Asia Pacific Poker Bets OnlineTour have now released the schedule for the upcoming Macau Summer Festival of Poker, the keystone event of which, the APPT Macau main event, kicks off Season 3 of the APPT. The festivities at Macau run August 15-30, 2009 and include a selection of satellites and preliminary events in addition to the August 25-30 main event. Online qualifiers to the APPT Macau main event, as with all upcoming APPT stops, are available at PokerStars.
The 2009 Macau Summer Festival of Poker Bets Online will include 20 separate events, with buy-ins for non-satellites ranging from HKD $1,000 all the way up to HKD $40,000 for the APPT Macau main event and $88,800 for a special “High Rollers” event to be held August 29 and 30. Also on the agenda are special women’s and charity events and a “Terrence Chan Limit Hold’em” (shorthanded) tourney, scheduled for August 23.
The complete 2009 Macau Summer Festival of poker slate of events:
August 15
14:15 Satellite to 100K Guarantee $550
18:00 No Limit Hold’em - $100,000 Guaranteed $2,500
August 16
14:15 No Limit Hold’em w/ Re-buys - $20,000 Guaranteed $500
17:00 Satellite Main Event Phase 2 $900
19:00 Satellite Main Event Phase 3 $4,200
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Poker Game Bets Online-WSOP’s November Nine
And then there were nine.
The World Series of Poker’s Texas Hold’em Main Event breaks until November when the final table will be played.
As it stands, Darvin Moon is the odds-on favorite to win it all at +275.
The World Series of Poker’s Texas Hold’em Main Event breaks until November when the final table will be played.
As it stands, Darvin Moon is the odds-on favorite to win it all at +275.
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Poker Bets Online-The second stage Of The Italian Poker Tour On August The 27th
After the World Series of Poker of which finale on November is the latest stage, the France Poker Bets Online Tour which is also waiting for its first stage, foreseen to be held towards the end of August in Paris, another new event of will take place this year. After the successful first stage which distributed a prizepool of $494,700 to 255 players present in last June, the Italian Poker Tour is back again to confirm too this growing popularity of poker.
This time, it will take place in Venice at " Ca' Vendramin " casino from July the 27th till August the 8th.
For its second stage, Italian Poker Tour will propose a Main Event of €2,000 +200 buy-in of which Day 1A will begin on August the 30th and the Day 1B the next day. The Finale Table of the Main Event will be held on August the 2nd.
The presence of great amateurs or Italian poker professional players will put a little more spices in the sauce of this event. The last time, enthusiasts of this card game were able to meet terrors of poker as Isabelle Mercier, Dario Minieri and Lucas Pagano but it was an Italian amateur player, Stefano Puccilli who managed to win the $120,000 of the first prize.
This time, it will take place in Venice at " Ca' Vendramin " casino from July the 27th till August the 8th.
For its second stage, Italian Poker Tour will propose a Main Event of €2,000 +200 buy-in of which Day 1A will begin on August the 30th and the Day 1B the next day. The Finale Table of the Main Event will be held on August the 2nd.
The presence of great amateurs or Italian poker professional players will put a little more spices in the sauce of this event. The last time, enthusiasts of this card game were able to meet terrors of poker as Isabelle Mercier, Dario Minieri and Lucas Pagano but it was an Italian amateur player, Stefano Puccilli who managed to win the $120,000 of the first prize.
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Memorable Stories from the 2009 World Series of Online Poker Betting
The 2009 World Series of Poker (WSOP) will certainly be remembered for dominating performances by Jeffrey Lisandro and Phil Ivey (especially if the latter wins the Main Event in November). Lisandro won three bracelets, all in Stud events, to capture WSOP Player of the Year honors, while Ivey won two bracelets before claiming a seat as part of the 2009 November Nine. While those two superstars took the poker world by storm, Poker News Daily was at the Rio all summer to catch some of the other memorable stories from the world’s largest poker event.
