Saturday, January 31, 2015

Kiwi jockey disgraced in betting scandal that shocks industry

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New Zealand 1Australian Gambling – In a story that has shocked the typically clean natured New Zealand racing scene, jockey David Walker has had his riding licence suspended after an investigation was launched into one of his rides at Awapuni earlier this year.

The Central Districts jockey will face charges of pulling up a horse so he could collect from a head-to-head bet he ‘allegedly’ placed on a rival horse. The senior rider was aboard Watch Your Man who sat near the rear of the field but video shows he never gave his mount a chance and when he found clear running room, he simply sat on the horse and didn’t move a muscle.

When stewards questioned Walker about the ride he claimed that he was denied any clear running room but that he also had cramp in his hands – something he told stewards before the inquiry was launched. Further investigations by the Racing Integrity Unit concluded that Walker did place a bet, to which he has now admitted to, but in New Zealand it is legal to place a bet on a horse you are riding, however, placing a bet against a rival is not permitted and Walker faces serious charges.

Reports state that the bet was in excess of $500 which seems rather pointless, but he isn’t the first jockey to illegally wager on a race. Remarkably, Walker was seen via CCTV footage to be collecting his winnings after the race. The rival horse, St Ransom, closed at $1.80 in the head-to-head market but the price was higher before the large bet was placed – leaving Walker to likely double his money.

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German Internet Casino Ban May Crumble Internally

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The first German state to withdraw from the national ban on online casinos will aolmost certainly not be the last.

The German attempt to maintain the state gambling monopoly and bar foreign online casinos may crumble from within. The state of Shleswig-Holstein has promised to open its gaming market to private gambling operators, and withdraw from the agreement among German states to ban online casinos.

The German State Treaty on Gaming united Germany's states insupport of the national Internet gambling monopoly, claiming that doing so is the only viable means of protecting consumers. However, EU findings indicate the move is more financially motivated, protecting the state gaming system from licensed competition by EU online casino operators.

Now, as Schleswig-Holstein becomes the first state to reject the federal reasoning, other states are rumored to be primed to follow suit and allow competitive online gambling in their borders.

Opening the market to EU competition would relieve Germany of potentially costly infringement proceedings by the European Commission. And consumers across Europe are demanding that state protectionist blocks be removed to allow choice in online gambling systems.

Even if some form of the monopoly is presently maintained, the State Treaty ends in 2012, permitting states to license online casinos freely after that point.

Published on October 29, 2009 by K.C.Carmichael


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New Football League Sees No Problem with Sports Betting

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Organizers of the new United Football League pooh-poohed NFL claims that gambling is a threat to sports, and said they hope sports betting helps their league as much as it has the NFL.

Gambling may be a subject that causes National Football League Commissioner Roger Goodell's eyes to bug out, but the innovators starting up the United Football League don't understand the NFL's problem with sports betting. UFL leaders have installed a team in Las Vegas, and say they hope gambling does as much for their game as it has for the NFL.

Michael Huyghue, commissioner of the UFL, says sports gambling has caused success for US pro sports leagues, and he welcomes lines being posted on his games by Las Vegas sports books.

"I think it's hypocritical to act like it (gambling) doesn't exist," said Huyghue in a press conference held at the Palms Casino. "We will embrace it."

The UFL will play its inaugural season with four teams, including Las Vegas, Florida, New York, and San Francisco. Teams are sprinkled with coaches and players with NFL experience, including Jim Fassel, who coached the New York Giants into the Super Bowl.

Huyghue asserted that, even if NFL executives refuse to acknowledge it, sports betting is essential in establishing public interest in games. He downplayed NFL terrors about disruption of game integrity, pointing out that sports gambling has co-existed for decades with football.

"The popularity of the NFL has grown abundantly because of that," said the new commissioner.

Published on August 11, 2009 by JoshuaMcCarthy


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Friday, January 30, 2015

Gambling Proliferation Attacked by Therapist Without Evidence

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A California family therapist says increased exposure to gambling availability is causing more problem gambling, but his only evidence is anecdotal, while scientific research indicates otherwise.

While admitting that modern studies seem to prove pathological gambling is a result of chemical imbalances in the brain, a California therapist claims proliferation of gaming is creating new problem gambling cases. Michael Halyard says in a press release that "gambling is ubiquitous" and that "more gambling opportunities mean more compulsive gamblers."

Halyard acknowledges that compulsive gamblers have been found to have higher levels of dopamine or lower levels of norepinphrine in their brains than the average person. Yet somehow he concludes that increasing availability of gambling will cause new pathological gamblers, even though he doesn't say that the proliferation would cause a change in dopamine or norepinphrine levels.

"Science is now showing us that for addicts, the part of the brain that is in charge of decision making is broken, which is why addicts of all kinds continue the addictive behavior in spite of ever increasing negative consequences," states Halyard. This would seem to be consistent with international surveys showing the percentage of problem gambling victims remains extremely constant around the world, regardless of tight or loose gambling laws.

But, without any useful statistical evidence, Halyard says he's been told stories by counselors that problem gambling is on the rise.

