2012 Aug 10

The Nightly Turbo: Gambling Buddhist Monks Punished, PokerStars 85 Billionth Hand, & More

Before you start your weekend, we’re bringing you the day’s biggest poker stories from around the world. In this edition of the Nightly Turbo, we’re covering the latest from the Buddhist monk poker scandal, PokerStars’ 85 Billionth Hand promotion, and more.

In Case You Missed It

How was the high-stakes action at the PokerStars tables this week? Read the Online Railbird Report to find out the week’s biggest winners and losers.

In 1981, Perry Green finished runner-up to Stu Ungar in the World Series of Poker Main Event. Green recently sat down the Chad Holloway for the latest Where Are They Now piece.

Is your fantasy football draft coming up? The Pigskin Diaries can help you prepare. In the first edition of the 2012-13 season, Rich Ryan takes a look at some quarterbacks to keep an eye on.

Did you miss anything from the past week? Don’t worry, we’ve got you covered. Lynn Gilmartin breaks down all the big stories in the PokerNews Weekly.

Buddhist Monks Fined

Two Buddhist monks have been fined 2 million Korean won ($1,775) each for illegal gambling after video footage of their high-stakes poker game found its way to television stations in May.

Prosecutors launched an investigation after eight monks were caught gambling, smoking and drinking at a luxury hotel in April. The incident took place after a gathering for a fellow monk’s memorial service. Video footage of the game found its way to television stations after a fellow Jogye monk named Seongho released it to the media.

Meanwhile, the monk who filmed the game and the engineer who set up the camera were given suspended prison sentences for breaking into the room and damaging property while trying to install the camera.

Gambling is illegal in South Korea outside of licensed casinos and racetracks. The activity is especially frowned on by religious leaders. Six monks resigned from the Jogye order over the scandal.

Here’s a look at the video if you missed it the first time around:

The Bangkok Post has more.

Another PokerStars Milestone

PokerStars is about to hit another milestone en route to its “Road to 100 Billion” promotion. On Friday, the world’s leading poker site announced that it will be dealing its 85 billionth hand in the near future. To celebrate the momentous occasion, PokerStars will be giving away up to $1 million in prizes!

More than 300 players will cash in on the promotion, with prizes being awarded to players dealt into every one-millionth hand from 84,700,000,000 to 85,000,000,000. The winner of the Mega Milestone hand will collect at least $20,000, so if you’re playing in a regular ring game next week make sure that you keep an eye on the lobby for the real-time count on the number of hands dealt.

In May, Spanish player “funex700″ was the lucky winner of the 80 Billionth Hand promotion. He made runner-runner two pair after getting all of his chips in with eight other players at a $.25/.50 no-limit hold’em table to collect a $179.88 pot, plus an additional $22,940 for the winning the promotion. Everyone else at the table collected at least $10,000 just for being dealt in.

For more information on the 85 Billionth Hand promotion, check out PokerStars.com.

Honoring the Brits

Organizers of the British Poker Awards have unveiled nominees for their annual awards show next month. The event, sponsored by Genting Poker and the English Poker Open, showcases the U.K.’s biggest poker stars vying for more than a dozen different honors.

Some of the awards up for grabs this year will be Best Cash-Game Player, Best Tournament Player, Best Online Player, and Player of the Year, which will be voted on by a panel of judges. Ten of the honors will be voted on by the public at the organization’s website.

Several British players have earned multiple nominations in 2012, including Sam Trickett, Chris Moorman, Chris Brammer, Neil Channing and Vicky Coren. Trickett, Moorman and Coren each won awards in 2011, but Jake Cody collected the most hardware after being honored with the Best Tournament Player and Player of the Year awards.

This year’s ceremony will take place on Monday, Sept. 17 at 17:30 BST aboard the H.M.S. President Boat.

To place your vote on each category, visit TheBritishPokerAwards.com.

LAPT Medellin

Day 1b of the PokerStars Latin American Poker Tour Medellin Main Event came to a close on Thursday. When registration ended there were 218 players in the field, and 71 of them advanced to Day 2 to join the 43 who survived Wednesday’s Day 1a.

Colombian player Ruben Ospina ended Day 1b as the leader with 171,300 chips. Ospina bagged nearly 50,000 more chips than his next closest competitor and was the overall leader heading into Day 2 on Friday. Among the notables who survived with Ospina on Day 1b were Team PokerStars Pros Humberto Brenes (105,200 chips), Angel Guillen (75,000), Andre Akkari (34,600) and Nacho Barbero (15,200).

Here’s a look at the top 10 stacks from Day 1b:

PlacePlayerChips
1 Rubén Ospina 171,300
2 Steven Escobar 126,900
3 Rafael Moraes 122,000
4 Daniel Hurtado 119,000
5 Humberto Brenes 105,200
6 Carlos Camargo 103,100
7 Raúl Paéz 91, 000
8 Diego Mura 90,400
9 Miguel Cichi 86,100
10 César Quengua 80,600

We’ll have a full recap of LAPT Medellin in Monday’s edition of the Nightly Turbo. For live reporting from the event, visit the PokerStars Blog.

