves in the eye-watering position of coming to the table, losing chunks of money, and then getting voted off it again.  This was especially harsh for the reluctant leavers, like Dusty ‘Leatherass’ Schmidt, and later (briefly) Neil Channing and Isaac Haxton.  Tony G proved himself the master of the tactical vote, but also mixed up his (comparatively) brief time on the table with flair and a permanent massage.

Schmidt’s voted exit from the game came as a blessing in disguise, perhaps, for commentator Jesse May, who found a hitherto-untested but very capable co-commentator who proved his own stamina with over a day straight talking over the action with him.  Popping in and out for a shot at the mic (and a fascinating real-time view of the table’s hole cards and action) were also Justin Bonomo, Andrew Feldman, and Irish Open winner James Mitchell.  While no one came close to the profit shown by Viffer, Phil Laak made a good showing (and some rather unorthodox plays which had the table in knots at times) with around £25k, and Bodo Sbrzesny, Ellis Reuben, Paul Zimbler, Tilly and Grondin all leaving ahead.   The whole dramatic session will be shown over sixteen 45 minute episodes, and with bluffs, outdraws and the Seven-Deuce game wreaking havoc on the table all the way through, it should be a thrilling ride.

HOURGLASS OF GOLDEN SANDS – SIX WEEKS TO QUALIFY

02:12, April 14th, 2010

Direct buy-in for the next Unibet Open event which will take place at Golden Sands in Bulgaria from the 3rd-6th of June is now open!  You can now reserve your seat at this beachside extravaganza of poker and parties well in advance, and guarantee that your section of the felt is held for you.  If you’re more of a last-minute globe-trotter, or want to take part in one of the many online satellites which could bag you a Bulgaria package for a tiny price-tag, then now is the time to start qualifying.

Every Sunday at 20:30 CET Unibet run a €275 +€25 super-satellite with five packages guaranteed!  With a 5k starting stack and 15 minute levels, the same skills which take players through four live days at Unibet Open reward at least five people per week with the full trip, accommodation for five nights and a chance at a title and six-figure payday.  If that doesn’t fit your poker budget, satellites to the weekly final are running all week long, starting with €5 rebuys or €30 freezeouts straight in, or you can even start with a freeroll!  Whatever your tournament bankroll, a place at Unibet Open Golden Sands can be won over the next six weeks.  Each event on the Unibet Open tour welcomes greater numbers of qualifiers to the excitement of competing in the live arena for huge prizes – whether it’s your first live event or a regular stop on the tour, the atmosphere and competition in Golden Sands will be the best yet.

Full details on how to qualify, and information on all levels of satellites can be found here.

ANTHON-PIETER WINK TALKS HOME GAMES, VICTORY AND WINTER SPORTS

23:51, April 6th, 2010

IMG_1377Anthon-Pieter Wink, Champion of Unibet Open Budapest, has experienced the poker world from several viewpoints.  Playing since the age of 18, he’s no stranger to the live felt, occasionally takes a seat at the virtual one, and is also editor of Card Player Nederland.  Despite the Dutch player’s workload, he took the trip to Hungary to play in the Unibet Open event in March, saying that although it was his first appearance, “We have covered all the 2009 events in Card Player Nederland, so I kind of felt like I had been there before.”

Wink’s calm and considered manner showed his comfort at the table, and his sanguine approach to the swings of tournament play meant that he was unfazed when he dropped down the chip leaderboard, making the second day’s dinner break as the shortest stack still left in.  It wasn’t quite a chip and a chair comeback to challenge the lead over the next day and a half’s play, but it was close, with the turnaround in fortune in full swing by the time the final table was announced.  He started the final third in chips behind Belgium’s Nils Ral and Russian Maksim Tyurin, but only just, and eventually eliminated the start-of-day leader in a race which propelled him to a comfortable lead.

Changing gears and alternating quiet periods with orbits where it seemed he was raising every hand, Wink never seemed to lose his composure.  His background playing live regularly has surely been beneficial.  He says of his poker introduction, “Since I was about 18 I’ve played draw poker with friends. In 2003 (after Moneymaker) we started a home game of hold’em and Omaha that is still running. I play online every once in a while but not on a professional level.”  When asked what he thought made a good poker player, he replied, “Love of the game, enthusiasm, willingness to study and discussion with friends.”