“My colleagues tell me that they have gotten an increase in those seeking treatment for gambling addiction, including underage teens that get hooked on Internet gambling,” asserts Halyard.

However, anecdotal evidence is considered close to useless in determining scientific fact. Without controls and measures, word-of-mouth recollections are subject to mistakes, exaggeration, and outside factors beyond the study. For instance, even if Halyard's friends' instincts turned out to correspond to an actual numerical increase, the cause could be more readily accessible help programs, rather than more individual problems.

Without objective scientific measurement, such as Dr. Howard Shaffer's years-long study at Harvard Medical School proving how slight the danger of problem gambling at online casinos is, anecdotal tales by interested parties is about as useful as a car salesman's opinion on how great the car he is selling is.

Published on January 2, 2010 by VirginiaMaddox


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Steady ROHR comes from behind for Sunday Warm-Up Victory!

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Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for sunday-warmup-promo1.jpgIt was a huge weekend in PokerStars-land, with the EPT Deauville reaching a final table just hours before the Sunday Majors kicked into high gear, with both the Warm-Up and Sunday Million blowing through their guarantees with ease yet again. After better than ten hours of high-octane tournament poker ROHR came from behind to claim the victory and $119,548.05 payday. His final payout was the result of a three-way deal and the extra $10,000 he won as a result.

It took nine hours to get there, but only a few minutes to play out hand-for-hand play as derek8 busted in 10th place to set up the final table. Gretko came into the final table as the chip leader, with the stacks looking like this as the final nine settled in to duke it out for the big money.

gretko (LA) - $11,052,372
ROHR (Wurzburg) - $8,641,187
Chaesi (Aetingen) - $7,155,428
donnylon346 (skivarp) - $6,298,870
delegator (Bergen) - $5,435,468
risiko13 (Basel) - $3,741,696
toetagU (WWI) - $2,532,407
Joe Hahn (Doorwerth) - $2,053,096
Negriin (Punta Alta) - $1,269,476

warmup 1.24.jpg

It only took a few hands into the final table for the first big confrontation to take place. Action started off reasonably, with a preflop raise from Chaesi and a call from ROHR, but the fireworks kicked off when the flop came down Q♠-9♠-A♥. Chaesi led out with a bet, and ROHR flat-called to bring the J♦ on the turn. Chaesi quickly moved all in with A♦-J♠ for two pair, and ROHR made the easy call with A♠-Q♥ for the bigger two pair. Only a jack on the river would save Chaesi, but it was not to be when the A♣ rolled off to send him packing in 9th place ($7,708.80).

Joe Hahn came into the final table one of the shortest stacks, and when action folded around to his small blind, Q♦-6♣ looked good enough to shove with, so that's exactly what he did. ToetagU thought for a moment before calling, but tabled the dominating A♥-6♦ to put Joe in a world of hurt. Life got no better for Joe Hahn as the board ran out A♣-8♠-K♠-Q♥-K♥ to bust him in 8th place ($12,045).

Negriin played the short-stack ninja role well, ducking and weaving his tiny stack to a 7th-place finish and a $21,681 payday. His run came to an end at the hands of the deep-stacked gretko, who moved all in over the top of Negriin's preflop raise. The pot-committed Negriin called with A♣-3♦, only to find himself crushed by gretko's A♦-4♥. The flop of 4♠-9♣-7♣ left Negriin looking for running clubs to stay alive, and for a moment it looked like the poker gods would obey when they dropped the T♣ on the turn. But the river was a less-than-helpful 6♥, and Negriin was headed to the virtual rail.

Gretko claimed another victim and the chip lead when he busted toetagU in 6th place ($31,317). All the money went in preflop when toetagU defended his small blind against gretko's button raise by moving all in over the top with A♥-2♦. Unfortunately for toetagU, gretko wasn't on a bluff, but had pocket queens. Gretko made the obvious call, but the 4♦-2♥-4♠ flop gave toetagU a couple more outs. The T♦ on the turn wasn't one of them, and neither was the 5♠ that hit the river as gretko's queens held up, and then there were five.

They say that fortune favors the bold, and it's certainly easier to be bold if you've got a big chip lead. That's what the world looked like when gretko open-raised from the small blind with K♣-3♠, then called delegator's all-in move. Delegator showed A♥-K♥, and looked to be in good shape to double through the chip lead on the J♣-8♠-T♣ flop, but disaster in the form of the 3♥ came on the turn. The 7♦ on the river was no help, and delegator was relegated to a 5th-place finish, good for $40,953.

Donnylon346 made it all the way to 4th place mostly by staying out of the way, but eventually he too, succumbed to the gretko steamroller. Gretko opened with a raise from the button, and donnylon moved all in over the top with A♣-5♥. Gretko made the call with A♥-8♣, and was significantly ahead of his opponent. The flop was no big help to either player, coming down 4♠-J♣-7♣, and the Q♦ on the turn was equally meaningless. The Q♥ on the river brought no reprieve for donnylon, and he was done in 4th place ($54,443.40).

