Hugh Freyer, Poker Player With the Discretion of a Banker, Dies at 86 – The New York Times

This obituary is part of a series about people who have died in the coronavirus pandemic. Read about others here.

Hugh P. Freyer played seven-card stud in the Bronx with a core group of fellow recovering alcoholics for more than 30 years. The discretion demanded by his day job as a private banker, combined with the self-discipline required by Alcoholics Anonymous, made him more prudent than most of those at the table.

He always had a budget when he played, and he did not play beyond his means, ever, his daughter, Carolyn Freyer-Jones, said.

His prudence, she recalled, extended beyond poker: He had no debt, he paid off any credit cards he used every month, and all of his end-of-life details were paid in advance, by him.

Mr. Freyer was admitted to a Bronx hospital on June 20 for blood pressure problems. He tested negative for the novel coronavirus, as he had a week earlier when he was examined by his own doctor.

But the day before he was scheduled to be released for rehabilitation, Ms. Freyer-Jones said, he tested positive. Nine days later, on July 14, he died at the hospital. It was his 86th birthday. She said the cause was complications of Covid-19.

Hugh Philip Freyer was born on July 14, 1934, in Manhattan, the son of Josephine (Shannon) Freyer, an Irish immigrant who worked as a cleaning person at New York Hospital (now NewYork-Presbyterian), and Hugh Freyer, a window washer who was born in South Africa.

He was raised in the Washington Heights neighborhood and, after graduating from George Washington High School, served in the Army in Korea from 1957 to 1959 as a radio operator. He started working at what is now Citibank in 1959 and attended night classes at New York University, earning a bachelors degree in business in 1967.

He rose from branch manager to corporate vice president, then moved to the New York office of the London-based bank Standard Chartered, where he was a senior vice president until he retired in 2001 at 67.

As a member of Alcoholics Anonymous for more than 50 years, he counseled patients at Roosevelt Hospital (now Mount Sinai West) who had been admitted for drug and alcohol overdoses. He also served on A.A.s board.

He married Gertrude Flexer in 1956. They lived in the Riverdale section of the Bronx. She survives him. In addition to their daughter, he is also survived by their sons, Philip and Paul Freyer; seven grandchildren; and his sister, Kathleen Harmon.

The prudence Mr. Freyer showed at the poker table paid off, his daughter said.

My dad bought every grandchild their first car, she said. Nothing fancy, just good used cars. He made sure in his will that theres money set aside for my daughters first car as well.

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Hugh Freyer, Poker Player With the Discretion of a Banker, Dies at 86 - The New York Times

Poker, Metacognition and ‘The Biggest Bluff’ | Learning Innovation – Inside Higher Ed

The Biggest Bluff: How I Learned to Pay Attention, Master Myself, and Win by Maria Konnikova

Published in June 2020

What if the best way to learn about learning is to play poker? Or maybe to read about learning to play poker?

This is the premise of New Yorker writer (and Columbia psychology Ph.D. trained) Maria Konnikova's new book, The Biggest Bluff.

Konnikova tells how she went in under a year from not knowing how many cards are in a deck to a tournament-winning professional poker player.

The Biggest Bluff is less a book about poker -- although we learn plenty about the subculture of professional poker players -- and more a book on metacognition. Poker, it turns out, is a vehicle for thinking about thinking.

The animating spirit underlying Konnikova's journey from a poker novice to expert is summarized in the advice that her coach, professional poker player Erik Seidel, repeats continuously:

"Less certainty. More inquiry."

In learning how to thrive in the hypercompetitive male-dominated (and incredibly sexist) world of professional poker, Konnikova must absorb many lessons beyond optimal betting, calling and folding strategies.

Over the book's chapters, Konnikova relates how poker uncovers and reveals one's blind spots, biases and mental fault lines.

It is hard to come away from reading The Biggest Bluff without concluding that poker should be integrated into the curriculum. At the very least, it seems as if Centers for Teaching and Learning should think about a faculty learning science reading group where the book is discussed, followed by some low-stakes Texas Hold'em.

CTLs, and the universities in which they are embedded, might want to think about adopting less certainty and more inquiry in their official mission statements.

The Biggest Bluff should be included in any bookshelf on learning about learning.

What are you reading?

View post:

Poker, Metacognition and 'The Biggest Bluff' | Learning Innovation - Inside Higher Ed

Facebook AI ReBel Capable of Beating Poker Pros | My Blog – Tight Poker

Thursday, July 30th, 2020 | Written by Renee

Facebook has developed yet another poker-playing AI, this time using a general framework that does not rely heavily on domain knowledge. Recursive Belief-based Learning (ReBel) revolves around game state concepts, operating via two AI models that enable it to create a public belief state, which in turn gives it the capability to outclass human players.

How It Works

Like many other AI systems, ReBel also uses reinforcement learning in order to learn a game as quickly as possible. But unlike its predecessors, ReBel implements new concepts that help it go beyond what is visible and known. It trains two AI models one for value, the other for policy and then generates public belief states, quite similar to how human players decipher whats inside the mind of their opponents.

Thus, ReBel considers not only the available data, such as the cards, bet size, or hand range, it digs deeper into the hidden info during self-play, and then creates a subgame to look into probabilities and all the possible actions from opponents as well as the potential outcome of each hand. ReBel then makes a decision around these aspects.

ReBel differs from DeepMinds AlphaZero as it does not base its decisions on mere assumptions; rather, it also takes into account the pot, chips, as well as the agents belief and policies which help it achieve a certain accuracy threshold when making a decision.

Trials Prove ReBel Performs Better Than Poker Pros

To put ReBels capability to the test, it was made to play against one of the top players of heads-up no-limit holdem, Dong Kim, along with three other highly-skilled players.

The experiment showed that ReBel played faster than its human opponents, and defeated heads-up specialist Kim with an aggregated score of 165 thousandths of a big blind, with an average deviation of 69. ReBel also outclassed Facebooks previous poker-playing AI Libratus which achieved an average score of 147 when it was pitted with the top human players back in 2017.

Also worth-noting is the fact that Libratus only defeated Kim by 29 thousandths of a big blind during their trial match. ReBel was trialed in two-player versions of holdem liars dice, and turn endgame holdem, and the results were equally impressive.

Future Applications

The approach used by ReBel has enabled it to master imperfect-information games, making it a viable reference for developing future universal frameworks involving multi-agent interactions in large settings, such as in the field of negotiations, auctions, cybersecurity, and self-driving trucks and cars.

Since it does not depend much on domain knowledge, its algorithms are more geared towards general use in cases with less pre-determined factors. The only issue right now is the potential for it to be used by players as a sophisticated way to cheat when competing at the tables. Facebook quickly addressed this by saying it wont release the ReBel codebase for poker.

The researchers instead opted to open-source their code for Liars Dice which is flexible and easy to understand, and which can also be used in future research.

For the past few years, AI systems have greatly contributed to cracking different complex games. In 2017, Libratus was developed at Carnegie Mellon University initially for learning poker, but its developers had a goal for it to be used in other key areas that are not related to poker, such as medical planning, cybersecurity, and business negotiations. The AI took on four top poker pros and beat all of them.

In 2019, Facebooks AI Lab developed another poker AI called Pluribus, in partnership with the CMU. When it was trialed, it was able to outclass six human players in a traditional no-limit holdem game, making it become the first bot to outclass humans in a multi-player setting. It was also developed using self-play algorithms. Among its human opponents was no other than six-time World Series of Poker bracelet winner Chris Ferguson.

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Facebook AI ReBel Capable of Beating Poker Pros | My Blog - Tight Poker

How to attract more luck into your life, using the ‘poker mindset’ – Business Insider – Business Insider

There's a lot that's been written about games of skill. There'sthe 10,000 hour theory. Deliberate practice. Flow state. The list goes on.

In contrast, there's been little that's been written about games of luck.

This is because by definition luck is a random event that we can't control, so we don't bother discussing it that much. I think there's a secret hidden in plain sight, though. Luck is partially a game of skill and you can increase your odds by following the rules of the game.

Here are three ways you can attract more luck into your life.

I stole this from Josh Wolfe, who stole it from Jim Watson. The phrase "Avoid boring people" has two meanings. Read it again.

The more interesting you are, the more interest you get. And the more interest you get, the more opportunities that come your way.

And of course, the more interesting friends you have, the more interest they get. And the more interest they get, the more opportunities will come their way, which will inevitably get passed on to you (as long as you're not boring).

On a long enough time horizon, it will look like luck. But the act of being interesting to people and having interesting friends helped create those crazy moments of luck.

How to do this? It's a flywheel.

First, focus on being an interesting person. If this isn't intuitive, find someone you admire and break down to first principles what makes them interesting. "Command C" and "Command V." Copy and paste.

The more interesting you get, the more interesting people you will meet. This will then result in you becoming more interesting. Flywheel. Flywheel. Flywheel.The Bezos way.

Let's explore several mental models.

Occam's Razorstates that if all other factors are equal, you should choose the most simple option.Hanlon's Razorstates that if all other factors are equal, you should attribute bad behavior to stupidity rather than malice.

