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After I learned to play poker online I desperately wanted to play poker live in London, but after searching the net I couldn’t find details on any poker clubs in London, just pages and pages of online poker rooms. When I eventually did find a club, I was really nervous making that first step into it and playing live without a dealer.

LondonPokerDirectory.com is here help you. I have played in just about every poker club in London now and have listed a personal review on each club covering everything from simple directions to get there though to the quality of players and games at each poker venue.

I am also continually adding other great resources to the site.  Be sure to check out the latest london poker news and also register for our new London poker forum where you can communicate with other London based poker players and register for our monthly free rolls!

Privately operated poker clubs and video gambling machines have been irritants to many Ohioans for some time now. But soon, they will become more – competition for state-sponsored gambling. That ought to convince state legislators to do something about the scofflaws.

Through the state lottery, four planned casinos and seven racetracks where video gambling is to be permitted, one might think Buckeye State residents would have plenty of opportunites to flush their hard-earned dollars away. But no, private poker clubs and backroom gambling machines are located throughout the state.

Their operators insist they are in compliance with state law. In some cases, that may be true – technically. But the venues offer gambling that clearly is in violation of the spirit of state laws intended to keep the practice under supervision and control of the government.

And as long as the small poker and slot parlors operate, they will siphon money away from state-sanctioned gambling.

Frankly, the American ideal of a free marketplace seems in some ways to dictate that small operators not be shut out of legalized gambling. But rest assured, if Ohio follows the lead of West Virginia and other states in legalizing thousands of video slots at hundreds of locations, there will be an outcry among some in the public.

Something needs to be done to either eliminate or legalize and control the poker parlors and privately operated slots, however. That is an issue lawmakers should address.

BOSTON — Gambling interests spent more than $1.3 million in the first six months of the year lobbying Beacon Hill lawmakers to approve legislation legalizing casinos and slot parlors in Massachusetts.

An Associated Press review of records filed with the secretary of state’s office showed no letup in the flood of dollars aimed at pressuring lawmakers to come up with a final casino deal.

The $1.35 million in lobbying dollars came from casino development firms, manufacturers of slot machines and federally-recognized Indian tribes. Gambling interests spent more than $3 million in all of 2010 on lobbying.

The top spender was Sterling Suffolk Racecourse, which runs the Suffolk Downs racetrack. The company spent nearly $320,000 between January and June.

Opponents of expanded gambling spent about $33,200.

Top Massachusetts lawmakers have put off any casino debate until September.

(Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

I started gambling seriously in 2000, the year I moved to Seattle for a newspaper job. By 2001, I was hooked. I’ve been grappling with a poker addiction ever since.

While I’ve had some happier times at the poker tables recently, during the past decade gambling has often wreaked havoc with my life. I don’t know if I’ve “hit bottom” — a term many in the recovery community rightly detest — because I don’t know what, for me, bottom is.

There are things I’ve never done because of my habit. I’ve never borrowed from a loan shark or bet with a bookie. I’ve never stolen anything to raise gambling funds. I’ve never been kicked out of my apartment because I couldn’t pay the rent. I’ve never let work slide so badly that it caused me to be fired.

But there are lots of ways in which my gambling affected me for the worse during my six years in Seattle and more recently in Las Vegas: I’ve left bills unpaid, sometimes for weeks, months, or years. I’ve borrowed incessantly, both to raise poker funds and to pay bills.

Several times when the losses mounted and funds were especially tight, I’ve survived for days on end on boxes of store-brand mac and cheese, ramen noodles, saltines, and seltzer water.

Perhaps worst of all, I’ve been missing out on some basic human connections. Because of the thousands of hours I’ve spent playing poker, I’ve let some friendships and family relationships wither. And I’ve dated and pursued serious girlfriends less energetically than I used to. Some of that might be a function of middle age. But much of it, without doubt, has been due to poker.

I don’t know what my gambling future holds. It’s my hope that I’ll be able to find a way to reinvigorate my life through reduced time at the poker tables. (This might be easier now, given that I recently moved from Las Vegas to Washington, DC.) Quitting for good is one option and is something I recognize may ultimately be the answer. Another option is to do nothing, to continue to play regularly, no matter where I live. After all, it’s becoming more and more difficult to find a region of the country not within easy driving distance from a legal poker room.