With donnylon's elimination, the three remaining players took a moment to discuss a chop, and after some brief discussion, they agreed on a chip count chop that locked up $128,188.59 for gretko, $109,548.05 for ROHR and $94,758.03 for risiko13. With $10,000 left on the table for the eventual winner, the three survivors retook their seats and the tournament was re-started.

All the money went in on a coin flip on the very first hand back, as gretko opened from the button with A♥-J♥, and risiko13 moved all in over the top with 6♥-6♣. The flop swung the pendulum firmly to gretko's side when it came down T♣-A♦-Q♥, and risiko was in deep trouble. The 5♠ on the turn was no help for anyone, and when the river brought the 9♥, risiko was done in 3rd place and heads up poker ensued.

For all the fevered pace of the rest of the final table, the heads up match between ROHR and gretko was a study in patience. Gretko took a big lead into heads up play, and quickly established a 2:1 chip advantage, but was unable to advance his cause for the longest time as ROHR proved adept at picking his spots and timing his moves.

And finally, after a lengthy heads-up duel, ROHR's patience was rewarded. He took a dominant chip lead when his pocket eights held up against gretko's flush draw in the next-to-last hand of the tournament, and then this all happened. With a massive chip lead, ROHR opened for a raise from the button with 3♣-3♥. Gretko called for the last of his chips with J♦-4♣. The flop of Q♦-7♠-6♥ was no help to either player, but gretko picked up an inside straight draw with the 5♣ turn. No two-outer for greto, though, as the A♦ on the river sent him packing in 2nd place, but with $128,188.59 for his troubles.

ROHR proved that good things come to those who wait, and his slow-but-steady approach to the heads up match garnered him a Sunday Warm-Up title and $119,548.05 for a good day's work. Congratulations to ROHR and all our final table players on a job well done!










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Tuesday, January 27, 2015

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2015 partypoker WPT National Cyprus Main Event Day 2: Noubarian Leads Final 12


The penultimate day of the 2015 partypoker World Poker Tour National Cyprus €2,000 Main Event saw 75 players from a field of 149 entries return to the tables of the Noah's Ark Deluxe Hotel & Spa. Late registration and reentry were still possible until the end of the third level of the day, and the overall participation would grow by another 23 entries.

With a prize pool of €300,312, the guarantee was achieved and 12 players are left competing for the first-place prize of €75,000. Leading the field into the final day is Majid Ejlal Noubarian from Iran with 896,000 in chips, who took down one of the side for events for €8,151 just a couple days ago.

Not far behind in the counts are Kemal Sevevi (805,000) and Atanas Kavrakov (667,000), while other notables to bag up chips included Jacques Torbey and Aykutalp Yilmaz. Marco Della Tommasina will be returning as shortest stack when play resumes at 1 p.m. local time, and the Italian has 20 big blinds at 4,000/8,000/1,000.

PlacePlayerChips
1Majid Ejlal Noubarian896,000
2Kemal Sevevi805,000
3Atanas Kavrakov667,000
4Vasili Kesnin502,000
5Carl Maertzen428,000
6Mohamed Almani396,000
7Jacques Torbey380,000
8Aykutalp Yilmaz265,000
9Vitalii Grekul227,000
10Grigorii Rodin227,000
11Ercan Olgun215,000
12Marco Della Tommasina153,000

After the sixth level of play, the field was reduced to 22 participants. Sinem Melin and Chino Rheem were long gone by then after buying in again on Day 2, and other notables such as Sergey Rybachenko, Jan Bendik, Eddy Maksoud, Dimitar Danchev, Manig Loeser, Igor Dubinsky, Miltiadis Kyriakides, and Kelly Kim also failed to make profit. Also of note, World Series of Poker bracelet winner Simeon Naydenov busted just shy of the money when his queen-high flush draw was no good versus Onur Unsal's ace-high flush draw.

Daniele Mazzia would be the last player to leave the tournament area empty-handed. The Italian pushed with the {K-Spades}{J-Clubs} and was called by Michael "The Grinder" Mizrachi before the American folded to the all-in isolation of Atanas Kavrakov with the {A-Hearts}{Q-Hearts}. Mizrachi dominated most of the day and peeked at 880,000 before losing two huge pots in a row. The first one was a flip with the {A-Diamonds}{K-Spades} against Sergey Minaev's {A-}{J-} and the {Q-Clubs}{Q-Hearts} of Kavrakov, and the second one a failed bluff. In the end, Mizrachi would lose a flip to Kavrakov and had to settle for 17th place worth €3,800.

Onur Unsal made a miracle comeback after reentering, falling to as low as one ante and spinning it up to an above-average stack with less than 30 players left before bowing out in 16th place. Barny Boatman flopped a flush with the {9-Diamonds}{4-Diamonds} after defending his big blind only to run into the {Q-Diamonds}{8-Diamonds} of Sevivi. Etemad Saeid and Ivan Luca busted just before the end of Level 18 to set the final 12 for tomorrow.

The PokerNews Live Reporting team will be right back here on Monday to cover all crucial action until a new WPT National champion is crowned, so stay tuned and get ready for an action-packed day of poker.