And then there's what I call the Luck Razor. If all other factors are equal, choose the path that feels the luckiest.

This is a highly personal one for me. I was supposed to go for a drink with someone cool I met on Twitter. It was standard UK winter rainy weather ("Pissing it down" is what we call it). The person texted me before saying, "I'm tired and the weather is awful. I can still do tonight but happy to cancel if you are not up for it?"

When I got this text, I was tired and didn't feel like commuting one hour in the rain. I wrote back "Let's do another time."

Before I hit send, I asked myself: "What's the luckier option? Going and meeting someone interesting or chilling at home watching Netflix?" The answer was obvious when viewed through this frame.

So I went.

Since that drink, two to three opportunities have come directly from that person. And numerous opportunities have come from those opportunities. (And more opportunities from those opportunities, and so on.)

On a long enough time scale, my hourly rate from taking the luckier option that evening has been the best hourly rate of my life so far.

Roulette is a pure game of luck because you can't control the outcome. The casino operator spins the wheel, and you get the number the ball lands on.

Poker is a game of luck and skill, in which you can control the outcome. Even though there are factors like the hand you are dealt, you can still use skill to play the hand you are dealt.

The luckiest people I know have a poker mindset they are obsessed with finding a way to hack the system.

I'd even go so far as to make the following ridiculous statement: Playing a game of roulette thinking it's poker is better than playing a game of poker thinking it's roulette.

The person who plays poker with a roulette mindset will lose. They will cause more bad luck by attributing everything to luck and ignoring the influence they have.

The person who plays roulette with a poker mindset will probably turn it into a game of skill on a long enough time horizon.

If they are obsessed with identifying the areas they can control and influence, they'll ultimately find a way to do it. They may design a chip that sits in the casino's ball or simply bribe the guy at the wheel. Either way, it's doable.

Even for games that feel like pure luck, question everything with a poker mindset. You may find a hack that nobody else has discovered because they thought it was roulette.

George Mack works in growth marketing for tech and e-commerce businesses, and studies mental models and how they influence our thinking. Follow him on Twitter.

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How to attract more luck into your life, using the 'poker mindset' - Business Insider - Business Insider

Poker, Metacognition, and ‘The Biggest Bluff’ | Learning Innovation – Inside Higher Ed

The Biggest Bluff: How I Learned to Pay Attention, Master Myself, and Win by Maria Konnikova

Published in June of 2020.

What if the best way to learn about learning is to play poker? Or maybe to read about learning to play poker?

This is the premise of New Yorker writer (and Columbia psychology PhD trained) Maria Konnikova's new book The Biggest Bluff.

Konnikova tells how she went in under a year from not knowing how many cards are in a deck to a tournament-winning professional poker player.

The Biggest Bluff is less a book about poker - although we learn plenty about the sub-culture of professional poker players - and more a book on metacognition. Poker, it turns out, is a vehicle for thinking about thinking.

The animating spirit underlying Konnikova's journey from a poker novice to expert is summarized in the advice that her coach, professional poker player Erik Seidel, repeats continuously:

"Less certainty. More inquiry."

In learning how to thrive in the hyper-competitive male-dominated (and incredibly sexist) world of professional poker, Konnikova must absorb many lessons beyond optimal betting, calling, and folding strategies.

Over the book's chapters, Konnikova relates how poker uncovers and reveals one's blind spots, biases, and mental fault lines.

It is hard to come away from reading The Biggest Bluff without concluding that poker should be integrated into the curriculum. At the very least, it seems as if Centers for Teaching and Learning (CTLs) should think about a faculty learning science reading group where the book is discussed, followed by some low-stakes Texas Hold 'em.

Universities, and the CTLs in which they are embedded, might want to think about adopting less certainty and more inquiry in their official mission statements.

The Biggest Bluff should be included in any bookshelf on learning about learning.

What are you reading?

Read this article:

Poker, Metacognition, and 'The Biggest Bluff' | Learning Innovation - Inside Higher Ed

What Are the Best Poker Apps of 2020? – GameIndustry.com

If there is one good thing about smartphones and tablets, it is that they allow those with a passion for poker to play easily. There are so many poker apps available, some can feel overwhelmed when it comes to choosing the right platform.

Not only are poker enthusiasts keen to use an app that is easy to use, but it also ensures that any personal information contained within the app is always safeguarded. Of course, everyone can have their own requirements concerning a poker app, so what suits one person will not necessarily suit another.

Reading reviews and listing to friends recommendations can be helpful, but those looking for the best poker platforms of 2020 need only consider the following poker apps.

GGPoker

It is not just the winnings of poker that can be alluring, but also the social aspect. As such, some may want to use a poker platform that is always busy, and GGPoker is perfect in this regard. Of course, this is not the only beneficial aspect of GGPoker. As well as holding several poker tournaments throughout the day, there are also several promotions to enjoy on a regular basis.

Downloading the GGPoker app is straightforward, and all versions are available via the download page.

888Poker

888Poker is another app worth considering for those wanting to make light work of playing poker on the go. Always abundant with ongoing promotions for players as well as incentives for introducing friends and family to the 888Poker platform.

888 Poker is also one of the few poker apps that supports fast-fold tournaments, which is perfect for those that enjoy visiting different poker tables.

There is a desktop site that can be accessed as well as apps available for iOS and Android users which can be downloaded via their respective download links Playing poker on the go has never been so easy.

PPPoker

PPPoker is an app that can be downloaded to iOS and Android devices and allows poker payers to connect with players situated globally. Not a fan of playing poker with online strangers? Fear not, as the PPPoker app will enable members to create a playroom which can only be accessed by friends and family members.

There is also the opportunity to test out your poker face via the use of play money, which can be converted to real money once you are confident using the app.

Poker Stars

One of the reasons that the Poker Stars app is so popular is due to it being home to the renowned World Championships for Online Poker. Those that enjoy the streamlined aesthetic of the poker platform will find the same variants in place on the Android and iOS app.

As Poker Stars can be played on several devices, switching from a mobile to the desktop is effortless and secure.

Although there are hundreds if not thousands of poker apps available for iOS and Android devices, those listed have proved to be easy to use, great value for money and have procedures in place that help reinforce responsible betting.

Infinite Ventures, Inc., handheld game developer and publisher, today announced plans to produce its award-winning

Watch the E3 trailer for the Puppeteer. Available for pre-order now and releases September 10th.http://www.youtube.com/watch/?v=4qlEhkhDxKg

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What Are the Best Poker Apps of 2020? - GameIndustry.com

Kai Havertz WILL face Rangers as Chelsea ‘poker game’ forces dramatic U-turn over 80m superstar – Daily Record

Bayer Leverkusen main man Kai Havertz looks set to face Rangers in the Europa League last 16 showdown in Germany - according to a report.

Bild state the 80million Chelsea target will almost certainly be in the team that takes on Steven Gerrard 's side at the Bay Arena next Thursday despite fervent speculation over his future.

The Germany international is Frank Lampard's No.1 signing target and it's understood the player himself has his heart set on a move to Stamford Bridge,.

But the publication believe a poker game is currently taking place between free-spending Chelsea and Leverkusen over the structure of the deal for the 21-year-old.

The Blues view the attacker as the perfect player to compliment fellow new arrivals Timo Werner and Hakim Ziyech.

And Havertz, who returned to training last week, now looks poised to be among the team in the vital clash with Rangers for Peter Bosz's under-pressure side.

Leverkusen are desperate for Euro success as they target winning the revised tournament after missing out on a Champions League place following their fifth-placed Bundesliga finish.

Havertz was brilliant in the 3-1 first leg win back in March and scored from the penalty spot on a night he pulled the strings at Ibrox.

The winner of the tie will remain in Germany to take on Inter or Getafe as the tournament becomes a one-legged affair.

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Kai Havertz WILL face Rangers as Chelsea 'poker game' forces dramatic U-turn over 80m superstar - Daily Record

Man Utd in transfer ‘poker game’ for winger that could save Ed Woodward 55m – Express

Meanwhile, former Red Devils midfielder Paul Ince thinks Sanchez could be a "totally different player" at Manchester United next season.

I wouldnt rule out Sanchez going back to United and being a key part of their team next season, Ince told Paddy Power.

Football is a funny old game. Ive been in the situation as a manager where Ive thought, right, Im going to get rid of him and him but when it comes to it you cant get the deal done, so they stay at the club.

Then pre-season comes around and theyre a totally different player to the season before, and theyre your key man the next season.

So Sanchez could definitely go back to United, look fantastic in training, and bang suddenly hes important to their plans after all."

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Man Utd in transfer 'poker game' for winger that could save Ed Woodward 55m - Express

This book is the new ‘Moneyball’ (and every investor should read it) – The Australian Financial Review

She adds: "If he could figure out how to disentangle the chance from the skill, how to maximise the role of the latter and learn to minimise the malice of the former, he believed he would hold the solution to some of life's greatest decision challenges."

Spoiler alert: Over the course of the year and a half the book spans, Konnikova goes from being a rank novice who doesn't know a straight from a flush to an accomplished pro who gets to final tables in tournaments sometimes winning and makes serious money $US350,000 ($489,000) and counting, she told an interviewer. She even had a sponsor for a time.