Outside the tournament arena, Wink is unusually active for a poker player.  “I’m pretty sporty. Besides poker my hobbies include football, snowboarding and surfing. Winning the first Unibet Open for Holland is pretty cool, although I’m only nationalistic when it comes to sports. I love writing and editing Card Player, and the Unibet Open has been a great experience for me. Not only as a turning point in my poker career, but also for the kindness of the press, the players and the organisation.”

The first Champion from Holland to raise a Unibet Open trophy (and take down a chunky €172,500 top prize), Wink may now be in the awkward position of having to interview himself…

MARIA POKER TO MOVE FROM VIRTUAL TO REAL FELT IN SEPTEMBER

19:46, March 31st, 2010

Heads up for the ladies now – Maria Poker, whose distinctive logo has been adorning the clothing of more than a few players at recent Unibet Open tournaments as ever greater numbers of women take to the tables, is planning a special live event this September.

IMG_0563The €330 buy-in main event will take place on the 4th-5th September 2010, on the beautiful island of Malta.  Hosted at the Casino at Portomaso, which has been providing a glamorous venue for gaming since opening in 2006, the tournament expects to attract 150 players who will be able to enjoy both a weekend of poker and the fashionable surroundings of the St. Julian’s district on the island’s north-eastern coast.  The Hilton Malta in the same marina complex will host the players (and a guest for no extra accommodation charge) for two nights, and there will be a welcome party on the evening of the 3rd.

Women are encouraged at Maria Poker to get started online with comprehensive and clear tutorials on the game and the software, and the special tournaments on offer are geared toward female players of all abilities.  They’ve recently sent satellite winners to Unibet Open in both Warsaw and Budapest and at the Hungarian leg of the tour hosted their own €100 Ladies’ side event (these are now in the pipeline for all forthcoming Unibet Open destinations!).

Daniela Caserotto, spokesperson for Maria Poker Live, says, “Maria Poker is the leading female poker brand in Europe, where women are more than welcome to challenge what is so far a man’s game, and the idea was to help them feel more confident about playing, and hence organised the side tournament during Unibet Open.”  There were a couple of extras involved (and the lucky ladies playing in Malta may have similar things in store) – goodie bags greeted each player on arrival, there was a friendly coaching session before the start to teach or refresh those who hadn’t played before, and at the last minute eight men entered the tournament, which ran with 40 runners for many hard-fought hours, until Swede Andreas Hoglund took the top spot, although admitted, “I was impressed. The girls were really focused and good, realizing that there is not really a difference between men and women playing poker.”

For a glimpse of that tournament, and a hint of things to come for Maria Poker, watch the video from Unibet Open Budapest here.

RUN GOLDEN – UNIBET OPEN BULGARIA PACKAGE NOW FIVE NIGHTS!

01:32, March 26th, 2010

_MG_0301The second leg of the Unibet Open tour, which will take place at Golden Sands in Bulgaria from the 3rd-6th of June, now includes accommodation from the 2nd-7th, giving every package winner a chance to soak up the atmosphere (and the sun) in the resort for a little longer.  No airport-table-airport rush this time round, as players will be able to fit in some proper rest and relaxation, or various interesting-sounding diversions which a quick search on the www.goldensands.bg website brings to light; ‘balneotherapy’, ‘congressional tourism’ and ‘night fun’ are just a few categories which intrigue the casual eye (although you’ll probably have to experience them to know exactly what’s involved).

The tournament itself will be the usual Unibet Open format – four days of non-stop poker as the Main Event gets underway with two starting days on the 3rd and 4th June with side-events and cash games following in the luxurious Casino International.  Players taking their seats for the Main Event on the second start day will effectively have two nights and a whole day on their arrival in Bulgaria to take full advantage of this exceptional location, not to mention the Welcome Drinks on the Thursday night.

For more details on this next event, and to find out how to qualify now, visit the Unibet Open Golden Sands page!