I’m currently leaning toward a third option, one espoused by two writers who each released gambling memoirs in the last few years, Martha Frankel and Burt Dragin. Both had developed serious gambling problems — Frankel through Internet poker and Dragin through regular trips to casinos. Neither ended up permanently in recovery. Instead, both say their answer has been to limit their gambling to a weekly poker game with friends and reasonable stakes.

“(T)his game is social and relaxing, not compulsive and fearful,” wrote Frankel, a celebrity profiler for magazines, in her 2008 book “Hats Eyeglasses: A Family Love Affair with Gambling.” “It reminds me of the fun that I had when I first started playing, and how much I love poker. And it shows me that I’m no longer out of control, fighting a dragon I could never slay.”

Maybe this kind of solution could work for me, with a trip or two to Vegas every year tacked on for good measure. Maybe it’s pie-in-the-sky thinking. I don’t yet know.

It’s not easy to write these things. There’s a certain shame attached to confessing a gambling addiction in our culture, even more so than copping to being an alcoholic or a cocaine addict. Many still believe that people gamble excessively because of a lack of willpower or because they’re simply immoral. These antiquated beliefs are beginning to fade, as doctors, scientists, and researchers are increasingly concluding that pathological gambling is a behavioral addiction that affects the brain in much the same way as substance dependencies. I share this notion.

Since the 1970s, legalized gambling has grabbed hold of the country’s consciousness. It’s rooted itself in scores of cities and small towns in every region, including many that never before have had to deal directly with the fallout.

Indian tribes have renegotiated compacts in more than two dozen states to allow for new casinos. State governments have joined in, bringing private casinos, card rooms, and video poker and slot machines by the tens of thousands into their jurisdictions.

The national poker craze has proved amazingly durable. Forty-three states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands each sponsor heavily promoted lotteries.

In 2007, Americans lost more than $92 billion gambling — about nine times what they lost in 1982. To put that amount into perspective, it’s almost ten times what moviegoers in the United States spent on tickets during the same year.

In 2005, 73 million Americans were estimated to have patronized one of the country’s twelve hundred casinos, card rooms, or bingo parlors — twenty million more than just five years earlier.

Thirty-five years ago, casinos were legal in one state, Nevada. As of 2010, various forms of gambling have been legalized everywhere in the United States except Utah and Hawaii.

The total amount wagered legally in the United States is “undoubtedly” well over a trillion dollars per year, one of the nation’s leading gambling experts, I. Nelson Rose, concluded in 2010.

Because of this growth, millions of Americans have for the first time been directly exposed to gambling. As a result, there’s been a significant increase in the number of addicted gamblers around the country. There is a fairly obvious proposition at work here: in communities where legalized gambling has been introduced, new problem and pathological gamblers have been forged.

According to experts, gambling becomes a problem when it disrupts or damages personal lives or careers. Problem gamblers often devolve into pathological gamblers when the gambler loses control over her betting; when she gambles more often or for larger amounts; and perhaps most importantly, when she continues to gamble despite adverse consequences.

Those consequences are felt not just by the gamblers. They ripple outward to family and friends, employers and whole communities. They run the gamut from decreased work productivity and increased physical and mental health problems to rises in divorces and various types of crimes, from theft and embezzlement to domestic violence and child abuse. Studies have also shown that pathological gambling has caused an increase in bankruptcy filings and claims for unemployment and welfare benefits, and in the worst cases, suicides.

The gambling industry argues that in the long run, problem gambling rates in some communities where gambling has been introduced have stayed about the same or have even decreased slightly. In certain cases this may be true, as some who initially develop problems because of the new availability of gambling subsequently undergo what researchers call an “adaptation” effect. Though problem gambling rates almost always spike immediately after the introduction of legalized gambling, sometimes they slowly drop back to where they were. But this misses several important points. In the worst cases, many gamblers “adapt” by going to jail or committing suicide. Regardless, even in communities where adaptation may have occurred, it’s always the case that an initial spike in problem gambling rates means a greater number of injured lives, temporary or not. Finally, many researchers discount the adaptation thesis, concluding that legalizing gambling, especially slot machines, results in problem gambling rates that, over time, in fact remain higher than they were.

