HAS THE HIGH STAKES POKER CROWN SHIFTED TO THE
INTERNET?
28 August 2009
And can it last?
Writing in the UK poker magazine Inside Poker this week,
Alun Bowden asked some interesting questions about the
future of high stakes poker and the development of the
game on Internet nosebleed tables.
Following a
week of particularly big pots and frenetic action on the
high stakes tables at Full Tilt Poker.com (see previous
InfoPowa reports) it's a timely examination of the
phenomenon.
Bowden notes that five years ago The
Big Game at the private Bobby's Room at the Bellagio in
Las Vegas was where the world's richest cash games could
be found, an exclusive and discreet venue that produced
legendary poker action among the planet's high rollers.
But, Bowden points out, "...walk into the Bellagio,
anytime other than during the major festvials during
2009, and Bobby’s Room is likely to be empty. Instead,
inside the gated communities around the outskirts of Las
Vegas the high-stakes pros can be found playing online
in games where pots of $500 000 are rapidly becoming
commonplace.
"The highest stakes games in the
world are being played online, available for anyone to
watch. The stakes are higher than ever in poker history
and rapidly running out of control."
Bowden goes
on to examine the history behind this switch to the
online environment, explaining the meteoric rise of high
stakes online poker and reporting that in the early
years of the Internet game - a mere five or six years
back - the major poker sites were PokerStars and Party
Poker, neither being keen on opening up high stakes cash
gaming. It was the then PrimaPoker network (now
Microgaming Poker Network) and UltimateBet that took the
lead in this area.
"At UltimateBet, it was
players like CardRunners founder, Taylor Caby and the
legendary Prahlad ‘Spirit Rock’ Friedman who were
killing the high-stakes action at stakes up to
$50/$100," Bowden records. "But it was a European who
arguably led the initial rise of online poker as a
spectator sport. Norwegian, Johnny Lodden absolutely
destroyed the big games on Prima during 2006, reportedly
winning around $7 million.
"His fame blazed
across the internet after he became involved in the [at
that time] biggest pot of all time. The $465 000 pot
sent online forums into meltdown as small-stakes
grinders began to realise just how big the stakes were
getting and a new type of poker icon began to be
emerge."
Bowden goes on to claim that it wasn’t
until 2007 that the major movement of big money action
to the Internet really caught on, with young players
like Brian ‘sbrugby’ Townsend dominating the high-stakes
no-limit tables. New poker heroes in this genre now
proliferate, with the swings in fortune and millions of
dollars involving youthful players like Tom 'durrr' Dwan
being avidly followed by a new generation of Internet
poker players.
"He [Dwan] quickly achieved cult
status from a series of incredible hands posted online
such as a famous one against [Patrik] Antonius where he
called with third pair in a $400 000 pot. Suddenly the
hands being talked about online were not those from the
TV, but the huge bluffs and calls from the high-stakes
online games," Bowden recalls.
The Inside Poker
article records that by 2008 the big money was being
made on the Internet high stakes tables, naming poker
aces like Phil Ivey and fellow Big Game alumni Gus
Hansen and David Benyamine as leading participants.
"It all but killed off the big live action, and live
game specialists like Daniel Negreanu and Barry
Greenstein suddenly were without a game," the article
claims, noting that on the Internet, the games
themselves were undergoing a major evolution as the
action moved from NLHE to PLO "...as the fish in the
hold’em world started to vanish."
The stakes
also kept rising, first to $300/$600 and then up to the
massive $500/$1 000 games that run today.
Bowden
looks at the extremes that have developed, remarking
that this year Tom Dwan and Ilari Sahamies played a
heads-up pot-limit Omaha game where the effective blinds
were $3 000/$9 000. "The two players agreed to raise and
re-raise before the flop every hand. It led to some huge
pots, and arguably the highest-stakes poker game ever
seen," Bowden reports.
The downside of these
exhilarating developments is covered by Bowden in his
concluding paragraphs, where he asks: "But how long can
it all last? As Phil Galfond recently said the games are
currently running so high that most players simply avoid
each other. Could it be the high-stakes online games
eventually start to eat themselves?
"Although
Full Tilt must love the legions of railbirds that flock
to the site to watch the games, perhaps the huge
$500/$1,000 may prove to be a step too far for the poker
economy. Nobody is really bankrolled for these games,
and with the stakes getting ever higher will it
eventually turn into a circus freak show and implode in
on itself? Either way, in this new era of poker we can
all watch it play out in front of our eyes."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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