ROUSSO FAR SO GOOD: UK’S UNIBET PRO ‘PICKLEMAN’ INTERVIEWED

16:04, March 20th, 2010

IMG_9965 Alex Rousso is one of the Unibet Pro players you may have seen around the tables, distinguished by this label upon his shirt and, as you’ll see from his interview, a fascination with the strategy and statistics involved in the game – the ’science of poker.’  His PhD in Social Sciences may have contributed to a drift from the family pickle business into the game as lifestyle, job and research interest, and he’s now to be found writing, playing Omaha, and heading live Boot Camps with the Bluff Poker Academy.  He’ll be on the road with Unibet Open in 2010, with one eye on the prize and one on whatever his latest writing concern may be (he spent Budapest making notes on the number of players remaining per level, their changing attrition rate and the implications of the structure!).   London-based, Rousso has finalled a good number of tournaments in his hometown in 2009, and is looking to continue this trend further afield in 2010.

How/when did you start playing poker?  When did you start making proper money?

I played poker for pennies back at school but didn’t really know what I was doing. One day at the work poker night I had a hand where I had mid pair and was facing a bet. I thought to myself “this is ridiculous, I don’t have the first idea what to do!” Internet poker was just getting big (this was 2002), so I resolved to get online and get myself an education.

I put $300 in an online account and read Lee Jones’ “Winning Low Limit Hold Em” while playing. I read it through twice in 3 weeks, and went no more than $80 into the red playing $0.25/0.50 limit hold’em. By the end of the third week, I was back in the black and have never been in the red since.

I started making proper money around 2006 when I migrated to the then very juicy Omaha Hi/Lo. I was very unhappy running the family business (importing pickles – hence the name “Pickleman”) and noticed that in hourly rate terms I was actually making more money from poker than running the business. The business was sold in 2007 and here we are.

What is your niche/regular game?  Why do you like it so much?

I play Pot Limit Omaha 6-max cash. I much prefer Omaha because it’s more mathematical and it has a very long learning curve – meaning that good players can find an edge as long as they keep one eye on game selection. Gamblers love the action of Omaha so as long as you can handle the volatility, the rewards are fantastic.

So many Hold em tournaments for example are just filled with players who know what they’re doing – how can you have an edge in that game? Granted, if someone picks up poker for the first time, they’ll play Hold Em not Omaha, so the real beginners are there, but I feel I have a much better control of my destiny playing cash games, and even more so playing PLO.

Who is Pickleman, and what is he all about?  Where can I find his writing?

I write a monthly column for Bluff Europe and I also head the Bluff Europe Poker Academy, which runs poker seminars. At present, we’ve only done seminars in the UK and Ireland, but we’re hoping to be in Europe by the end of the year.

The column is supposed to be anything and everything poker, but I have to say I’ve focussed on research-based stuff more lately because that’s my background (I have a PhD in the social sciences). When I was starting out playing poker there were almost no studies to answer questions such as “What percentage of poker players are pros, and how many are losers?” and “How do you compare tournament structures?” My column is an attempt to answer questions such as those using real stats and research.

Although poker is my job I like to have fun playing. When I’m at a live tournament I always try to talk to people and have a laugh. My real job is playing the PLO cash games online. The tournaments are also about getting out of the house and meeting people!

What do you like about the Unibet Open tour, seeing as there is so much tournament action to choose from these days?

Well, if you’ve read any of my Unibet Open tournament reports you’ll know how much I love them and I’m chuffed to bits to be working with Unibet. They basically have the right attitude – let’s have some fun and play some poker. And the players – both the sponsored ones and the others – echo that sentiment. It’s a big happy family.

What do you think are the main things players should focus on when preparing for a live tournament?

If you want to take live tournament poker seriously, you’ve got to treat it like a sports event. Early nights, no drinking and lots of exercise (not easy at Unibet Open!). If you look at the interviews with James Akenhead on the Bluff Europe website, you’ll see what I mean. This is a guy who takes what he does seriously. By the way, those interviews were filmed before he made both WSOP ME final tables and won Poker Million.

How do you organise playing online with writing for Bluff/yourself?  Do you find the poker lifestyle is not compatible with doing other things?

The most difficult thing is synchronising one’s life with when the poker tables are juicy. On US-focussed sites, that’s usually early morning, and on European sites, it’s in the evening. That means sacrificing a few nights out with mates.

Live tournaments and our seminars are on weekends, so that can be a bit of a dealbreaker! Especially when you have to set aside an entire weekend for a tournament. If you bust out half way through day one, you now have an entire weekend free that you had earmarked for poker!