The most noteworthy research conducted over the last couple of decades concludes that the unremitting expansion of legalized gambling has helped turn great numbers of Americans into problem and pathological gamblers.

To wit:

A comprehensive “meta-analysis” of one hundred and twenty gambling prevalence research studies, which looked at gambling behavior in the United States and Canada between 1974 and 1997, concluded that there had been a dramatic rise in the adult problem and pathological gambling rates over that time. While the studies conducted from 1977 to 1993 determined that at some point over their lifetimes, 4.38 percent of the two countries’ general populations had become problem or pathological gamblers, the 1994 to 1997 studies showed a sharp hike in the percentage of “lifetime” problem or pathological gamblers — more than 2 percent, to nearly 7 percent. That’s a jump of more than 4.3 million people — roughly equivalent to the entire populations of states such as Kentucky or Louisiana.

“As gambling has become more socially accepted and accessible during the past two decades,” adults in the general population have “started to gamble in increasing numbers,” the study concluded. It was led by Howard Shaffer, the gambling industry-funded researcher who later helped develop the adaptation theory. “Newly exposed to the gambling experience, adults in the general population are having difficulty adjusting and, unlike the other population segments who already evidence gambling problems, are beginning to report increasingly higher rates of gambling disorder.”

Other prominent studies back up this notion. The gambling behavior survey carried out for the National Gambling Impact Study Commission, for example, determined that those who lived within fifty miles of a casino were more than twice as likely to develop significant problems as those who lived between fifty and two hundred and fifty miles from the establishment.

And look at the rates of both problem and pathological gambling in Nevada — by far the most extensive legalized gambling market in the United States. The most complete prevalence survey ever taken in Nevada, published in 2002, showed that the incidence of problem and pathological gambling in Nevada was exponentially higher than in the United States as a whole.

The study concluded that 2.9 percent of the state’s adult population were problem gamblers, and that another 3.5 percent were “probable” pathological gamblers — for a whopping total of 6.4 percent of the population. Assuming that those rates have remained the same, given Nevada’s 2010 population, that amounts to more than one hundred and fifteen thousand adults.

Spend any time in Las Vegas and it’s easy to conclude that those numbers, if anything, are an understatement. The number of pawn shops and payday loan stores that mark virtually every neighborhood — places for often-desperate problem gamblers to replenish their gambling bankrolls — is astonishing. As a resident, you can’t escape gambling. Not only have “locals casinos” sprouted up in every corner of the Las Vegas Valley, not only are casino promotions plastered on countless billboards throughout the region and on TV and radio advertisements, it’s nearly impossible to grab a drink at a neighborhood bar or even shop for groceries or buy gasoline without passing by banks of slots and video poker machines.

What’s more, it’s clear that as the number and range of legalized gambling opportunities have grown throughout Las Vegas — and the country — and as a rising number of gamblers have suffered serious consequences, more and more have turned to Gamblers Anonymous, or GA, for help. In the Las Vegas metro area, about 100 GA chapters meet weekly, a higher number than anywhere else in the country.

Over a recent ten-year period, GA — a twelve-step support program modeled after Alcoholics Anonymous — grew dramatically nationally, too. From 1996 to 2005, the number of weekly GA meetings nationwide rose by almost 50 percent, from 1,073 to 1,584.

Yet the newly addicted gamblers and all those they impact aren’t the only victims. States and other municipalities have also increasingly been suffering some pretty severe gambling hangovers. Governors, state legislators, and mayors all around the country have become hooked on gambling revenue, coveting the easy ways the steady stream of government gambling winnings have shored up budget deficits, paid for education programs, and reduced property and income taxes.

Gambling revenues have become critical income streams for more than a few state governments. According to a 2005 report released by researchers at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, in four states — Louisiana, Nevada, Oregon, and South Dakota — taxes from casinos, slot machines, video poker terminals, racetracks, and states lotteries made up more than 10 percent of overall revenues. In six other states, gambling brought in more than 6 percent of overall revenues. And those numbers were rising.