How does she do it? First, she finds the perfect teacher in Erik Seidel, a poker legend who's a kind of Delphic presence in the book. He tends to guide her towards knowledge rather than imposing it, so that her poker breakthroughs feel like her own discoveries at least as much as his teachings.

Second, she goes all-in, devoting herself fully to the task at hand, even though there are many discouraging moments along the way moments when her lack of poker smarts allow better players (usually men) to goad her into making mistakes.

And third and this is the part that truly grabbed me she learns a mode of thought that is vital to winning poker. This is where The Biggest Bluff intersects with Moneyball. What Konnikova has to say about thinking can also be applied to investing. "It's all about thinking well," Seidel tells her during one of their first meetings. "The real question is can good thinking and hard work get you there?"

In one of her few direct references to stock picking, she quotes the Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman: "For a large majority of fund managers, the selection of stocks is more like rolling dice than like playing poker."

He continues: "The successful funds in any given year are mostly lucky; they have a good roll of the dice. There is general agreement among researchers that nearly all stock pickers, whether they know it or not and few of them do are playing a game of chance."

Thinking like a poker player could well be an important way to minimise the element of chance in investing, and heighten the element of skill.

Konnikova's first lesson and it's a painful one is that she's going to need to lose to get better. "The benefit of failure is an objectivity that success simply can't offer," she writes. "If you win right away if your first foray into any new area is a runaway success you'll have absolutely no idea to gauge if you're really just that brilliant or it was a total fluke and you got incredibly lucky."

Lesson No. 2: How do you react to losing? She quotes Dan Harrington, the author of several widely read poker strategy books: "Everyone plays well when they're winning. But can you control yourself when you're losing? And not by being too conservative, but trying to still be objective as to what your chances are in the hand. If you can do that, then you've conquered the game."

And so it goes: A good poker player has to be comfortable with uncertainty just like a good investor. She has to have a good reason for every single decision she makes. She has to be able to acknowledge mistakes and adjust accordingly. She has to be able to shut out all the white noise while searching for meaningful patterns. She can't get too high when she wins a big pot or too low when she's on a losing streak. A player who is self-aware enough to clearly see her own strengths and weakness has a big advantage. All of these attributes are important for good investing as well.

Konnikova stresses the importance of not dwelling on bad luck those times when you have a good hand that you played correctly but lost because your opponent got lucky when the last card was turned over. What matters is whether your decision was sound.

At one point, when she is complaining about a hand she lost, Seidel tells he doesn't want to hear the result of her hands any more. He just wants to hear her explain her decision-making. "When you're telling me hands, don't even say how it ended," he says. "I want you to do your best to forget how it ended yourself. That won't help you."

"Poker taught me not to be focused on the outcome, but on the process," Konnikova told me when we spoke a few days ago. "And that has been liberating in everyday life. It feels nice to wallow when things go wrong. Give me some sympathy! Poker just knocked that out of me. You are just wasting valuable emotional resources. It serves no purpose."

More than just about anything, Konnikova learns how to take emotions out of her decision-making. That may be the single most important thing Seidel and several other mentors taught her.

What surprised me the most is the idea that you can be taught to think in a less emotional, more rigorous way. You don't see many adults changing their thought process and I asked Konnikova if it were really possible on a wide scale. After all, not everyone has a doctorate in psychology like she does or undertakes a task they will fail if they don't learn to think differently.

Yes, she replied, she was convinced that modes of thought could be taught. "My graduate adviser was Walter Mischel," she said. Mischel was a psychologist who conducted one of the world's most famous experiments: the marshmallow test.

That's the delayed gratification test in which children were put in a room with a treat (often but not always a marshmallow), which they could either eat right away or hold off, knowing their reward for doing so will be a second marshmallow. The marshmallow tests were conducted in the 1960s, and Mischel then followed the subjects for decades afterwards. He found that those who were able to hold off eating the first marshmallow fared better in life than those who lacked that self-control.

"There were actually two other fascinating trajectories that no one talks about," Konnikova said. "There were children who couldn't wait to eat the marshmallow, but learnt self-control later in life. And there were some who did wait for the second marshmallow but whose self-control ended up deteriorating."

Guess what? Those who were taught self-control had the same life outcomes as those who had that mindset at the start and never lost it. "A lot of these skills can be taught," she said "And the same is true of critical thinking."

Maybe it's time for investors to start learning how to play poker.

Joe Nocera is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering business. He has written business columns for Esquire, GQ and The New York Times, and is the former editorial director of Fortune. His latest project is the Bloomberg-Wondery podcast The Shrink Next Door.

Bloomberg

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This book is the new 'Moneyball' (and every investor should read it) - The Australian Financial Review

5 Best Online Poker Sites for Real Money (2020)

The US online poker for real money scene continues to grow, and a number of fantastic poker sites for real money games are now available to play here. There are many to choose from, but this article will focus on only a few of the best US friendly poker sites available right now.

One of the best poker sites for US players is BetOnline (click for a $1,000 bonus). Since this sites creation in 2009, BetOnline has grown to become one of the most popular internet poker websites in the world with a huge user base and some of the best tournaments available.

Players here have the option to play instantly online or download the software for a bigger selection of games. Their design is simple and offers a live chat feature that helps customers with any questions they might have.

You cant make a list of the top US poker sites without mentioning the highly popular Ignition Casino (click here for a $2000 bonus). It was formed as a replacement for Bovada and strives to offer members the same high-quality gaming experience that its predecessor did.

Many members of Ignition praise the website for their highly functioning mobile platform. Despite the huge number of mobile poker fans, many of the best poker sites in the USA still do not offer a great way to play through a phone. Ignition Casino took notice of this and now offer all of their games on both iOS and Android devices.

Intertops is known as one of the most popular internet sportsbooks in the world, and in more recent years has become one of the best online poker sites for US players. Much like their sports betting platform, Intertops poker (click for $1000 bonus) games for real money offers players a simple and safe way to play a wide range of different poker games for real money.

What makes Intertops one of the best US poker sites for real money is their huge list of amazing offers for both new and existing customers. One of the most popular bonuses right now is the refer-a-friend bonus, which offers a $50 cash reward to any member that helps a friend sign up. There is also an incredible 200% welcome bonus up to $1,000 for new members with a minimum sign-up deposit of $25.

The welcome bonus at Bovada might be enough to list them as one of the best online poker sites US players can access, but in reality, its their massive list of different games and fantastic tournaments that put them at the top of the list.

New players are eligible for a 100% bonus up to $2,500 on their first deposit. Additionally, this amazing site offers a huge number of games including the Bad Beat Jackpot tables, offering some of the biggest jackpots you can find today.

Each of these sites is available to US players right now and are special for a number of different reasons. If youre looking for some great bonuses and a massive list of different games, check them out today and find out for yourself why they have become so popular with US poker for real money fans.

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5 Best Online Poker Sites for Real Money (2020)

Best 7 Online Poker Sites (2020) for Real Money

If youre a poker player and you want to make money, then you need to find the fish. Most players randomly play poker online, not even thinking about what kind of competition theyre going to be up against. This is a real error.

Half of todays game is to seek and destroy. If you want to play online poker for real money, then you need to go to the sites that have the most traffic. By doing so, youre going to find the largest pool of players. When you find the largest pool of players, you will find the most fish or the softest poker game. Lets take a look at where to find the most fish.

The best places to play poker online for real money are Ignition, Bovada, and Intertops.

Ignition attracts a lot of players because you can win 1,000 times your buy-in in a short period of time in a tournament. They will also run a tournament series from time to time in order to attract new players. These new players are often recreational. If you want to take advantage of someone who will be willing to call your all-in with AJ-off while youre holding AA, then you might want to play poker for real money on Ignition. It is considered one of the best online sites because of all the fish swimming around.

Ignition might be one of the best online poker sites for US players, but Bovada can sure give it a run for its money. Bovada has an advantage because it has been around since 2004. Therefore, it has the most US players of all poker online sites. Bovada is also known for having the fastest payouts, which might make it the best online poker sites US players. Americans love money, and they want their money fast. They can find that at Bovada.

If you love Monster Stack tournaments and youre seeking online poker real money, this is the place to go. You will find the game you want at 7 a.m., 7:00 p.m., and 7:30 p.m. All of those are Daily Monster Stack tournaments. This is a limited-time event, but you can safely bet that something similar will launch right around the corner on this poker online site. Bovada likes to take care of its players. Therefore, if the Daily Monster Stack tournaments are a success, they will bring it back or do something similar in the near future.

Intertops is a bit different. If youre seeking a cash game, otherwise known as a ring game, then this is where you want to go. Cash game players tend to play online all day and/or night. Its difficult not to do so if you know what youre doing and your opponents dont. When it comes to ring games, this is one of the top sites out there. Intertops also offers freerolls and sit & go tournaments.

The online game is a bit different than the live game. You see a lot more hands per hour online and people tend to be more aggressive. They also tend to make looser calls. This is because theyre hidden behind a screen and wont be embarrassed like they would in a live setting. This is a tremendous advantage for a patient player. You dont even need to bluff. With the online game, you can be the biggest NIT in the world and still make money. Just sit back and wait for an opponent to make an error. Then start counting your money.