Get all the latest PokerNews updates on your social media outlets. Follow us on Twitter and find us on both Facebook and Google+!

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Monday, January 26, 2015

UKIPT5 London Final table: Level 26-31 updates (100,000/200,000 ante 30,000)


10.15pm: Rapinder Cheema wins UKIPT5 London and £78,825
It's all over here in London and Rapinder Cheema is the newest UKIPT champion. But spare a thought for Fernando Marin who will be wondering how in the world he lost this heads-up battle.

The biggest pot was actually not the final hand but it might have well as been. Pre-flop Cheema raised to 530,000 on the button, Marin shoved from the big blind and Cheema made the call. When the cards where turned over the situation looked like this:

Cheema: A♦2♦
Marin: A♠7♦

The stacks were very close so this hand was basically for the title. The 9♣8♦2♠ flop gave Cheema the lead and Marin looked disgusted. He'd got it in good again but was now behind. The 3♦ turn and K♣ river kept Cheema in front and it was now time to count the stacks down.

Cheema had 8,940,000 whilst Marin had 9,350,000 so was still in...just.

On the next hand Marin moved all-in for just over two big blinds with 9♦5♥ and Cheema called with 6♥6♠. The 6♦5♦9♣ flop was a fine microcosm of this heads-up play as Marin hit the flop hard, but Cheema had hit it even harder!

The 8♥ turn and 2♣ board meant Rapinder Cheema is the champion of UKIPT5 London whilst Fernando Marin finishes second for £74,275. -- NW

Ukipt5_london_main event_day3_rapinder_cheema.jpg

It's all about the UKIPT trophy!

Blinds up: 100,000/200,000, 30,000 ante

10.15pm: Chips for Cheema as he doubles
It had been brewing and after Fernando Marin made his standard raise of 330,000 on the button, Rapinder Cheema moved all-in for 4,165,000 and Marin made a quick call.

Marin: K♥Q♦
Cheema: J♣T♦

Marin was five cards away from the title with the best hand, but it didn't hold as a A♠J♦5♥6♥7♣ board meant Cheema doubled up to 8,330,000 and Marin slipped to 10m. -- NW

Ukipt5_london_main event_day3_rapinder_cheema.jpg

Cheema is back in the game

10pm: Back and forth
The chips are just flowing back and forth at the moment. No major action to report, but Rapinder Cheema is up to about 3,900,000 whilst Fernando Marin has dropped to around 15.8m. -- NW

9:49pm: More for Marin
Fernando Marin has increased his chip lead further and is up to around 16.2m whilst Rapinder Cheema is down to 3.5m. You sense he's going to take a stand soon. -- NW

9:39pm: Fernando Marin doubles through Rapinder Cheema
Big swing in chips now and Fernando Marin is now in a very dominant position indeed.

He opened to 425,000 and then called all-in when Rapinder Cheema shoved from the big blind, Marin was at risk for 6,885,000 total.

Marin: A♠Q♠
Cheema: Q♦9♠

The T♣4♠7♥2♦5♠ board kept the Spaniard in front and he now has 13,770,000 to Cheema's 5,000,000. -- NW

Ukipt5_london_main event_day3_fernando_marin.jpg

Marin got a crucial double

9:35pm: Changing of the guard
Rapinder Cheema now has the chip lead. There's been no major pots, just a couple of three-bets that have got through. He's up to 11,500,000 whilst Fernando Marin is down to 8,000,000. -- NW

9:25pm: Raps fast out the traps
Rapinder 'Raps' Cheema is up to 8,500,000 after all but doubling through Fernando Marin.

Marin made it 320,000 to go and Cheema called from the big blind. The 3♣Q♣6♥ flop was checked through and the A♣ fell on the turn. It checked to Marin, he bet and Cheema made the call.

On the 4♠ river Cheema checked again, Marin bet 1,300,000 and called after Cheema check-raised to 3,000,000 total. Cheema turned over J♣T♣ and it was good. -- NW

Blinds up: 80,000/160,000, 20,000 ante

9:15pm: It's a deal
Shortly before heads-up play started the two players struck a deal. There's still £15,000 to play for but they've flattened the structure a touch. Fernando Marin is now guaranteed £74,275 whilst Rapinder Cheema has locked up £63,825. -- NW

Ukipt5_london_main event_day3_heads_up.jpg

The stage is set for heads-up play

9:05pm: Off we go
Heads-up play is under way here at The Hippodrome Casino in London. -- NW

8:55pm: Another worthy winner
The Main Event trophy isn't the only one that'll be handed out today, as well as the London Cup, Deepstack Turbo and Ladies events trophies one player got his hands on a very well deserved trophy today.

Back in October after a season long battle against Max Silver, Tomasz Raniszewski and David Lappin to name just three, Daragh Davey sealed the UKIPT4 leader board title in the glamorous environs of a £300 side event at UKIPT London.