State leaders don’t relinquish these income streams easily. And in many recession-wracked states currently burdened with unprecedented budget gaps, officials are clamoring for more gambling. In 2009 and 2010, officials in at least thirty-seven states — three out of four — pushed for new or expanded gambling. The evidence is clear that the gambling industry and their politician partners are gearing up for more battles than ever.

As these debates are being hashed out all over the country, a variety of other important gambling trends in the United States also have manifested themselves.

The poker explosion, assumed by many to be little more than a pop-culture fad when in first took root in 2003, has maintained its hold on the American public.

Internet gambling drew millions of Americans to their computer screens in the years before the federal government in 2011 effectively shut down the top sites — a setback the gambling sites and their political allies are working hard to overturn.

Asian-Americans, often lured to casinos by persistent industry marketing, are both gambling and becoming addicted at rates sufficiently high that researchers are devoting more effort than ever into studying the phenomenon. Asian community activists are also now taking more serious note. “This marketing goes beyond targeting and into predatory practices,” Helen Gym, a Philadelphia-based activist, told me last year. “We consider it to be a devastating thing.”

Gambling addiction science is in the midst of a revolution. Scientists are concluding in greater numbers that pathological gambling is a true addiction. Long classified as an “impulse control disorder” — closer to kleptomania or pyromania than to alcoholism — leading psychiatrists and addiction researchers are set soon to change their definition. In its 2013 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, called the DSM-V, the American Psychiatric Association is preparing to reclassify pathological gambling as a “behavioral addiction” more akin neurologically to alcohol and drug addictions than, say, to compulsive shoplifting. No other behavior has ever been classified as an addiction by the psychiatric group.

Finally, as these changes are in the works, more attention is being paid to industry influence in gambling addiction research.

A charity affiliated with the powerful American Gaming Association, the commercial casino industry’s Washington, DC-based trade group, funds the majority of the problem gambling research conducted in the United States, many gambling researchers contend. This is prompting growing concerns among critics, who assert that the industry is attempting to buy research legitimacy and conclusions that suit its purposes — that gambling is less addictive than many believe; that problem gamblers don’t provide the industry with the high percentage of revenues that numerous independent studies have suggested; that pathological gamblers frequently have addictive “personalities,” implying that the industry should in no way be held to blame for their gambling addiction.

I don’t mean to propose that legalized gambling is responsible for every social ill befalling America. Far from it. And gambling businesses do provide jobs — something that can’t be scoffed at, especially in our bottomed-out economy.

Not to mention, a significant majority of those who visit their nearby racino or card room or video poker bar with friends once or twice a month, or who buy the occasional lottery ticket with dreams of striking it rich, do so without developing negative side effects. They don’t gamble because they’re addicted. They simply get a kick out of it, and they’re glad the state has provided them with the entertainment option.

Yet the gambling boom has had myriad consequences — costs that have grown right alongside the industry’s growth.

In the end, voters in more and more states are being asked to weigh whether to grant gambling a place in their communities and possibly their lives.

Increases in state-sanctioned gambling aren’t just drawing folks who have been gambling illegally, concludes Robert Ward, deputy director of the Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government.

“In other words,” said Ward, “the states almost certainly are creating new gamblers—and a certain number of those folks are finding out first-hand what addiction is all about.”

Dubai: A shepherd has been jailed for six months after a court convicted him of organising a gambling game for the public in a pedestrian underpass in Deira.

The Dubai Court of First Instance handed the 25-year-old Bangladeshi defendant, B.H., a six-month sentence followed by deportation.

Prosecutors charged the accused with organising a gambling game using a screwdriver, a belt and a plastic table. His accomplice is yet to be arrested.

The defendant pleaded guilty in court.

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“Yes, I gambled and organised a gambling game,” B.H. told Presiding Judge Maher Salama Al Mahdi.

According to the charge sheet, prosecutors said B.H. and the fugitive organised a gambling game in a public place. He was additionally charged with gambling.

Caught red-handed

A Yemeni policeman testified that an informant alerted them that some people were gambling in a pedestrian underpass in the Bani Yas area.