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Best 7 Online Poker Sites (2020) for Real Money

Best 9 Online Poker Sites for Real Money 2020 – Bonus to …

If youre looking for online poker real money, there are a few options you can try out. These sites for online poker for real money range in variety, but one thing they all have in common is that they let you play poker for real money. Heres some information on these sites.

This online poker casino lets you play poker online for real money. Its consistently rated as one of the best online poker sites for US players. The reason why its rated as one of the best online poker sites US players is due to its various features. Some of the features it has included a 100% casino match bonus that goes up to $1000. This means that for every dollar you deposit, you get $1 in return from the site.

Its also known for having some strong developer companies behind the slot games. Realtime Gaming and Rival are considered by many to be among some of the best developers for slots in the business. Plus, you also have the option for adding Bitcoin to your deposit account, which is attractive to many people due to the fact that theres some anonymity to it and many people are happy with the security.

Bovada is a popular poker online location for people from the U.S. It has a lot of opportunities for real online poker options for making money. It started out in 2011, and it has a real email and phone contact info so that you know its legit. People love the racebook and sportsbook options along with casino options, all from the same account. Bovada actually appeals directly to US players and focuses exclusively on them. It gets excellent ratings online and has built up a reputation as a trusted organization.

You can deposit and withdraw funds easily from the site, minus a lot of the hassle that you may get with other sites. The Welcome Bonus is good up to $3750. Among the community for casinos on the Internet, it has a reputation for actually paying players who win quickly. This is critically important among an industry that often doesnt meet these high standards.

They have a huge number of games with over 150 casino games. You can cash out of the site in just 4 days, and it should never take longer than a week. They take a number of different credit cards, as well as Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash.

Intertops also gets some strong reviews, especially in the area of sports betting. They are one of the longest-lasting games in town. They receive 4.5 out of 5 on many review sites, and many places indicate they have a strong performance when it comes to payments. There are apparently virtually no reports of them having a problem with not paying the people who won on their site.

They are also known as being a place that pays players quickly. On Intertops, you get up to a $200 sign up bonus. They have been running since 1996. They can handle just about everything from basketball to NFL, MLB and other types of bets. They also offer poker or casino bets.

The place has a lot of support for customers, and you can contact them on a variety of different platforms including through Skype, through live chat, email or on the phone. They take bitcoin, and the estimated payout time through Bitcoin is just 48 hours.Plus, if you dont speak English, they still have you covered. You can instead get support in Spanish, Danish, Chinese, Portuguese, and many other languages besides. Its all included.

This is an excellent chance to play poker online, and pick any online poker game you want. You can play poker online whenever you want here.

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Best 9 Online Poker Sites for Real Money 2020 - Bonus to ...

Josh & Heather Altman Threw Son Ace an Adorable Poker-Themed 1st Birthday Bash – Bravo

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Josh and Heather Altman Give a Tour of "Lexi's Backyard"

With a name like Ace, a poker-themed party seems to be... well, in the cards. So when their son turned 1year old, Heather and Josh Altman seized upon the milestoneto host a festive barbecuethat was filled with Vegas-style flair.

Both Million Dollar Listing Los Angelesparents shared photos from the bash on Instagram. "We celebrated Aces 1st Birthday this weekend with our family having a good ol fashion BBQ and pool party with the cousins," mama Heather wrote. "Of course, we themed it up as a poker theme in honor of Aces name inspiration and my Vegas roots."

In her photos, the Nevada nativeoffered a glimpse of the decor. There were black, red, and gold balloons from Sky Balloon Bar, as well as oversized dice and playing cards. Ace's big sister Lexi helped him blow out the candle on his first-ever cake, which had two tiers covered with edible poker chips, cards, and spades.

That cake was too elaborate to smash but Ace's parents also brought in the cutest, powder-blue confectionfor him to dig his little fists into. "The cake smash was epic and definitely Lexis favorite part," Josh wrote on his feed. "Best of all [was] celebrating health and happiness with family Altman BBQ style."

Get a taste of that BBQ swagger, below:

To seemore of the family's kid-friendly backyard, watch the clip above.

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Inside the world of Daniel Negreanu: The life and making of poker’s biggest superstar – Mirror Online

As a teenager, Daniel Negreanu would visit the mall in his hometown of Toronto - but he wasnt there to buy clothes.

Instead, he was there simply to watch people walk by.

It was, in part, the making of a genius. He wouldnt realise it at the time, but by studying anyone and everyone who happened to enter his vision, Negreanu was mastering his craft.

When he took to the poker tables, it became his forte. He developed an almost subhuman ability to call his opponents hand, as he assessed his opponents body language on top of their betting patterns.

It would win him championships - six World Series of Poker bracelets, two World Poker Tour titles and over 32million in tournament winnings - and coupled with his quirky and bubbly personality which perfectly lent itself to the televised game, he soon became a true superstar of the felt.

When I was learning the game as a teenager, I just noticed patterns, Negreanu said.

To some people, it may sound a bit silly. Id sit on a bench for like an hour and I wouldnt say anything, and Id watch people walk by.

I would make up stories in my head about who they are. What they were like in high school, whether I liked them, whether I could trust them, would they be honest.

It wouldnt matter if I was wrong, it was just the case of seeing what I could pick up.

Negreanu ended up becoming a blockbuster star of the game he was introduced to by friends at his local snooker centre. He soon got the poker bug and would host private games in his basement, or even play in the cafeteria at school.

Those games were funded by a modest early working life: he was a telemarketer, but didnt like people hanging up on him so quit after one day, and had spells working in Subway sandwiches, as a dishwasher and as a bus boy.

I did a lot of those things in high school, just so I could have enough money to gamble at pool, or go to the pool hall, and eat and have a life, he said.

Those were the only jobs that I had but then as soon as poker took off for me, no more jobs existed.

Ultimately, Negreanu knew he was destined for the big time when he made his debut at the World Series of Poker in 1998. In his very first event, he took home over 130,000 and won a coveted bracelet, which remains the holy grail for players learning the game today.

While it was confirmation that he could compete at the very highest level, it would also prove to be a steep learning curve.

I was like woah, I have so much money, I could never lose this money ever and the two months later, it disappeared, he said.

I think the first one was when I won my bracelet in my first-ever event at the World Series of Poker in 1998. My bankroll went from like $2,000 to $150,000.

But then I started to stake the wrong people, I lent the wrong people money, a few of those things and then it was all gone.

So that was a life lesson of understanding that I had to treat this more like a business, I cant just do this loosey-goosey.

Fast forward 22 years and Negreanu is now content that he has achieved all of his early lifes goals. Primarily, he wanted enough money so he would never have to work by the time he was 30.

He lives with his wife, Amanda, on the outskirts of Las Vegas, in a house built to his dream specifications. He has a pool, a golf simulator, a state-of-the-art TV multi-screen system, video games, everything he needs.

He actively avoids going on lavish holidays and visiting the worlds flashiest places in favour of kicking back on the sofa.

And despite appearing to be a natural showman on the televised poker tables, Negreanu says that he prefers playing online poker in the comfort of his own company - and is currently playing this years World Series of Poker, which is being hosted online on GGPoker.

Contrary to popular belief, people make the assumption about me that I am an extrovert, he explained. I would say its the opposite. Im very introverted and so is my wife.

Introvert doesnt mean that you cant have fun and be socially engaging when you are out, it just means that when you are doing that, you are spending energy and it drains you.

When I am home and relaxed, that is my favourite thing in the world, I feel energised.

I find that a lot of people judge if you dont go out hiking and seeing nature, travel and all that stuff, people think youre not living, he said. If thats what you like to do, more power to you, go out on a hike, go travel.

Me and my wife love staying home. We love watching TV together, we love reading. What are you judging me for, because I am not living my life how you would do if you had money?

Were living a life as we designed it and as we want. Guess what, if we wanted to go out and go hiking, I can do that!

Throughout my career, I travelled so much for poker. I would travel to Atlantic City, LA, whatever for months at a time.

I would go to Europe for two straight months and I would see all these beautiful places, but they were always related to work. They were work trips.

I remember I would go to say, Barcelona, and people would ask me what it is like there and I would say I dont know, the hotel was nice and the room service was good because I didnt really experience it.

The truth is that the only two vacations Ive taken that were not poker related were my first honeymoon and my second honeymoon!

I am not a traveller. I much prefer staying at home. I feel that when Im at home, Im on a regular routine. I thoroughly enjoy that.

Vegas has proven the ideal base for Negreanu, because while the outskirts of the city overlooking the desert provide him the peace and quiet he craves, he does remain just a 15 minute drive from the strip.

It is down the famous Las Vegas Boulevard in the world famous Bellagio where you might be most likely to spot him.

The Bellagio is the venue of pokers most iconic high stakes environment: Bobbys Room. And thats the place where Negreanus world renowned status counts for nothing.

When you enter Bobbys Room, they dont care if you are Michael Jordan, Oprah Winfrey, Barack Obama. Youre just a person with money. So lets sit down, put your money down on the table and lets shoot the s*** as they would say!