Brock “t soprano” Parker Wins Back-To-Back Tournaments
While Ivey, Lisandro, and Greg “FBT” Mueller each won multiple bracelets during the 2009 WSOP, Brock Parker’s feat was arguably the most impressive. Parker, considered by many as an online poker Betting legend, reached his first WSOP final table on June 7th and overcame a significant chip deficit to defeat PokerStars Team Pro member Daniel Negreanu in the $2,500 Limit Hold’em Six-Handed event (#17). Parker received $223,688 and his first bracelet for that victory, but it was just the beginning of an unforgettable week. Parker registered for the $2,500 No Limit Hold’em Six-Handed Event on June 9th and, two days later, found himself at another final table. He would again come out on top, besting fellow online star Joe “floes” Serock to claim his second bracelet in just six days. His determination rang true on June 10th: Parker played the $1,500 No Limit Hold’em Event at Noon as his focus quickly turned toward Player of the Year honors. He busted early from that event, but still managed to cash six times at the 2009 WSOP and finish sixth on the Player of the Year leaderboard.
Brock “t soprano” Parker Wins Back-To-Back Tournaments
While Ivey, Lisandro, and Greg “FBT” Mueller each won multiple bracelets during the 2009 WSOP, Brock Parker’s feat was arguably the most impressive. Parker, considered by many as an online poker Betting legend, reached his first WSOP final table on June 7th and overcame a significant chip deficit to defeat PokerStars Team Pro member Daniel Negreanu in the $2,500 Limit Hold’em Six-Handed event (#17). Parker received $223,688 and his first bracelet for that victory, but it was just the beginning of an unforgettable week. Parker registered for the $2,500 No Limit Hold’em Six-Handed Event on June 9th and, two days later, found himself at another final table. He would again come out on top, besting fellow online star Joe “floes” Serock to claim his second bracelet in just six days. His determination rang true on June 10th: Parker played the $1,500 No Limit Hold’em Event at Noon as his focus quickly turned toward Player of the Year honors. He busted early from that event, but still managed to cash six times at the 2009 WSOP and finish sixth on the Player of the Year leaderboard.
Sunday, July 26, 2009
Texas Hold 'em Poker Betting
Dealing the Game
The object of Texas Hold'em is to create the best five-card hand using seven cards.Before the Deal
- Players will buy-in for the posted amount
- Selected players will post blinds
The Dealer Button
Unlike Seven Card Stud wherein the dealer deals each opening round clockwise around the table starting with the player closest to the left, the dealer in Hold’em will start to deal each game contingent upon which player has the “button.” The button is a graphical representation (“D”) of which player is the “dealer.” Although our dealer will be dealing the Hold’em game, the player who has the button placed in front of his seat gets to play his cards as if he were the actual dealer. When the cards are dealt to players, they are dealt in a manner as if the player was actually dealing in a live environment.Blinds
Because we have a player “on the button” we now ask two players to “post the large or small blinds please.” The blinds serve a purpose similar to antes, in that they put forced money into the pot that gives players an incentive to enter the hand. However, only two players will “post” or “put up” the blinds.The first blind is called the “small blind”. This bet is usually half the minimum bet of the game, although in some games, the fraction is slightly different. In $15-30, the small blind is $7, and in $5-10, the small blind is $2.
So, in a $2-4 game the small blind will be $1. The second blind is called the “big blind” and is always the same size as the game’s minimum bet, e.g., in a 5-10 game, the big blind is $5.
The player directly left of the button will have the “small blind.” The player directly to the left of the small blind will have the “large blind” of the full amount or the lowest game limit.
Opening Deal
Now that we have a Button and small and big blinds, we are ready to deal. The dealer always deals from the player closest to the dealer’s left. Moving clockwise around the table, the game will “deal-in” each player. The players will be dealt one card face down, then a second card face down. A round of betting will occur starting with the player seated to the left of the big blind.Betting on Opening Deal
The player seated to the left of the big blind will always have the action on the opening deal. This player may not check, but rather can only fold, call, or raise the amount of the big blind.The game will now advance to each player seated asking to fold, call, or raise until we reach the big blind for an action decision. If no one has raised by the time the play comes back around to the big blind, the big blind has the option to “check” his own BLIND wager or raise. Once all players have completed the first round of wagering, they will proceed to the flop.