“A special police team rushed to the location. We caught B.H. red-handed organising a gambling game for a number of people. There was a crowd of pedestrians in the corner where he had organised the gambling game. We detained B.H. immediately and seized a belt, screwdriver and a plastic table that he used in the game.

Testimony

“However, we did not confiscate any money from him… he admitted that he had gambled and organised a gambling game as well. Upon questioning, he informed us that he had absconded from his employer and gambled,” the policeman claimed during prosecution questioning.

According to the rules of the game, gamblers had to throw the screwdriver in the circle formed by the belt without touching it. Wednesday’s verdict remains subject to appeal within 15 days.

RALEIGH, N.C. — North Carolina’s Cherokee Indians and Gov. Beverly Perdue finalized an agreement Monday to allow live card dealers at the tribe’s casino in the mountains in exchange for school districts getting millions of dollars annually as a piece of profits from the new games.

The amended compact, which was signed in Raleigh by Perdue and Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians Principal Chief Michell Hicks, would let the tribe offer games beyond the electronic and video games now available at the Harrah’s Cherokee Casino and Hotel.

The finalized deal will now be sent to lawmakers scheduled to meet in Raleigh through Tuesday. They don’t have to approve the contract, but they’re being asked to loosen gambling laws separate from the compact so the tribe could offer games like live poker and blackjack.

Republican leaders at the Legislature may delay their action because they wanted a compact in their hands earlier to review. Any legislation involving gambling is tricky because of opposition by both conservative and liberal-leaning lawmakers critical of how they say gambling disproportionately affects the poor. House Speaker Thom Tillis, R-Mecklenburg, told colleagues that lawmakers would be meeting Monday to discuss whether to act. Hicks visited the Legislative Building after the compact signing.

The casino, which opened in 1997, has generated money for Cherokee tribal projects and individual tribe members. It already employs 1,760 people, according to a study. The new games will mean another 400 new jobs, Perdue and the tribe said.

“This will mean additional dollars going directly to school districts, and it will provide an economic boost for western North Carolina,” Perdue said in a prepared statement. “I urge the General Assembly to act so that we can quickly start receiving the benefits of this expansion.”

The agreement, which would last 30 years, would be a first for the state because it would get a portion of gross revenues from the new table games. In exchange, the tribe would have exclusive live table gaming rights in the area west of Interstate 26 — meaning the revenues would dry up if another similar gambling operation set up shop in the region. The tribe can only operate casinos on its lands in five western counties where the Qualla Boundary lands sit.

The compact would send revenues directly to local school districts rather than to state government. School districts would be required to spend the money on classroom teaching, according to a news release. The districts’ share would begin at 4 percent of gross revenues for the first five years of the compact, ratcheting up by 1 percentage point every five years before reaching 8 percent in years 21 through 30.

The state’s local school districts were projected to receive a combined $2.5 million to $3 million annually during the initial phase of the compact, said Leanne Winner, a lobbyist for the North Carolina School Boards Association.

“This agreement will provide substantial economic benefit to tribal members and throughout western North Carolina,” Hicks said in a statement. “This agreement further demonstrates the Cherokees’ commitment to educating our young people through the education funding initiative.”

Bill Brooks, executive director of the North Carolina Family Policy Council, which opposes any gambling expansion, said he’s worried the proposal will lead to additional Las Vegas-style casino gambling elsewhere. Brooks argues that anyone could successfully sue the state over giving the tribe the ability to offer games that are prohibited in every other locale.

Brooks said “there’s a whole host of societal ills that gambling brings,” such as increased crime, for example.

Profits from the live games and the designated marketing region for the tribe had been among the sticking points in negotiations over the past couple of months. Perdue’s office had lobbied for a 8.5 percent cut of the gross revenues from the live games, but the tribe had offered their region of exclusivity to be larger — the area west of Interstate 95, excluding the counties where I-95 is located. Perdue and legislative leaders balked at the size.

Tillis and Senate leader Phil Berger, R-Rockingham, wrote to Hicks and the tribe’s attorney general earlier this month saying they would be willing to return for a special session to consider the gambling law changes after this week if Perdue called them back.