Over the course of 16 months and 11 festivals Davey took on all comers and beat them. A deep run to third position at UKIPT4 Galway may have got the ball rolling but as well as two further cashes in UKIPT Main Events it was his prowess over a range of buy-ins and games that earned him the title. From pot-limit Omaha double chance events to no-limit Hold'em turbo 'Win the button' events Davey cashed them all and his title is thoroughly deserved.

Well played to Davey and we'll be seeing a lot more of him on the tour in 2015 as his prize for winning the leader board is hotel and entry to all events in 2015. -- NW

Ukipt5_london_main event_day3_daragh_davey.jpg

Davey receives his trophy from UKIPT Event Manager Dave Curtis

8:55pm: Heads-up chip counts
The players are on a short break and when they return to do battle Fernando Marin will start with a 13,885,000 chip stack, whilst Rapinder Cheema has 4,970,000. Below's a reminder of what they're playing for:

1st. £95,100
2nd. £58,000

-- NW

8:45pm: Martin Hanham eliminated in third place (£41,000)
Martin Hanham had shoved three times and get it through on each occasion, but on his exit hand he was the one doing the calling after Fernando Marin had set him in from the small blind for his last 1,800,000.

Hanham turned over 8♣8♦ and he was racing for his tournament life against Marin's A♦9♦. The 9♥3♥3♣ flop gave Marin the lead and there was no way back for Hanham on the Q♣[ turn and 4♥ river.

The tube driver can buy plenty of oysters with the £41,000 he's won here this week. -- NW

Ukipt5_london_main event_day3_martin_hanham.jpg

Hanham - out in third after a gritty peformance

8:35pm: Buzz has quietened, focus is on
Since Lawrence Bayley and his incessant stream of wry observations have been excised from the tournament, the players have gone into their shells a little - at least verbally.

Conversation is minimal - these guys just want to play to a winner.

So far three-handed Marin has been the busiest - raising every single button and occasionally three-betting late position raises, he is slowly but surely wearing Hanham and Cheema down at the moment as he moves up to the 11 million chip mark.

They still have stacks capable of hurting him though so a big pot could see the power balance shift.. --RS

UKIPT_Lon_2015_56665.jpg

The game has entered a pensive mode

8:15pm: Marin shows some frustration
Could we just have seen the first crack in the hitherto impenetrable force that is Fernando Marin?

He called a 325,000 pre-flop raise from the small blind after Rapinder Cheema had opened on the button. The 2♦Q♦2♣ flop was checked through and the 5♠ fell on the turn. First to act was Marin and he led for 325,000, call from Cheema.

The T♦ rounded things off and both players elected to check, Cheema showed A♦T♥ and Marin slammed his cards face-up on the table to reveal he'd been holding pocket eights. -- NW

8:05pm: Back to crown the champion
The remaining three potential champions are back at the felt looking to turn that potential into tangible return.

Can anyone beat Spanish sensation, chipleader Fernando Marin? -- RS

7:50pm: End of level 29; Break it up
Three handed for the title, the players are taking a short 15 minute breather before they return to play to a winner.

Here's how they line up right now:

Fernando Marin: 10,340,000
Rapinder Cheema: 5,005,000
Martin Hanham: 3,010,000.

See you in 15 minutes.

7:40pm: Marin and Cheema the main protagonists
In the opening exchanges of three-handed play it's Fernando Marin and Rapinder Cheema who've been making most of the running. Marin has won the most pots and he's put Martin Hanham to the ultimate test a couple of times.

But, he's had the roles reversed against Cheema, on two occasions Cheema has shoved over Marin's opens for over 40 big blinds. On the second time Marin showed and Cheema showed just a seven as he took the pot. -- NW

7:30pm: Lawrence Bayley eliminated in fourth place (£31,000)
Lawrence Bayley thought his exit hand was a bit of a slowroll on the part of Rapinder Cheema, who's playing his first ever live tournament, we'll let you be the judge of that though.

Down to just 1,750,000 Bayley three-bet shoved over the top of Cheema's 250,000 chip open. Back on Cheema he got a count, tanked for a bit and then called.

Cheema: T♥T♦
Bayley: 3♦3♣

The board came 9♣5♠7♣T♠7♠ and meant Cheema made a full house to eliminate Bayley in fourth place. So Bayley's entertaining tournament comes to an end and it's back to clicking buttons for the Supernova Elite. -- NW

Ukipt5_london_main event_day3_lawrence_bayley.jpg

Bayley - button clicking in a hyper-turbo near you soon!

7:25pm: Cheema injured by Marin
Fernanado Marin has had a fantastic final table. Most of his moves have worked out and his stack has increased steadily throughout.

He just took a huge leap toward the title by winning a big pot off his major stack rival, Rapinder Cheema.

Cheema had raised preflop and bet every street of the K♦7♣4♦7♥8♥ board for 300,000 (call), 300,000(call) then 350,000. The last bet however saw Marin now raise instead of call, making it 825,000 if Cheema wanted to see his cards.

He was too curious to fold his top pair, calling with K-T only to get the bad news Marin had spiked the turn and had A-7 for trips.