There is no sense of awe with these guys. They are all killers themselves.

Negreanu came through a generation of iconic poker players. He would often brush shoulders with legends such as Phil Hellmuth, Tony G, Sammy Farha, Scotty Nguyen and Doyle Brunson.

But over the years, those names began to disappear from the limelight as they couldnt keep pace with the younger, online-centred generation who were rapidly evolving the game.

Except Negreanu.

The secret to success? Mindset.

If you get to the point where you think youre the best, and youve stopped learning and youve stopped working on your game - everyone else is still working really hard.

I have watched the Rocky movies a lot and there is this montage where Rocky Balboa is doing commercials, doing ads, but Clubber Lang is in the gym, hes working hard, sweat, blood and tears. What happens when Rocky fights him? Clubber Lang knocks him cold - because he was not prepared and not ready.

I always look at these young and up-and-comers and rather than think these kids have got nothing on me, I think what are these kids doing well? Is he better than me? And if he is, what is he doing so I can learn and be better?

I am constantly looking at my game, every six months to a year, looking if I am good enough and what do I need to be doing differently.

I think a lot of my generation has fallen off, because of an unwillingness to learn from them and they just chastise themselves.

So, what next for Negreanu? He actively admits that until this year's World Series of Poker, hes playing less than ever before - and his goal is now to create a version of himself that he is happier with.

I have done everything in my life and now I want to look the part, he explained as he talked through his decision to go through an extreme body transformation.

I have tried different things at different times, with varying degrees of success, but I found a really good coach, who is vegan and he put me on a good meal plan, a good workout plan, with a good mindset.

We went from 176lbs to 138lbs, which is a huge swing for someone of my size, but I feel great. Right now Im at 140 and the plan is to gain muscle over the next year.

I have always been someone who has been about self-improvement. I have always enjoyed working out, being on a plan, so it goes well with my way of thinking in life.

As for poker? When I was young, I had a clear goal in life in my early 20s, so that when Im in my 30s, I dont have to work, I can do whatever I want because I have enough money. And Ive accomplished that goal.

I play when I am inspired to play. I will play the high rollers, I will play the big tournaments, but outside of that, I have a pretty balanced life and it is not a case of burn out, because I still enjoy the game, but its just a case that I dont have to do it to put food on the table.

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Inside the world of Daniel Negreanu: The life and making of poker's biggest superstar - Mirror Online

Dont Hold Your Breath: Live Poker Not A Top Priority In Reopened PA Casinos Yet – Penn Bets

With the reopening of Rivers Casino Philadelphia last Friday, all 12 casinos in Pennsylvania are now back in business following temporary shutdowns in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Zero of the 12, however, are dealing live peer-vs.-peer poker.

One site in the state, PokerStars, is operational for online poker, and assorted poker-based player-vs.-house table games and video poker games are available at either brick-and-mortar or online casinos. But real live games of Texas holdem, Omaha, seven-card stud, etc., arent happening at any regulated property.

When the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board shared its casino reopening protocols on May 19, the language about poker was direct:

Poker rooms are not authorized to operate due to players handling cards and chips, the PGCB document spelled out. Poker room operations will be re-examined based upon changing CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) and PA DOH (Department of Health) guidance.

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Two months out from that statement and six weeks after Rivers Casino in Pittsburgh became the first in the state to again welcome customers, are we any closer to the return of live poker in Pennsylvania?

One factor possibly working in the favor of poker rooms reopening sooner rather than later is that experts understanding of the spread of the virus has evolved, and the players handling cards and chips element, as specified in the PGCB protocols, is now widely accepted to be less dangerous than was initially believed to be the case.

Fears of surface spread have diminished, as it has been observed that COVID-19 is mostly transmitted through airborne particles at close distances, particularly over extended periods of time and/or if masks covering the nose and mouth are not worn. So while its helpful to frequently sanitize hands, cards, and chips, and for poker players to avoid touching their faces, the primary concern is players breathing on one another and on the dealer.

At table games such as blackjack, this risk has been mitigated by the combination of mask requirements and plexiglass dividers.

It would seem something similar could be attempted at poker tables and has been in some other states:

This is among the possibilities that PGCB Communications Director Doug Harbach says the board is looking into.

There [have been] conversations with casinos and health experts, and this matter is continually re-examined by the PGCB, Harbach told Penn Bets. Introducing appropriate shielding, disinfecting, table coverings, player limits, and social distancing are certainly discussion points on providing a safe poker environment, but that must be balanced against a game in which full tables are important to its success and financial viability.

Harbach brings up a key consideration for casinos. Poker rooms are not huge money generators even under ideal circumstances. For the 10 Pennsylvania properties with poker rooms, rake in 2019 added up to $53.9 million, a mere 1.7% of the nearly $3.2 billion in total gaming revenue for those casinos.

The primary function of the poker room from a casinos perspective is often to help drive business for other parts of the property. Maybe poker gets them in the door, and they take a detour to the table games on their way out or they bring along a significant other who will play the slots. Poker rooms are not, in and of themselves, huge profit drivers.

And the numbers become that much less attractive if the usual nine-seated tables, featuring plexiglass dividers, are capped at five or six players.

Wind Creek Bethlehem has not had any recent conversations with the PGCB about reopening its poker room, Executive Director of Brand Marketing Julia Corwin said, and even though the casino boasts one of the biggest and most popular poker rooms in the state, its not a top priority at this time.

While we enjoy offering live poker at Wind Creek Bethlehem, Corwin said, our first priority is keeping our guests safe. Until guidelines are released that provide how we can keep our guests safe playing poker, the poker room will remain closed.

Corwin added that Wind Creek has not begun internal discussions on the viability of offering poker if there is a cap on the number of players allowed per table.

What this strongly suggests is that the timeline for the return of casino poker rooms is not an especially short one. The ball has barely begun rolling.

The focus for the casinos is on keeping customers safe and avoiding another shutdown.

Overall, we believe Wind Creek Bethlehems reopening has been well received by our team members and our guests, Corwin said. We have worked with various health officials to create The Wind Creek Standard, which is being followed at all of Wind Creek Hospitalitys properties, and the feedback weve received has been very positive.

Harbach echoed the same general sentiment, valuing a patient, cautious approach over a blind all-in shove.

[The Pennsylvania casinos] are still pretty early in the re-opening stage, and they are not only continuing to adjust their safety protocols for patrons and employees surrounding the play of slots and table games, but have also been asked to adjust operating with mandatory patron masking, without smoking or beverage/alcohol, and with very limited food service, Harbach noted. Thus, while we and the casinos are hopeful that openings of poker rooms can occur in the not-too-distant future, it is still not possible to affix a timetable on that right now.

If theres no timetable yet, the smart money is on a second online poker site launching in the state before any live poker room welcomes back local rounders.

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Dont Hold Your Breath: Live Poker Not A Top Priority In Reopened PA Casinos Yet - Penn Bets

Chasing Poker Greatness: #68 Andrew Brokos: Co-Host ThinkingPoker Podcast & Author of Play Optimal Poker – Pokerfuse

Full Episode Description Todays guest on the Chasing Poker Greatness podcast is the host of the Thinking Poker podcast and author of Play Optimal Poker 1 and 2 Andrew Brokos.Andrews another one of those human beings who makes you consider your personal beliefs.Recently on Twitter in a thread about the Daniel Negreanu WSOP software meltdown Andrew left me with a this statement, One last thought for you specifically, very few people have chased poker greatness as successfully as Daniel Negreanu and this is where it got him.Which I equated to throwing a grenade and leaving the room.With that thought in mind I just want to make absolute certain one persons version of poker greatness does not have to be yours. Its a personal aspiration that each and every one of us, myself included, should consider deeply.I genuinely hope that through this podcast, if nothing else, you will gain the necessary tools needed to answer this question for you and you alone.And its my ultimate wish that you take special care on your emotional, physical, and spiritual as you endeavor to chase your version of poker greatness.With that said, in todays episode youre going to learn: - The surprising why behind the beginning of Andrews poker career.- Why Andrew has found poker attracts the kinds of souls he tends to enjoy spending time with.- An awesome tactic he uses to measure his level of play in live tournaments.- And much, MUCH more!So, without any further ado, I bring to you podcaster, author, and thinker Andrew Brokos.

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Chasing Poker Greatness: #68 Andrew Brokos: Co-Host ThinkingPoker Podcast & Author of Play Optimal Poker - Pokerfuse

Venetian poker room going to 8-handed tables – Las Vegas Review-Journal

The Venetian poker room is installing plexiglass dividers to allow eight-handed games.

Ten tables already have dividers, and all 32 tables in the room will be fitted with them in the next two weeks. The poker rooms Twitter account provided the information, and a casino spokeswoman confirmed it was accurate.

Traditional poker tournaments will resume at The Venetian on July 24. The room has been hosting shootout-style tournaments over the past few weeks that require players to defeat their entire table before moving on to the next table. In traditional tournaments, tables are balanced throughout as players are eliminated.

The Venetians tables that dont have plexiglass yet will continue to host five-handed games, per guidelines from the state Gaming Control Board.