The agreement also must be sent to the U.S. Department of the Interior for approval, Perdue’s office said.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Outcome

With the blinds at 500 and 1,000 with a 100 ante, Tripodi raised to 2,200 from late position, McDonald reraised to 6,700 from the small blind, Tripodi called. On the Flop, McDonald bet 6,600, Tripodi raised to 13,200, McDonald reraised to 22,200, Tripodi went all-in, Mcdonald called.

Analysis

Tripodi defended his opening raise with the benefit of post-flop position, speculating with his suited two-gapper. Each player nailed the flop, with McDonald making top set while Tripodi enjoyed his unlikely baby flush. McDonald led out as he could not afford to trap with his vulnerable set, but Tripodi was also wary of a potential fourth club which could spoil his flush. A raising war ensued as each sought to protect their hand, and McDonald discovered he was at risk for 80% of his stack in spite of his flopped top set. Tripodi was relieved to discover he had the lock on clubs, but he would need to fade a board-pair to score the huge double-up. McDonald found a repeater on the river, earning a full house while eliminating Tripodi after quite a sweat. Sets on suited flops, or flops with three consecutive straightening cards can be quite tricky to play and it is often advisable in the early stages of tournaments to wait until the turn for the heavy betting, as players can become quite stubborn or aggressive with draws and semibluffs when there are still two cards to come. McDonald parlayed his freshly minted wealth into a deep run, eventually finishing in 18th for €19,000.

Poker Tropical Meet

Saez, Sano wrap up jockey, trainer titles at Tropical Meet

Calder Race Course concluded its 45-day Tropical Meet on Friday, with jockey
Luiz Saez and trainer Antonio Sano taking the leading jockey and trainer titles,
respectively.

Saez rode 66 winners to become the leading rider of the 2011 Tropical Meet.
Daniel Centeno came in second place with 29 winners, while Fernando Jara was
third in the jockey standings with 27 winners.

The leading trainer of the Tropical Meet was Sano with 18 victories. Steve
Dwoskin and Nick Canani each sent out 16 winners to tie for second in the
trainer standings, while Jose Pinchin, Jose Garoffalo and Eddie Plesa Jr. came
next, each with 12 winners in another very competitive Tropical trainers’ race.

The Tropical Meet leading owner’s trophy went to Frank Calabrese, whose
horses won 19 races. Steve Dwoskin and Starship Stables tied for second place in
the owner standings with 10 winners each. Jose Pinchin came in third with seven
winners at the meet.

The 2011 Tropical Meet again showcased the Florida Thoroughbred breeding
industry with its renewal of the Florida Million on November 12. The event,
first held in 2002, features eight stakes races worth $1 million for registered
Florida-breds and is held in conjunction with the Florida Thoroughbred Breeders’
and Owners’ Association.

Six graded stakes were featured during the season, including two prestigious
turf fixtures, the Grade 2 W.L. McKnight Handicap and Grade 3 La Prevoyante
Handicap, won by Musketier and Casablanca Smile, respectively.

While the final day of the 2011 Tropical Meet was Friday, Calder remains open
seven days a week for full card simulcasting, slot games in the casino and live
poker action in Studz Poker Club. The full line-up of simulcast tracks includes
Gulfstream Park, Santa Anita, Aqueduct, Fair Grounds, Tampa Bay Downs and
Oaklawn Park.

The World Poker Tour

The World Poker Tour is putting the “world” back in its moniker lately, and its latest stop at the Kings Casino at the Corinthian Hotel in Prague, the Czech Republic, has proven to be a huge success.

Two Day Ones played out over Thursday and Friday and, by the end of registration on Day 1B Friday, the field that had come together was astounding. The €3500 buy in didn’t seem to keep anyone away and, as the final registration bell crept closer, there was the realization that this might be the biggest event ever for the WPT in Europe. Once the late registration period had expired, that notable achievement was achieved.