Marin now up to 9 million, he is really starting to crush the final. Can anyone find a rush of cards to decimate his lofty towers of chips? -- RS

UKIPT_Lon_2015_56725.jpg

His supporters will be vamooing like there's no tomorrow

7:10pm: Bayley under the cosh
After playing that tension-filled pot with Marin earlier, Lawrence Bayley was pushed into a tough place once more, Rapinder Cheema the man to apply the pressure this time.

Bayley raised the button to 200,000 and Cheema peeled from the big blind.

Cheema saw the J♦7♥3♠8♠5♣ board and just took off, betting 300,000 on the flop ( call) 350,000 on the turn (call) and 500,000 on the river (tank)

Bayley looked really perplexed at what Cheema could have "It just doesn't make sense!"

He tried his best to elicit some information from his opponent, pleading friendship, asking regular questions, suggesting hands but Cheema had turned statue-esque and refused to respond to external stimuli anymore.

Eventually Bayley threw his hand away. "Live to fight another day he said," though his stack has been reduced to below 2 million and he will be starting to move into shove/fold mode soon. Cheema meanwhile is up to 6million.

"All the interesting hands are coming at the end of the tournament," he commented smiling. -- RS

7:10pm: Double for Hanham
A simple, classic hand here.

200,000 raise from Cheema again, a 1.7 million shove from Martin Hanham, a snap call from Cheema - we had an all-in!

The showdown was about as flippy as it gets A♥K♠ for Cheema, 9♣9♦ for Hanham.

The board ran out J♣J♥2♠7♣4♥ and it was Hanham who had run the allin gauntlet successfully once more - his stack now with a little more potential at 3,500,000 whilst Cheema loses those chips he just won from Yong. -- RS

7:00pm: Yong eliminated in 5th place
Christopher Yong has had his moments on the final table, but overall it's been a pretty tough experience for him. To be fair he doesn't seem to have had the best of cards at times, and once more the deck conspired to ensure he was pipped to the post - his 14 BB reshove with A-9 running into the pocket kings of Rapinder Cheema, who had min -raised from UTG.

A king on the K♦6♠3♦ board pretty much sealed the deal and once the formalities of a 9♣ turn and 5♠ had been revealed, it was handshakes and farewells for Yong, busted in 5th place for a very healthy £24,600.

Cheema climbs to 7 million chips-- RS

UKIPT_Lon_2015_57108.jpg

Christopher Yong - He's been all about the smiles and good poker

Blinds up: 50,000/100,000, 10,000 ante

6:50pm: Marin puts Bayley in the hurt locker
Sound the big pot klaxon!!

Lawrence Bayley just went through a tournament's worth of emotion in the space of one hand but he was gracious enough to say: "great bet, whatever you had," to Fernando Marin at the conclusion of the hand.

The action started with Bayley raising to 150,000 from the cut-off and Marin defending from the big blind. The 4♥J♦8♥ flop was checked through, giving little indication of the fireworks that would follow. On the 6♦ turn Bayley bet 205,000, Marin check-raised to 720,000 and Bayley smooth called.

The 5♠ completed the board and Marin announced that he was all-in, he was the covering stack so the shove was for an effective 2,600,000 or so. Bayley rocked back in his chair and said: "fair play to you, you've given me a very tough decision." He then eyed up the rest of the stacks at the table which were roughly:

Rapinder Cheema - 2,900,000
Martin Hanham - 1,350,000
Christopher Yong - 1,500,000

Perhaps ICM considerations were playing a big part in Bayley's thinking and given his online background it's a distinct possibility. Bayley began talking through the hand and said to Marin. "What seven can you have?"
"You want a clue?" asked Marin.
"Yes," said Bayley."
"I don't have a seven," said Marin.
"So you've merged two pair or a set then?" responded Bayley.

Eventually Bayley elected to fold and fight another day. "You were losing," said Marin as he stacked the chips. "Yeah but you're Spanish and you always bluff," said Bayley with a grin.

Who was winning? We'll never know but Marin is up to 9,300,000 and has half the chips in play. -- NW

6:40pm: Marin gets shoved on
Two hands, two raises from Fernando Marin, two shoves and two folds from the Spaniard.

First to take him on was Martin Hanham, he shoved for 1,550,000 over Marin's 175,000 open and the Spaniard folded after getting a count.

On the next hand it was Christopher Yong's turn to shove over his raise, this time for 1,105,000.

The Spaniard gave it up once more, he seemingly won't be able to bully this table at will. -- NW

6:30pm: Marin hoovering up chips
Fernando Marin is increasingly moving away from the chasing pack and he's up to 8.3m after winning a big pot against Rapinder Cheema.

The hand started with Marin raising to 175,000 from under-the-gun, Cheema three-bet from the big blind to 450,000 and Marin elected to peel. On the 5♣T♣9♠ flop Cheema c-bet 550,000 and Marin smooth called.

The 7♥ fell on the turn and Cheema slowed down, Marin didn't though as he bet 800,000 and Cheema folded to leave himself with a stack of roughly 3m. -- NW

6:20pm: Paul Simmons eliminated in sixth place (£18,600)
When you've shoved and Lawrence Bayley asks for a count beware, he's about 95% likely to call you.