Sahara Las Vegas is now hosting seven-handed games after installing plexiglass, poker operations manager Steven Pique said on Twitter. The room will also start hosting shootout-style tournaments July 25.

The Aria, the Bellagio, MGM Grand and The Orleans are hosting six-handed games with plexiglass. Caesars Palace, the Flamingo, the Golden Nugget and the South Point are hosting five-handed games without plexiglass.

Contact Jim Barnes at jbarnes@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0277. Follow @JimBarnesLV on Twitter.

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Venetian poker room going to 8-handed tables - Las Vegas Review-Journal

The Phil Ivey Of Poker – HBCU Buzz

At present, only a few individuals would be disputing the fact that Phil Ivey happens to be the greatest poker player ever.

Phil Ivey has the propensity to emphasize more on games that generate cash and less on the tournaments, which make his accomplishments much more impressive in the long run. If Phil Ivey ever decides to play tournaments full-time, there will be not much doubt in many people that he would be ranking at the very top of the tournament money list ever.

According to the players who have played cash games against Phil, he happens to be the most gifted player they have ever come across, having mastered every game. As per his colleagues, Phils thorough knowledge in every single variant of poker helps to make him the very best.

Younger players, older players. Professional players, as well as casual players, have one thing in common. Nearly all of them regard Ivey to be the most gifted poker player on the planet.

According to some individuals, names likeDoyle BrunsonandChip Reese should be listed before Phil Ivey; however, these people happen to be few. The general opinion is that Phil Ivey happens to be the best poker player ever in the world.

It is quite difficult to argue with the results of Phil Ivey. According toPhil Hellmuth, Ivey is a triple threat he is outstanding in tournaments, outstanding in online cash games, and exceptional in live cash games. It is very difficult to come across a player who dominates all three settings.

At present, Phil Ivey has got almost $15 million in net lifetime tournament cash, and this places him in 2nd spot on the list of all-time money earners. Moreover, it should be mentioned here that Phil does not appear on the tournament circuit regularly.

Since January 2007, almost $20 million has been won by Ivey on Full Tilt Poker. It is probably the highest amount of cash that any single player has been won since the introduction of online poker in the early part of the 2000s.

As per the players playing regularly with him, Ivey happens to be amongst the most effective live cash game players ever. Apparently, Phil is a big lifetime champion in Las Vegas in the Big Game.

Phil Ivey has as many as 10World Series Pokerbracelets despite being only 35 years of age. Phil has succeeded in picking up his pace only recently, mainly because of the introduction of hefty bracelet prop bets. Earlier, Ivey could play only a few World Series Poker events since better action was available in the lucrative high take cash games.

When looking at all his skills, one has no other option but to provide Ivey the nod for the most gifted poker player ever. None else comes close to him while taking into consideration live cash games, live tournaments, as well as online cash games.

Phillip Ivey was born in February 1977 and has succeeded in winning 10 World Series Poker bracelets, 1 World Tour Poker title while appearing at 9 World Tour Poker final tables. He had been designated to the Hall of Fame of Poker In the year 2017.

Phil IveyEarly Years

In the initial phases, Ivey started developing his poker skills by combating against his colleagues at a telemarketing firm in New Jersey in the latter part of the 1990s. He got a nickname, which is actually derived from the counterfeit ID card that was secured by him for playing poker in New Jersey during his adolescent years. Phil was provided with another nickname in the year 2002 after he won 3 World Series Poker bracelets. He is also called Pokers Tiger Woods.

2017 had been a sluggish year for Phil, who focused on Asia, particularly Hong Kong, and ended up missing all the major global events in the western part of the world because he wanted to play the greatest games in Asia. In a conference, Phil announced that he would be returning to the main circuit for the year 2018.

World Series Poker

Phils most significant tournament accomplishments consist of winning 3 bracelets at World Series Poker in the year 2002, tying Ted Forrest, Puggy Pearson, and Phil Hellmuth for the maximum number of wins in World Series competitions in just one year. Ivey likewise has got bracelets from 2000 as well as 2005 in Pot Limit Omaha. He had been the first individual who defeated Amarillo Slim In the year 2000 at a table for the WSOP finals. The victory of Ivey over none other than Amarillo Slim had been for his initial career bracelet. Apart from his 10 bracelets in the World Series, Phil was also successful in the Main Event at WSOP. Between the World Series Poker held in 2002 and the World Series Poker held in 2009, he had been placed at the top 25 for as many as 4 times. In the year 2002 Phil finished 23rd, in 2003 10th, in 2005 20th, and on 2009 7th.

World Series Poker Hall of Fame

Ivey ended up winning the 6th bracelet of his career in the year 2009. He managed to defeat as many as 147 players for catching his bracelet. Phil succeeded in winning a very long combat against a player named John Monette. Following this, he won one more bracelet in the $2,500 Omaha Hi/Lo event defeating as many as 376 individuals. He succeeded in defeating Ming Lee as well. While emerging the victor in the event, he likewise managed to be placed in the 22nd position in the $5,000 Pot-Limit Omaha event despite playing only at the time of the breaks.

In the World Series Poker in the year 2010, Phil succeeded in receiving the maximum Tournament of Champions votes.

At the WSOP in the year 2010, Phil won his 8th bracelet n a table that comprised of other distinguished players, including Bill Chen, John Juanda, Jeff Lisandro, as well as Chad Brown.

Phil finished amongst the top 25 gamers between 2002 and 2009 in the Key Event for as many as 4 times in pitches, which varied from 500 entrants to under 8,000 in size. In the Main Event at WSOP held in 2003, Ivey finished 10th and 7th in the year 2009. Ivey ended his Main Event in the year 2009 after winning $1,406,002

Having as many as ten World Series Poker bracelets, Phil is presently tied with Johnny Chan and Doyle Brunson for the 2nd maximum all-time. Moreover, at 38 years of age, he happens to be the youngest gamer who has ever won 10 bracelets (in fact, Phil Hellmuth had been 42 while winning his 10th bracelet). Furthermore, you will not come across any other player who has accumulated ten bracelets more quickly. Phil took just 12 years from winning his 1st bracelet to the 10th (Phil Hellmuth took 17 years). Ivey likewise holds the all-time record for winning the maximum number of bracelets in the non-Holdem events. His win in the year 2010 helped him to lead Billy Baxter. Phil likewise has won the maximum number of mixed-game bracelets; in fact, he has won as many as 5 in his illustrious career. He succeeded in winning one in the year 2002, another in the year 2009, one more in the year 2010, in the year 2013, and in the year 2014.

World Tour Poker

Phil has also succeeded in reaching nine final tables during hisWorld Tour Poker. He had been eliminated during several WPT events while he held the identical starting hand every single time, a queen plus an ace. Ivey has been able to cash in an event at the WPT 9 out of the 12 times. Ivey succeeded in making the final table in the year 2008 at the LA Poker Classic during the 6th season of the WPT at the Commerce Casino, the final table comprised of Nam Le and Phil Hellmuth. Phil eventually captured the first prize worth $1,595,100, which ended his run of 7 final tables at the WPT without securing a victory. In fact, Ivey has succeeded in earning approximately $3 million in cash at the WPT. In September 2006, he made his appearance for the first time on the European Tour Poker. Although coming as the chip leader to the ultimate table of 9, he finally finished second to Norways Bjorn-Erik Glenne.

Other significant tournaments

Ivey took part in The All-Star Challenge held in London in the year 2006. Phil ended up finishing 7th and accumulated 6,700. Ivey won the first prize of $1,200,000 at a competition held in Monte Carlo in 2005. The next day, another $610,000 was won by him for winning The FullTiltPoker.Net competition in Monte Carlo. Phils six rivals had been Gus Hansen, Phil Hellmuth, Mike Matusow, Chris Ferguson, John Juanda, and Dave Ulliott.

In the year 2007, Ivey succeeded in winning the $126,000 Earphones Please competition, where he defeated Andy Bloch, Hellmuth, Tony G, Matusow, and Sam Farha. On 15th April 2007, Don Cheadle defeated Ivey in the very 1st sound at the National Heads-Up Poker Championship. It had been the third successive year where Phil had been eliminated in the very 1st round of the particular competition. However, this streak was ended in the year 2008, while he succeeded in advancing to the semi-finals, where he lost to Ferguson, the eventual winner. Phil participated in 3 and 6 seasons of the High Poker Stakes of GSN.

Ivey won the Australian Millions $240,000 High-roller competition on 29th January 2012, where he defeated Patrik Antonius for prize money worth A $ 2,500,000. Ivey was likewise positioned 12th for prize money of A$120,000 at the Aussie Millions main event.

Ivey ended up winning the 2014 LK Boutique Aussie Millions $255,000 Challenge on 10th February 2014 for a sum of AU$4,500,000 this had been the biggest single cash in his entire career. He succeeded in winning the Australian Millions $255,000 Challenge once again in February 2015 this time, he earned AU$2,210,000, which made him the only gamer in the tournaments history with two successive championships within a period of 4 years.