568 players stepped to the felt in Prague, breaking the record set last season by the WPT tournament in Vienna (555 players), building a prize pool of slightly more than €1.75 million. 63 players would be able to walk away from the picturesque city on the banks of the Vltava River with the minimum cash of slightly more than €6400, but there is a larger prize that all were in the hunt for. The eventual champion of this tournament will walk off with €450,000, a seat at the WPT Championship next year and have their name etched for eternity into the Champions’ Cup.

The story of Day 1B was noted journeyman professional Casey Kastle, who was a dominant force throughout the action on Friday. Kastle, who ranks in the Top Ten in cashes on the WPT, meticulously built his stack throughout play on Day 1B, but got a tremendous boost to his stack once another pro stepped to his table.

During one of the last hands of Friday night’s session, Kastle and Swedish pro Michael Tureniec – both with well above average stacks – decided they didn’t want to just cruise into the Day Two play. After several raises between the duo, Kastle put his last 170K in chips into the center and found a call from Tureniec. As expected, the hands were huge when turned up – pocket Aces for Kastle, pocket Queens for Tureniec – and, once there were no surprises on the board, Kastle had doubled up for the chip lead and Tureniec was chopped down to 100K in chips.

The Day 1B field actually proved to provide many of the front runners. Along with chip leader Kastle, the United States’ Nikola Sears, Russia’s Karen Saruisyan and American Stephen O’Dwyer (in the hunt for a potential Player of the Year award) held down the two through four spots on the leaderboard. The Day 1A chip leader, the Czech Republic’s Jan Ramik, dropped into the number five spot for the start of Day Two play. In total, 218 players started off play on Saturday still with chips and a shot at a WPT crown.

Day Two play has already begun this morning (afternoon in Prague) with plans in place to play eight levels before calling it a night. With the final table set for play on Monday, the players are wasting little time getting action going on the felt.

One of the early movers on Saturday is Daniel Carter. He eliminated Maksim Semisohenko when, holding Big Slick, Semisohenko made a stand with an A-J of clubs. An Ace came on the flop, but it also contained two clubs. Looking at a bit of a sweat, Carter was able to dodge a club and a jack on the turn and river to knock Semisohenko out of the tournament.

Carter wouldn’t be as fortunate against Jean Marie Vandeborne as, this time, the flush came home to chop some chips out of Carter’s stack. Undaunted, Carter made a brave call on a seemingly innocuous 10-10-5-4-8 board with A-Q to knock out another opponent (who only held K-Q) and move up to 170K in chips.

O’Dwyer and Sears have also already been at each other’s throats, with O’Dwyer coming out on the winning end. On a Q-8-7-4-8 board, O’Dwyer was able to get Sears to call on each of the streets before tabling pocket Aces, which led to a disgusted Sears to chuck his cards into the muck. A few moments later, O’Dwyer would administer the coup de grace to Sears when Steve’s pocket Aces held up against Nikola’s pocket Kings, thrusting O’Dwyer into the lead.

At this moment, here’s how the Top Five line up:

1. Steve O’Dwyer, 500K
2. Casey Kastle, 356K
3. Martins Adeniya, 310K
4. Karen Sarkisyan, 253K
5. Jan Ramik, 215K

If the players don’t start dropping soon, it will be a busy Sunday for the contenders. The final table is set for Monday and, with 188 players currently remaining, there is quite a bit of work to be done before the latest champion on the World Poker Tour is crowned.

Poker Online

This is continued from How to Play Top Pairs in Texas Hold’em Poker Part One. Playing Big Pairs in Early Positions Early position players in a Texas Hold’em poker game that are dealt big pocket pairs are suppose to not just call the bet, but raise it before anyone sees the flop. Raise the bet

Jeremy Portje Mom focuses on ‘Kyle’s Cause’ Karla Dawe, whose son died while hospitalized with mental illness complications, is holding a fundraising and awareness-raising event called “Kyle’s Cause” on Saturday, April 14. Kyle Straka was diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder and died a year ago. if you go The “Kyle’s Cause” mental-health awareness and fundraising event

You read that right. The 2012 Heart of Illinois Senior Games for the first time will include a Texas Hold-em tournament among its events, scheduled for 10 a.m. May 28 (that’s Memorial Day) at RiverPlex in Peoria. “This year’s tournament will be set up as near as possible to the recognizable format as seen on

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