I love the writing and it’s easy to find time to do it when the tables aren’t so busy (usually during the day). Every time I sit in Costa coffee in Belsize Park with my laptop I think to myself “this is the life!”

You went out in a series of unlikely outdraws in Budapest, but took it with a smile – are you in danger of becoming a poker pessimist, or genuinely unaffected by the swings of the game?

You should try Omaha . . .

Seriously though, volatility is something that you (almost) get used to. There is definitely a sense of “been there, done that” when it comes to bad beats. Sure, every now and then, you’re tired, it’s the fifth time in a row that it’s happened, and to cap it all, you’re on life tilt right now too. In those situations, I can blow up, but I’m happy to say they happen far less frequently these days (and I’m very happy to say that poker has helped me immeasurably with life tilt, BTW).

Let me say that regardless of what anyone tells you, no one is immune from tilt and from feeling the emotional rollercoaster. You get better at dealing with it in time, however. When you’ve only played 10k hands a cooler such as over full versus quads can seem like somebody’s out to get you. Put in 500k hands and it won’t.

Can you give any advice on the mental attitude of the tournament player? How do you stabilise the emotional rollercoaster and stop tilt?

Well, play more hands so that you get used to it, as I say above. Beyond that, I’d say read the two books by Larry W. Phillips on Eastern philosophy and poker. There’s some sage advice there.

By the way, if you’re not getting used to it, you have a wider problem, and it’s probably to do with your life in general. Something, somewhere in your life involved or involves a great miscarriage of justice and you play probably play poker at some level in order to redress that balance. When that “system” fails because of a bad beat, you’re back to square one – poker has fulfilled the prophecy that life is unjust, and now you can rail against poker/howl at the moon for all its injustice. You know what to do: fix the original problem and the sense of injustice will go away.

Bit heavy on the old psychoanalysis, there, Al!

Another major, major factor is playing within your bankroll. So few players I know do it, but it’s absolutely central to maintaining an even keel. I’d advocate playing with a bankroll at least fifty times your cash game or tournament buy in. If you can’t do that, drop down the levels.

Put it another way. How the hell can a bad beat hurt you at $1/$2 if you have a bankroll of $50k? You’d just laugh and move on. Most players know about the dictum that a bad beat is basically the thing that keeps bad players in the game. Without bad beats, there would be no such thing as a professional poker player, end of story.

And if you are on a huge downswing, TAKE A BREAK AND REGROUP. Analyse your play. Do something else for a while. It’s very, very difficult to realise whether you’re tilting when you’re in the middle of a huge downswing.

Last of all, it’s a game. Enjoy it. If you’re not enjoying it, don’t play. And if it’s your job, remember that this is just your job. There are plenty of other things going on in your life and all of them are what you live for.

FOLLOW THE LEADER: UNIBET OPEN LEADERBOARDS READY

07:02, March 17th, 2010

Unibet Open has a new feature for 2010 – the Leaderboards.  Visit the Unibet Open Homepage to view the top nine players, cash winners and countries who’ve taken the first event by storm.  At the top of the first two after Budapest is Anthon-Pieter Wink, who took down the €172,500 top spot ahead of Sweden’s Peter Skaj (who is, as you may have guessed, in second place).  The final nine from the event in fact hold all these coveted Leaderboard spots only until the next tournament, however, when your name could be appearing among them…

The great turnout for the Hungarian and Finnish players – and their cash results – got their countries higher on the Leaderboard or just squeaked them on there (Finland comes in 9th despite not having any leaders in the top nine for points).  In previous Unibet Open seasons, Swedish players have captured titles no less than three times out of nine (the champions being Jimmy Jonsson, Fuat Can and Simon Johansson) while Portuguese winners were seen twice (Andre Dias and Joao Barbosa).  Sweden in fact holds the lead on the country Leaderboard, ahead of Hungary in second and the Netherlands in third.  With four more events planned for this year, there’s plenty of time to join the race, however, and Unibet Open looks forward to welcoming old winners and new faces in Golden Sands, Bulgaria at the next event running from the 3rd-6th June 2010.