The net live tournament earnings of Phil are more than $26,240,000 as of 2018. Millions have also been won by him playing in cash tournaments as well as online. More than $6,800,000 of his net earnings have been derived from the winnings at WSOP. Presently, Ivey is in the 7th position on the money list of all-time.

Ivey regularly participates in the $4,200-$9,000 cash game in the city of Las Vegas at the Bellagio. Ivey succeeded in winning more than $16,200,000 over a span of 3 days at the time of a match held at The Wynn Resort. Phil had been competing for The Corporation which happens to be a team of professionals that took turns while combating Beal after pooling their cash. The Corporation had been beaten by Beal earlier in the month out of more than $14,000,000.

Phil Ivey Video Master of Poker Bluffs:

Phil Ivey AndOnline Poker

Ivey belongs to Full Tilt Pokers initial management department. Ivey had filed a lawsuit in Clark County in 2011 claiming that his contract had been breached by Full Tilt. More than $150,000,000 was asked by the suit for damages and for Ivey to be free from his agreement with Full Tilt. Ivey voluntarily withdrew the suit on 30th June.

In accordance with HighStakesDB.com, $2 million had been won by Ivey on FullTilt in the year 2007, $7.35 million in the year 2008, $6.34 million in the year 2009, as well as $3.2 million in the year 2010.

Edge-Sorting Lawsuit

It was reported that Phil had won 7.2 million in the year 2012 while playing the casino game Punto Banco in acasinoin UK; however, he had been declined payment beyond the initial 1.1 million stakes because of using edge sorting. Ivey issued a statement through his legal practitioners denying any kind of misbehavior. In April 2014, Ivey was sued by the Borgata Casino located in the Atlantic City, claiming that he used a flaw in the making of playing cards to his advantage and defrauded at baccarat. Incidentally, the identical type of cards is used by Crockfords along with the Borgata.

In October 2014, a court in the UK claimed that Phils methods at Crockfords actually constituted dishonesty.

On 29th November 2015, Phil had been granted the consent to make an appeal after a judge found that the case actually raised a vital question of regulation and had a genuine possibility of success. The Court of Appeal dismissed his appeal on 3rd November 2016 by upholding the previous conclusion that the method actually resulted in cheating. Another appeal made to the UK Supreme Court resulted in an undisputed judgment delivered on 25th October 2017 and found in the casinos favor. The court concluded that the actions of Ivey actually constituted dishonesty.

In the month of January 2019, the Borgata was permitted by a judge to pursue Iveys assets in Nevada for recouping in excess of $10 million, which was won by him at the gambling den by making use of edge-sorting.

On 27th June 2019, an execution writ was served to the World Poker Series by the United States Marshals Service, and it seized the 2019 winnings of Ivey for paying The Borgata.

On 10th July 2020, it was reported by Card Player publication that Ivey had given consent to a settlement of the claim made by the Borgata.

Personal life

As mentioned earlier, Phil Ivey arrived in this world in 1977 in California, USA; however, he later relocated to Roselle in New Jersey. He developed an interest in the poker card game when he had been an adolescent. Ivey learned many things from his grandfather, who educated him regarding the Five-Card stud to prevent him from gambling. However, Phil started playing for cash when he was 16 years of age, and when he was 18, he played at thelive tables in the Atlantic Cityfor pretty long durations.

At present, Phil lives in Las Vegas. He is likewise a huge follower of Los Angeles Lakers, Buffalo Bills, as well as Houston Rockets. Hes observed putting on basketball jerseys from time to time. Phil loves to play games, including golf, video games, plus prop betting, while not playing poker. Apart from this, he is also known for his charitable causes as well as philanthropic pursuits. He has donated thousands of dollars to charities intended for those children who happen to be underprivileged. A charity has also been co-founded by Ivey under the name ofBudding Ivey Foundationfor continuing his grandfathers benevolent work.

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The Deck Is Not Rigged: Poker and the Limits of AI – Undark Magazine

Tuomas Sandholm, a computer scientist at Carnegie Mellon University, is not a poker player or much of a poker fan, in fact but he is fascinated by the game for much the same reason as the great game theorist John von Neumann before him. Von Neumann, who died in 1957, viewed poker as the perfect model for human decision making, for finding the balance between skill and chance that accompanies our every choice. He saw poker as the ultimate strategic challenge, combining as it does not just the mathematical elements of a game like chess but the uniquely human, psychological angles that are more difficult to model precisely a view shared years later by Sandholm in his research with artificial intelligence.

WHAT I LEFT OUT is a recurring feature in which book authors are invited to share anecdotes and narratives that, for whatever reason, did not make it into their final manuscripts. In this installment, Maria Konnikova shares a story that was left out of The Biggest Bluff: How I Learned to Pay Attention, Master Myself, and Win (Penguin Press).

Poker is the main benchmark and challenge program for games of imperfect information, Sandholm told me on a warm spring afternoon in 2018, when we met in his offices in Pittsburgh. The game, it turns out, has become the gold standard for developing artificial intelligence.

Tall and thin, with wire-frame glasses and neat brow hair framing a friendly face, Sandholm is behind the creation of three computer programs designed to test their mettle against human poker players: Claudico, Libratus, and most recently, Pluribus. (When we met, Libratus was still a toddler and Pluribus didnt yet exist.) The goal isnt to solve poker, as such, but to create algorithms whose decision making prowess in pokers world of imperfect information and stochastic situations situations that are randomly determined and unable to be predicted can then be applied to other stochastic realms, like the military, business, government, cybersecurity, even health care.

While the first program, Claudico, was summarily beaten by human poker players one broke-ass robot, an observer called it Libratus has triumphed in a series of one-on-one, or heads-up, matches against some of the best online players in the United States.

Libratus relies on three main modules. The first involves a basic blueprint strategy for the whole game, allowing it to reach a much faster equilibrium than its predecessor. It includes an algorithm called the Monte Carlo Counterfactual Regret Minimization, which evaluates all future actions to figure out which one would cause the least amount of regret. Regret, of course, is a human emotion. Regret for a computer simply means realizing that an action that wasnt chosen would have yielded a better outcome than one that was. Intuitively, regret represents how much the AI regrets having not chosen that action in the past, says Sandholm. The higher the regret, the higher the chance of choosing that action next time.

Its a useful way of thinking but one that is incredibly difficult for the human mind to implement. We are notoriously bad at anticipating our future emotions. How much will we regret doing something? How much will we regret not doing something else? For us, its an emotionally laden calculus, and we typically fail to apply it in quite the right way. For a computer, its all about the computation of values. What does it regret not doing the most, the thing that would have yielded the highest possible expected value?

The second module is a sub-game solver that takes into account the mistakes the opponent has made so far and accounts for every hand she could possibly have. And finally, there is a self-improver. This is the area where data and machine learning come into play. Its dangerous to try to exploit your opponent it opens you up to the risk that youll get exploited right back, especially if youre a computer program and your opponent is human. So instead of attempting to do that, the self-improver lets the opponents actions inform the areas where the program should focus. That lets the opponents actions tell us where [they] think theyve found holes in our strategy, Sandholm explained. This allows the algorithm to develop a blueprint strategy to patch those holes.

Its a very human-like adaptation, if you think about it. Im not going to try to outmaneuver you head on. Instead, Im going to see how youre trying to outmaneuver me and respond accordingly. Sun-Tzu would surely approve. Watch how youre perceived, not how you perceive yourself because in the end, youre playing against those who are doing the perceiving, and their opinion, right or not, is the only one that matters when you craft your strategy. Overnight, the algorithm patches up its overall approach according to the resulting analysis.

Theres one final thing Libratus is able to do: play in situations with unknown probabilities. Theres a concept in game theory known as the trembling hand: There are branches of the game tree that, under an optimal strategy, one should theoretically never get to; but with some probability, your all-too-human opponents hand trembles, they take a wrong action, and youre suddenly in a totally unmapped part of the game. Before, that would spell disaster for the computer: An unmapped part of the tree means the program no longer knows how to respond. Now, theres a contingency plan.

Of course, no algorithm is perfect. When Libratus is playing poker, its essentially working in a zero-sum environment. It wins, the opponent loses. The opponent wins, it loses. But while some real-life interactions really are zero-sum cyber warfare comes to mind many others are not nearly as straightforward: My win does not necessarily mean your loss. The pie is not fixed, and our interactions may be more positive-sum than not.

Whats more, real-life applications have to contend with something that a poker algorithm does not: the weights that are assigned to different elements of a decision. In poker, this is a simple value-maximizing process. But what is value in the human realm? Sandholm had to contend with this before, when he helped craft the worlds first kidney exchange. Do you want to be more efficient, giving the maximum number of kidneys as quickly as possible or more fair, which may come at a cost to efficiency? Do you want as many lives as possible saved or do some take priority at the cost of reaching more? Is there a preference for the length of the wait until a transplant? Do kids get preference? And on and on. Its essential, Sandholm says, to separate means and the ends. To figure out the ends, a human has to decide what the goal is.

The world will ultimately become a lot safer with the help of algorithms like Libratus, Sandholm told me. I wasnt sure what he meant. The last thing that most people would do is call poker, with its competition, its winners and losers, its quest to gain the maximum edge over your opponent, a haven of safety.

