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David Singer’s Controversial Elimination


Author: Storms Reback
Published on: 01:35:37 on Jul 08, 2007

I spent the better part of this evening hovering between the tables occupied by 1995 world champion Dan Harrington and 1983 world champion Tom McEvoy. They provided an interesting contrast in styles. McEvoy, wearing a bright yellow shirt and his famed gold bracelet, was happy to mix it up whenever he could. When I arrived at his table he was all in against another player who had flopped a set of 7s. Fortunately for McEvoy, he had flopped a set of 9s, which doubled him up.

Ten feet away, Dan Harrington sat like the rock that he is. He was wearing his lucky green Red Sox hat and folding every hand. Despite this, he had a healthy stack of chips in front of him. How does this man accumulate chips when it seems like he never plays a hand? That’s the magic of “Action” Dan. On one of the few hands I saw him play he limped in from the small blind after Bruno Fitoussi limped from the button. The guy in the big blind who had previously said to his buddy, “The guy on my right [meaning Harrington] is keeping me in line,” raised 1.2k. Fitoussi folded, and Harrington gave the man a withering look. “Do you want a call?” he asked. The guy told him that he would show his hand if Harrington folded, which was all the information Harrington needed. “I don’t need to see it,” he said as he mucked his cards.

As if this strong stable needed any more star power, David Singer was relocated to it after the dinner break. After some French guy named Michele limped in, Singer raised from the button. French guy called and the flop came Ks7s4d. French guy led out for a bet, and Singer moved all in. As the French guy was deciding what to do, his cell phone rang and he pulled it out of his short pocket, turned the ringer off, and put it back into his pocket. Singer immediately lodged a complaint. The rule says No Cell Phone Use at the Table. As the floor was called over and the other players at the table injected their two cents, all hell broke loose. Singer kept demanding a “higher ruling.” Steven Frezer assured him that he was the man in charge this evening and asked why Singer was protesting. “I gave away information about my hand,” Singer told him, “after he broke a rule.” It was clear that Singer didn’t want the man to call him. Nolan Dalla intervened. “David, what advantage did he get by turning his phone off?” Frezer ruled that the man’s hand wasn’t dead. Because he didn’t speak English, Fitoussi translated for the man, who ended up calling and showing KdJd. Singer flipped over 5s4s. Singer didn’t improve his hand, and he was suddenly gone from the tournament.

The consensus at the table was that they thought the French guy’s hand should have been ruled dead. “The line is fuzzy,” said Dalla. “We obviously need to make it clearer. We say no cell phone, but at any give time 30% of the field is text messaging someone.” The players at the table thought that cell phones should be completely banned from the tournament room. One man, obviously a family man, protested. “What if there’s an emergency at home with the wife and kids?” “There was a time before there were cell phones,” said Harrrington, putting in the last word.

The gray area created by a rule that is rarely enforced has caused unnecessary controversy on the tournament floor this evening. I imagine and hope that Harrah’s will be addressing it this winter and implementing a stricter rule. When they do, I bet it will come to be known as the David Singer Rule.

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My Love/Hate Relationship with Tournament Poker


Author: Jeremiah Smith Tournament: 2007 WSOP
Published on: 20:36:16 on Jun 19, 2007

Every day...hell, every moment spent on the tournament floor has within it several instances of why I both love and hate the game.  I totally hate it because:

Every cliche about the Amazon Room being a "poker jungle" is true
I mean, seriously, can't we be a bit more creative than running the jungle image into the ground?  Eugene Todd, bro, actually had a new and improved metaphor to describe the pandemonium around the $5,000 Heads-Up event.  Heather told me that he walked into the room and blurted, "This is worse than $@#%ing immigration!" The tournament started over two hours late, players were moved from table to table, several players went back to their room because they had a bye, and eventually the second round was moved back an hour as well.

The best hand never seems to win
I was sweating Erick "E-Dog" Lingren in the $2,500 Six-Handed event in the hopes of getting some late-stage six-handed strategy tips from him.  Steve Wong was on a bit of a rush at his table, opening several pots in a row and E-Dog had already come over the top of him all-in.  The second time they butted heads, Steve opened for 16k,  E-Dog pushed in for 120k and Steve called with 66.  Erick had him dominated with 1010 but a 6 fell on the turn.  It was a huge overcall for Steve, and Erick had set up the situation perfectly.  If Erick wins the hand, he probably would've made his second six-handed final table in two years.

No matter how many small pots you win, it's the big ones that count
PokerWire Radio host/King of Hairy Italian comedy Joe Stapleton and I were watching a few players during their heads up matches.  I had watched Howard "Bore A Hole Through Your Skull With My Icy Stare" Lederer win small pot after small pot against Dan "Will Someone Please Buy Me a Hat That Fits" Harrington, but Harrington seemed to win the really big ones.  The same was true of Kristy Gazes against Rene Angelil.  Angelil limped in and both players checked down an A8XX8 board until the river, when they got it all in.  Kristy held 86 but Angelil slowplayed AA to double up.

 

However, for every moment in tournament poker that makes me vomit in my mouth, there's at least one more reason why I love it:

 

If it weren't for luck, Phil Hellmuth really would win every tournament
The guy is a machine.  He's already at another final table.  ESPN actually shut down play last night at 10 players because Phil was on the short-stack and they wanted him to be on TV.  It turned out to be a smart move by them, as he has already outlasted a few players.  Phil's ability to put on a clinic year in and year out at the WSOP demonstrates that it truly is a game of skill.  Yes, players go through streaks of "running good" and "running bad," but in the end it all evens out and the best players come out on top.

Mr. Bell is a hell of a guy
This good ol' boy from North Carolina always brings a smile to my face.  He waved me over to the rail to meet Mrs. Bell today, and ask about an update on his boy.  I first met Chris Bell's dad at the LAPC where his son just missed the final table.  Watching him and Mike Gracz (affectionately called "Keeeid" by Mr. Bell) pound the beers is entertainment worth paying for.  Mr. Bell is the only guy I know who could give JDN a run for his money on storage capacity for hops and barley. 

I have the best co-workers a guy could ask for
Seriously--I'm getting paid to travel around the world and watch people play poker--and I get to do it with some of my favorite people.  I tend to not be a late-night guy, but I decided to come back to the Rio last night to hang out with Alex (aka AlFX), Really Good Producer Jeremy, and LA Mike last night at Tilted Kilt.  Everyone at PokerWire has a niche and it's great to see an all-star team like this together (with Heather, Amanda, and Stapes rounding out the field).  The WSOP has been fun, but when we have the access to events we're used to (live updates, chip counts, and video), look out, because we'll have the best coverage on the net.

The Urban Dictionary accepts new poker terminology
Thanks to Gavin for pointing this out on the radio show. 

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Dan Harrington goes home


Author: Team Pokerwire Tournament: 2007 Mandalay Bay Poker Championship
Published on: 21:14:17 on May 29, 2007

Dan Harrington was just eliminated from the tournament by Random Guy.

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