Once again, this proved the case as Paul Simmons moved all-in from the cut-off and Bayley re-jammed from the small blind after a few of his infamous calculations.

You don't get to Supernova Elite without crunching some serious numbers with a fair degree of accuracy and Bayley once more was on the money, his call with pocket sixes +EV versus Simmons' range and specifically his hand A♥7♣.

"Overs at least!" Simmons piped up optimistically.

There was a flip to be contested though, a pretty key one for both players, and the mainly baby board of 8♦4♥3♥4♠Q♦ suited Bayley's hand better - his stack vaulting to 4.4 million as he sends Simmons to the rail in 6th place for £18,600,

It looks like Hanham the tube driver has bested Simmons the cabbie in the driver face-off.

"Well played Paul," Bayley said, shaking hands with another of his new friends before Simmons left to collect his money. --RS

UKIPT_Lon_2015_56825.jpg

5th place for Simmons - a quality result

6:10pm: Double for Hanman
Martin Hanman;s hands are tied really. His only realistic move when he decides to play a pot is to shove all-in. So when he found A♣7♣ this met the requirements for his sub-10 BB stack's shove range and he did the bizzo.

The allin triangle was passed his way but when Cheema made the call off his big stack in the very next spot, he must've been a bit dubious about how good he would look at showdown.

As it was when everyone else folded, Cheema turned up an inferior hand, albeit one with plenty of equity (41%) - his Q♥J♣ not far from flipping with Hanman's suited ace.

A board of K♣T♦5♠5♥8♥ would have sent a few shivers down Hanman's spine but his ace-high was ultimately good and he moves to 1,500,000 - his biggest stack for some time, whilst Cheema remains big stacked with over 4 million. -- RS

5:55pm Which driver will reach their final destination first?
As well as two professional poker players, there's a tube driver and a cab driver at this final table. Unfortunately unless our drivers go through the gears they're not going to be part of this final table for that much longer.

Paul Simmons (cab) and Martin Hanham (tube) are the two shortest stacks right now and it's Hanham's tournament that looks as if it could be derailed imminently. He's dribbled down to around 715,000 and whilst Simmons has a bit more wiggle room with 1,315,000 he's only just got over 15 big blinds. -- NW

Blinds up: 40,000/80,000, 10,000 ante

5:40pm Break
The end of level 27 means the players are taking a well-deserved break. We'll be back in 15 minutes, but in the meantime enjoy these stack counts:

Fernando Marin - 6,510,000
Rapinder Cheema - 5,020,000
Lawrence Bayley - 2,490,000
Christopher Yong - 1,925,000
Paul Simmons - 1,455,000
Martin Hanham - 955,000

UKIPT_Lon_2015_56710.jpg

Cheema has been growing his stack efficiently

5:35pm: Marin vs Yong part III
This is probably an understatement, these two have come into, if not mortal, then significant conflict on several occasions at this final table.

The main reason for this is that Marin is the button to Yong's BB and he doesn't seem to like to give it up too easily.

Most recently he peeled a 120,000 button raise from Marin, the pair seeing a board of 9♠7♦2♣.

Check from Yong, 135,000 from Marin raised to 340,000 from Yong. Marin called...

The turn saw the 7♠ appear and Marin called Yong's second bullet of 455,000 in position. A final K♦ on the river saw Yong fire his third and largest bullet - 715,000 the price to pay - but Marin pondered this before deciding his Q♥9♣ was too good to fold and it proved a perceptive call as Yong could only table the semi-bluffing 8♣6♠.

Marin up over 6 million, Yong down to 1.7 mill. --RS

5:25pm: Yong gets some back
Christopher Yong and Lawrence Bayley have continued to battle and in their latest skirmish it was Yong who came out on top.

He raised to 125,000 on the button, Bayley three-bet to 320,000 from the small blind and Yong called the extra. On the 3♣8♦A♥ flop Bayley bet 240,000 and Yong smooth called once more. The 5♥ fell on the turn and Bayley check-folded to a bet from Yong.

Yong then won a pot of roughly 800,000 against Fernando Marin and he's back up to 3,000,000, whilst Marin is down to 3,000,000 and Bayley around 2,600,000. -- NW

5:10pm: Final Table Profiles
Here are some short profiles of our 8 finalists for your consumption.

Please help yourself to a delicious slice of information.

5:04pm: Bayley pulls out the flair moves
It's a fine line between genius and madness, but Bayley just pulled off perhaps the most audacious move of the tournament so far, certainly one that required a healthy dose of bravery.

The hand started with Paul Simmons min raising the button to 120,000, Yong calling and a quick check of the stacks from Bayley in the big blind and he decided a squeeze was in order, making to 360,000.

Simmons looked highly disinterested in playing out this pot, throwing his chips into the muck...Yong on the other hand was not about to let this precocious whippersnapper steal the pot off him and after some thought four-bet to 600,000 to leave Bayley the one facing a potentially tough decision.