Logic is good, and the AI is much better at strategic reasoning than humans can ever be, he explained. Its taking out irrationality, emotionality. And its fairer. If you have an AI on your side, it can lift non-experts to the level of experts. Nave negotiators will suddenly have a better weapon. We can start to close off the digital divide.

It was an optimistic note to end on a zero-sum, competitive game yielding a more ultimately fair and rational world.

I wanted to learn more, to see if it was really possible that mathematics and algorithms could ultimately be the future of more human, more psychological interactions. And so, later that day, I accompanied Nick Nystrom, the chief scientist of the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center the place that runs all of Sandholms poker-AI programs to the actual processing center that make undertakings like Libratus possible.

A half-hour drive found us in a parking lot by a large glass building. Id expected something more futuristic, not the same square, corporate glass squares Ive seen countless times before. The inside, however, was more promising. First the security checkpoint. Then the ride in the elevator down, not up, to roughly three stories below ground, where we found ourselves in a maze of corridors with card readers at every juncture to make sure you dont slip through undetected. A red-lit panel formed the final barrier, leading to a small sliver of space between two sets of doors. I could hear a loud hum coming from the far side.

Let me tell you what youre going to see before we walk in, Nystrom told me. Once we get inside, it will be too loud to hear.

I was about to witness the heart of the supercomputing center: 27 large containers, in neat rows, each housing multiple processors with speeds and abilities too great for my mind to wrap around. Inside, the temperature is by turns arctic and tropic, so-called cold rows alternating with hot fans operate around the clock to cool the processors as they churn through millions of giga, mega, tera, peta and other ever-increasing scales of data bytes. In the cool rows, robotic-looking lights blink green and blue in orderly progression. In the hot rows, a jumble of multicolored wires crisscrosses in tangled skeins.

In the corners stood machines that had outlived their heyday. There was Sherlock, an old Cray model, that warmed my heart. There was a sad nameless computer, whose anonymity was partially compensated for by the Warhol soup cans adorning its cage (an homage to Warhols Pittsburghian origins).

And where does Libratus live, I asked? Which of these computers is Bridges, the computer that runs the AI Sandholm and I had been discussing?

Bridges, it turned out, isnt a single computer. Its a system with processing power beyond comprehension. It takes over two and a half petabytes to run Libratus. A single petabyte is a million gigabytes: You could watch over 13 years of HD video, store 10 billion photos, catalog the contents of the entire Library of Congress word for word. Thats a whole lot of computing power. And thats only to succeed at heads-up poker, in limited circumstances.

Yet despite the breathtaking computing power at its disposal, Libratus is still severely limited. Yes, it beat its opponents where Claudico failed. But the poker professionals werent allowed to use many of the tools of their trade, including the opponent analysis software that they depend on in actual online games. And humans tire. Libratus can churn for a two-week marathon, where the human mind falters.

But theres still much it cant do: play more opponents, play live, or win every time. Theres more humanity in poker than Libratus has yet conquered. Theres this belief that its all about statistics and correlations. And we actually dont believe that, Nystrom explained as we left Bridges behind. Once in a while correlations are good, but in general, they can also be really misleading.

Two years later, the Sandholm lab will produce Pluribus. Pluribus will be able to play against five players and will run on a single computer. Much of the human edge will have evaporated in a short, very short time. The algorithms have improved, as have the computers. AI, it seems, has gained by leaps and bounds.

So does that mean that, ultimately, the algorithmic can indeed beat out the human, that computation can untangle the web of human interaction by discerning the little tactics of deception, of asking yourself what is the other man going to think I mean to do, as von Neumann put it?

Long before Id spoken to Sandholm, Id met Kevin Slavin, a polymath of sorts whose past careers have including founding a game design company and an interactive art space and launching the Playful Systems group at MITs Media Lab. Slavin has a decidedly different view from the creators of Pluribus. On the one hand, [von Neumann] was a genius, Kevin Slavin reflects. But the presumptuousness of it.

Slavin is firmly on the side of the gambler, who recognizes uncertainty for what it is and thus is able to take calculated risks when necessary, all the while tampering confidence at the outcome. The most you can do is put yourself in the path of luck but to think you can guess with certainty the actual outcome is a presumptuousness the true poker player foregoes. For Slavin, the wonder of computers is That they can generate this fabulous, complex randomness. His opinion of the algorithmic assaults on chance? This is their moment, he said. But its the exact opposite of whats really beautiful about a computer, which is that it can do something thats actually unpredictable. That, to me, is the magic.

Will they actually succeed in making the unpredictable predictable, though? Thats what I want to know. Because everything Ive seen tells me that absolute success is impossible. The deck is not rigged.

Its an unbelievable amount of work to get there. What do you get at the end? Lets say theyre successful. Then we live in a world where theres no God, agency, or luck, Slavin responded.

I dont want to live there, he added I just dont want to live there.

Luckily, it seems that for now, he wont have to. There are more things in life than are yet written in the algorithms. We have no reliable lie detection software whether in the face, the skin, or the brain. In a recent test of bluffing in poker, computer face recognition failed miserably. We can get at discomfort, but we cant get at the reasons for that discomfort: lying, fatigue, stress they all look much the same. And humans, of course, can also mimic stress where none exists, complicating the picture even further.

Pluribus may turn out to be powerful, but von Neumanns challenge still stands: The true nature of games, the most human of the human, remains to be conquered.

Maria Konnikova is the author, most recently, of The Biggest Bluff. She is a regularly contributing writer for The New Yorker, the author of two previous New York Times best-sellers, and a professional poker player.

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The Deck Is Not Rigged: Poker and the Limits of AI - Undark Magazine

NJ Special Legislation and the Impact on Online Casino Players in NY – Blog – The Island Now

The recent proposal for special legislation to be introduced in New Jersey relating to poker was undoubtedly great news for fans of the game in the state.

However, for players in neighbouring New York it is highly likely that the announcement will have left them feeling just a little deflated.

While New Jersey officials continue to be proactive in embracing the gambling boom, their counterparts in New York are still dragging their heels.

Read on as we take a closer look at the latest state of play for poker in New Jersey and assess how developments there may affect New York in the future.

NJ Aiming to Declare Poker a Game of Skill

Players already have plenty of online casino NJ opportunities for real-money games and their options would be widened if the new legislation is passed.

The bill aims to have poker classified as a game of skill and bluff and would therefore not be a form of gambling that is restricted by the provisions of the New Jersey Constitution.

This would mean that permit holders for racetracks in the state could establish a poker room at their venues on the basis that they retained a portion of the amounts wagered.

The games would fall under the jurisdiction of the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement rather than the New Jersey Racing Commission.

Why Does the Bill Matter?

Establishing poker as a game of skill rather than a form of gambling is an important distinction to make and would have much wider reaching implications.

It would create new opportunities for the live poker industry and generate extra revenues for the various racetrack operators.

The latter point is a particularly pertinent one, with some venues in New Jersey currently struggling to make ends meet in the current financial climate.

Although there may be opposition from some Atlantic City casinos, the bill could have a good chance of passing as it is limited to the game of poker.

NJ Poker Boom Continues Apace

Online poker revenues continue to boom in New Jersey, highlighting the lucrative potential of the game in the state and elsewhere.

More than $3.5 million was generated by regulated operators there during June 2020 almost double the figure reported for the same period last year.

With revenues in April and May also showing a significant year-on-year increase, it is easy to see why officials in New Jersey are eager to cash in.

Allowing poker to be played at the racetracks would serve to heighten the games popularity and generate even greater revenues in the state.

New York Players Look on With Envy

While New Jerseys gambling boom is great news for players, operators and state finances, the situation is very different in New York.

The state has historically had some of the strictest gambling laws in the United States and has been reluctant to let off the brakes in recent times.

Although it is not illegal for New York residents to participate in online gambling, they have to use the services of operators located elsewhere.

However, the success of regulated online gambling in other states has left many NY players yearning for new legislation to be introduced in their jurisdiction.

Addabbo Leading the Poker Charge in NY

The push in New Jersey to have poker declared as a game of skill and bluff could have a major knock-on effect in New York.

Officials in the state have been trying for seven years to legalise online poker in the state, and they will be keeping a watchful eye on events in New Jersey.

A bill from Senator Joseph Addabbo to remove poker as an illegal game of chance has appeared back on file and may have a greater chance of succeeding than previous incarnations.

Passing new legislation for poker would not only be a positive move for NY players, but would also prove to be hugely beneficial for the state in terms of tax revenues.

NY Ready to Join the Poker Party

Given the difficulties many industries are facing in the current climate, it makes perfect sense for New York to ease the restrictions on poker.

The figures generated in New Jersey highlight the popularity of the game and operators are queuing up to replicate that success in New York.

The key to breaking down the barriers may well lie in the proposal in New Jersey to have poker declared as a game of skill and bluff as opposed to a form of gambling.

If that bill is passed, it would be no surprise to see Addabbos proposal rubber-stamped and that would be fantastic news for poker fans in New York.

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NJ Special Legislation and the Impact on Online Casino Players in NY - Blog - The Island Now