ANTHON-PIETER WINK WINS UNIBET OPEN BUDAPEST

00:18, March 8th, 2010

Combined_v2.jpgDutchman Anthon-Pieter Wink has captured the title and the €172,500 first prize at Unibet Open Budapest.  Fighting back from the shortest stack in the race mid-way through Day Two, Wink overcame tough Swede Peder Skaj heads up (and a tricky final table lineup all round) to bag the top spot.  Full results:

1 Anthon-Pieter Wink - €172,500
2 Peder Skaj - €110,400
3 Joachim Buch -  €74,175
4 Maksim Tyurin -  €53,475
5 Claus Nielsen -  €41,400
6  Danny Dabbagh – €28,290
7 Nils Ral – €21,045
8 Zsombor Gall – €14,835
9 Christian Kall – €12,075
10 Mitrovic Hrvoje – €8,970

Wink will have to wait until June to defend his title at the next stop on the tour – in Golden Sands, Bulgaria, where the cards will return to the air, the commentators to the livestream and hundreds of players to Unibet Open.

FINAL TABLE SET AT UNIBET OPEN BUDAPEST

02:19, March 7th, 2010

Day Two at Unibet Open Budapest was a hard-fought ten-level battle to get down to the final table, whittled down from the huge field which gathered in Budapest to play poker this weekend.  105 players reconvened today at the Sofitel Hotel to be mixed in with their alternate starting day brethren and left to fend for themselves.  Leading the field at the start of the day were Hungarian Zoltàn Toth, Swede Mats Rahmn and Dane Claus Bek Nielsen, who’d had a substantial stack all the way through his start day and was to continue to finish the second day’s play in third place.

Half way through the day and it looked like a Scandinavian monopoly on big stacks had been set up (with the exception of Spaniard Gonzalo Sanz Santos and Russian Maxim Tyurin).  The top nine players at the dinner break were Scandinavian, while Bulgarian Petar Zografov was tenth – he went on to finish 13th, cheered on by his supporters.  Amazingly, the player in last place at this stage went on to make the final himself – Dutch Cardplayer editor Anthon-Pieter Wink turned 26,500 into the chip lead by the end of the day.

Also in the top ten at the outset were eventual finalists Joachim Buch and last-two-tablers Petar Zografov and Tapani Miska Lahti; it’s unusual for so many of the day’s leaders to make it to the final 10 and the top prize-money of a tournament.  Buch especially has had an impressive run: this result means he has made back-to-back final tables at Unibet Open events!  The young Norwegian will start Day Three as a shortstack, but shouldn’t be discounted yet.  The lineup in full:

Anthon-Pieter Wink      730000
Christian Kall    235000
Claus Bek Nielsen        576000
Danny Dabbagh            464000
Gáll Zsombor   222000
Joachim Buch   270000
Maksim Tyurin 758000
Mitrovic Hrvoje          139000
Nils Ral            898000
Peder Skaj       309000

One of these players will win the first Unibet Open event of 2010, as well as the first prize of over €170,000!  Join us from 2pm for coverage of the final.

DAY 1B CLOSES AT UNIBET OPEN BUDAPEST

02:05, March 6th, 2010

_MG_0143-3As Day 1b draws to a close, the entire field has now had a chance to test themselves against 229 others per day, with just a fraction heading forward to the second day.  Of course, a chip and a chair are famously enough to win a poker tournament, so the many short stacks heading back to take a shot at the prizes are still definitely in the running.  However, it’s players like Mats Rahm, Claus Nielsen and Espen Kristoffersen who are ending the day in pole position, as it were – stacks to rival the top finishers of the first flight, all of these, and possibly one or two more who used the last four hands of the night which are played with no spectators to rocket past the 100k mark.

The day took much the same route to player elimination as the first flight – cagey at first, with a gradual acceleration, then after the dinner break a lot more action, culminating in a final level slowdown, when the big stacks were playing each other and the short ones were picking their moments.  An aggressive bunch, most of these Day 1b players, and when they’re added to the 51 remaining from yesterday it should be an exciting mix.

The prizepool has been set – a huge €172,500 for first, with those reaching the top 54  guaranteed at least €2,070.  Expect fighting to be fierce as the field is whittled down to the final table when play resumes at 2pm tomorrow; follow the live blog from the first hand, and the livestream of the feature table from 4pm.

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