Bayley dived into the tank for 20 seconds or so emerging with his scuba gear dripping and instantly 5-bet to 1,050,000. Wowzer.

Yong thought about it but decided to muck, only for Bayley to flash Q♦4♦. for a pretty impressive airball five-bet. Bayley's antics mean he's up to 3.4 million, Yong is entering the danger zone with just 950,000.

For completeness, the other stacks stand at:
Cheema - 5,000,000
Marin - 5,000,000
Simmons - 1,600,000
Hanham - 500,000

"Sorry about showing the hand, it was for the table," Bayley later explained.

"Haha no problem. I thought it might be something like that" Yong replied with a smile that suggested all was forgiven. --RS

UKIPT_Lon_2015_56744.jpg

Yong - cheerful in the face of adversity

4:50pm: Marin causes Yong pain
Christopher Yong has been a somewhat peripheral figure so far in the final but he got involved moments ago, raising under the gun to 125,000, only for big stack Fernando Marin to put the pressure back on him, re-popping to 330,000.

A pensive Yong made the call and the pair went heads-up to an A♣8♠4♦ board.

325,000 from Marin, a slow call from Yong. The turned 9♦ saw Marin raise the price to pay to 650,000. Again Yong made the call.

Come the 7♣ on the river, Marin considered this carefully before checking. Long deliberations from Yong eventually led to him checking also, Marin showing down A♥J♦ - evidently good as Yong quickly mucked. --RS

Blinds up: 30,000/60,000, 10,000 ante

4:35pm: Brett's in Bayley's corner
Brett Angell was philosophical about his exit and took to twitter to wish Lawrence Bayley good luck. -- NW

4:25pm: Brett Angell eliminated in seventh place (£13,300)
There will be no fairytale second title in back to back UKIPT Main Events for Brett Angell. The 'Boro boy shoved for 890,000 on the button with Q♠8♣ and Rapinder Cheema called from the small blind with A♥T♣.

Cheema flopped Angell dead on a T♦]T♠A♣ flop and Angell was up and shaking hands as the 4♣ turn and 6♣ river completed the board. -- NW

4:15pm: Bayley and Marin go to war
With the rising blinds shrivelling up the players' stack to blind ratios, mistakes at this point will be magnified and good decisions could make a huge difference to the payouts the players might receive.

Moments ago, we saw Bayley raise to 100,000 and Marin make the call from the button.

A board of T♥9♠9♦ saw Bayley make a slow check, Marin following suit.

The turned 4♠ produced a second check from Bayley who was remaining quiet throughout the hand. Marin however was keen on making a move on the pot and bet out 100,000. Bayley called.

The river saw the 6♣ appear - Bayley checked once more and Marin now bet out 355,000. Bayley went into "mental calculator" mode - eyes moving about as figures danced around in his head.

Finally he called, showing down A-Q for just ace high, but it proved an inspired call as Marin could only table K♠J♠ for a missed draw and king-high.

Good stuff from Bayley, Marin looked annoyed at himself for losing those chips.

Bayley rises to 2,100,000, Marin drops just below the four million mark. --RS

Ukipt5_london_main event_day3_lawrence_bayley.jpg

Bayley is on the up

4:05pm: Sorensen falls first in 8th place
Joakim Sorensen's short stack didn't afford him the luxury of passing up hands like A♣J♥ so when he looked down at such a pretty hand, he did what all poker players with a shortstack must do - shoved from under-the-gun.

A reshove from Paul Simmons UTG+1 didn't bode well and when everyone else elected to pass (Rapinder Cheema briefly considering getting involved before throwing his hand in the muck) it was left for Simmons to showdown A♥K♥ for a dominating hand.

A board of K♦9♥2♦4♥Q♠ sealed the Swede's fate and he departed to a smattering of applause to collect the £9,138 his 8th placed berth was worth.

"Congratulations on the pay jump chaps," Bayley added, although he was polite enough to wait till Sorensen was out of earshot first. --RS

3:50pm: Let's get this final started
The final table has been set up on the main stage here at The Hippodrome Casino and the players are now in their seats ready for the show to start. Tournament Director Toby Stone has just done the introductions and cards are back in the air. It's Fernando Marin who leads but all eyes are on Brett Angell who is not only attempting to win a second UKIPT title but back to back UKIPT Main Events.

Paul Simmons, United Kingdom, PokerStars Qualifier, 1,840,000
Christopher Yong, United Kingdom, PokerStars Qualifier, 3,510,000
Lawrence Bayley, United Kingdom, 1,930,000
Martin Hanham, United Kingdom, PokerStars Qualifier, 1,805,000
Brett Angell, United Kingdom, 910,000
Rapinder Cheema, United Kingdom, 3,590,000
Fernando Marin, United Kingdom, PokerStars Qualifier, 4,055,000
Joakim Sorensen, Sweden, 715,000

Ukipt5_london_main event_day3_brett_angell.jpg

Can Angell go back to back on the UKIPT?

PokerStars Blog reporting team at PokerStars UKIPT London: Rod Stirzaker and Nick Wright. Photos by Mickey May






































































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