Flop
But before we “flop” anything, we must burn a card. The dealer will deal face down one card into the pot. After the burn card, the dealer will deal three cards face up in the center of the poker table. These three cards are called “community cards” which are available to all players for potential use to make a poker hand. The area in which these cards lie on the table is commonly referred to as the “board”.
Now the flop has landed on the “board” and all players now have five cards available to make their hand, the two “hole” cards that were dealt on the opening round and now three “community cards” which all players may use. The rule of the determination of the action is as follows.
After the opening deal, the player who is seated closest to the left of the button shall have the initial action for the remainder of the game. If the player who has the button folds, then the button is still active and will remain in front of that player’s seat to keep position a constant throughout that game.
The player that has the action may check or bet. As soon as one player chooses to bet, then the other players in the hand can no longer check; they can only fold, call or raise the amount that is proper for that round (the lower betting limit on the first round and on the flop, and the higher betting limit on the turn and the river).
The Turn
At this point the players have access to the four cards on the board and their two hole cards. The game will now declare who has the action, which always begins with the player still remaining in the hand who is closest to the left of the button.
The bet on the turn is the higher level of the betting limit. In a $2-4 game, this would be $4. All raise will be in $4 increments with a cap of three raises. If there are just two players remaining, the number of raises is unlimited at our real money tables. However, in tournament play, the three-raise limit applies even if there are only two players left in a hand.
The River
At this point, five cards are on the board and two hole cards are in the players’ hands. The action again starts with the first player still remaining in the hand who is closest to the left of the button. All checks, bets, raises, and folds will be completed and then a showdown will begin.
Who shows first?
The determination of which players’ cards will and must be shown first will lie with the player who had initiated the action or with the person who had initiated the last bet, raise or re-raise. This simply means that whoever had the last action on the river must show his cards first.Suppose a player wins by default?
A player who has a winning hand does not have to show his cards if his bet was not called.Does a player have to show their cards if they call a bet on the River?
A player is not required to show their cards if, and only if, they are not the player who had the last action. If a player calls a bet and sees that he/she cannot win, he/she may fold his cards. Players who are curious about the folded hand may request a hand history to learn it.Who wins?
In our poker room, as with all, "cards speak." That means our dealer will find the best five-card hand using the five (5) community cards on the board and the two (2) pocket cards in the player’s hand. The winner will be decided based on the universal poker hand rankings.Blind Rules
All players must pay for their blinds in full before they are allowed to get the button. Therefore, the player who had posted the small blind in the prior hand will receive the button on the next deal of any game.If in the event we have a new player to the game, then three (3) actions will occur:
- If the new player is seated left of the blind, then he/she may choose to “post” the big blind or “wait.” If the player does post, then his wager is active.
- If the new player is seated in the big blind, then he/she is treated as such.
- If the player is seated between the button and any blind, then he/she must wait for the button to pass.
Missed Blinds Rules and Procedures
- Missed big blindIf a player misses the big blind for any reason, then that player may not play in any hands until the sum of all blinds are made up. The game will place an “ML” button in that seat to declare the missed big blind. The game will ask the next active player to the left to post the big blind for the hand. If the missed player makes up the sum of all blinds, then the small blind portion is dead and must be put into the pot before the hand is dealt.
- Missed small blindIf a player misses the small blind for any reason, then that player my not play in any hands until the small blind is made up. The game will place an “MS” button in that seat to declare the missed small blind. The game will ask the current big blind to please also post the small blind for the game. The game will further ask the next active player to the left to post the big blind. The player who had missed the small cannot return until after the button has passed. When and if the player does make up the missed small blind, then that money is dead and must be placed directly into the pot before any cards are dealt.
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