Help Casey Jones

We were stunned to learn on Friday that Casey Jones, a popular floorperson for the World Series of Poker, fell into a coma last week while traveling through New Mexico. Jones is currently in ICU in Las Cruces and is struggling to survive. Doctors have informed his family that there is little or no hope for any sort of recovery.

A fund has been set up by Casey’s family to ensure that he is comfortable in the coming weeks. Additionally, Casey has two young girls that depend on him. While his family prays for his miraculous recovery, they face insurmountable debt.

If you’d like to learn more about Casey or make a donation to his fund, please visit his page at GiveForward.com.

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The Nightly Turbo: Gambling Buddhist Monks Punished, PokerStars 85 Billionth Hand, & More

The Nightly Turbo: Gambling Buddhist Monks Punished, PokerStars 85 Billionth Hand, & More

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2012 Aug 10

Where Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry Green

There’s no doubt that poker has changed drastically over the last decade, and even more so since the inception of the World Series of Poker in 1970. Finding players who have remained consistent over the years is rare, but one recently showed up at the 2012 WSOP: three-time bracelet winner Perry Green, who finished runner-up to the legendary Stu Ungar in 1981.

Born in Seattle in 1936, Green worked as a successful fur trader in Alaska for the vast majority of his life. In 1976, he ventured to the WSOP where he took down Event #4: $1,000 Limit Ace to Five Draw for $68,300 and his first gold bracelet. The next year, Green won Event #6 $5,000 Limit Ace to Five Draw and then returned two years later to win Event #6: $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em Non-Pro for $76,500.

With three bracelets under his belt, Green made a go at the 1981 $10,000 Main Event, which attracted 75 players including Johnny Moss, Hal Fowler, Betty Carey, “Amarillo Slim” Preston and Jesse Alto. The field was reduced to just 38 players by the end of Day 1, and those 38 were reduced to 17 on Day 2. On Day 3, Doyle Brunson was eliminated, leaving Bobby Baldwin and Ungar, the defending champ, as the only former winners remaining. Both went on to make the final table.

1981 WSOP Final Table

PlacePlayerPrize
1 Stu Ungar $375,000
2 Perry Green $150,000
3 Gene Fisher $75,000
4 Kenny Smith $37,500
5 Bill Smith $37,500
6 Jay Heimowitz $30,000
7 Bobby Baldwin $15,000
8 Andy Moore $15,000

Green went on to finish as runner-up to Ungar, who claimed back-to-back Main Event titles. Green returned to the WSOP over the next three decades, amassing 24 WSOP cashes for $645,427.

Recently, Green made another deep run by navigating a field of 6,598 in this year’s Main Event with his wife of 56 years, Gloria, by his side, though she refused to sweat the action. “I don’t watch anymore. Ever since he started doing well in 1981, I stopped going,” Gloria told PokerNews at this year’s WSOP. “I can’t take the pressure. It doesn’t bother him, but it does bother me. When we were dating, we were able to go out to eat because he would win the money, actually from my brother and my cousin, he would play cards with them. We would go out on dates because he would win the money. I always thought if I took the money when he wins, I could put up with it.” Green finished in 152nd place for $52,718.

It’s not every day you come across a poker player from Alaska. Were you born there? What is it that you do in Anchorage?

My father was there in 1922, but I was born in Seattle. I was a fur buyer, and I operated five purse stores. I used to go to the Eskimo villages.

How did you learn to play poker? Likewise, how did you first hear about the WSOP?

Well, I was a teenager and played a little bit, then I went into the Army and supplemented my Army income. Afterwards, we used to have a little game once a week in Anchorage. I stumbled onto the WSOP by someone saying ‘Come on down to the Horseshoe, they’ve got a great game down there.’ The first time I went down there they played lowball and I won a lot of money in the cash games, I didn’t even know about tournaments.

Two of your bracelets are in lowball. Is that your favorite game?

Absolutely, I cut my teeth on five-card low, six-card low, and then seven-card low. I think it’s a terrible shame they don’t have the ace-to-five lowball at the WSOP anymore. You ought to talk to them about it.

Have you been playing the WSOP every year since 1976?

Off and on. I really haven’t played much. I’ve only entered the Main Event eight times, I would say. Over the years I’ve been busy. I’ve been working. I’m really an amateur and when you have responsibilities, five children, it’s much more important to take care of you responsibilities than play poker. But I combine them pretty good.

Are there opportunities for you to play back in Alaska?

Perry Green in 1981. Photo courtesy of thewsopblog.com.

I play in a friend’s game, it’s just a very small game. I play about five or six times a year.

In 1981 you finished second to Stu Ungar. Do you have any good stories from back in the day?

Oh yeah, I remember how I had Stu all-in three times in that tournament. I had him all-in early when I had Where Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry GreenWhere Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry Green and he had Where Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry GreenWhere Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry Green, and the two fives stood up. I had him all-in, I had Where Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry GreenWhere Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry Green and he had Where Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry GreenWhere Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry Green, and the board came Where Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry GreenWhere Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry GreenWhere Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry Green, and then it came another Where Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry Green and then another Where Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry Green, so we split the pot. I also remember I was going real good and was way ahead, having fun. In those days, I really played for the fun of it. My wife was watching on the side, and Doyle Brunson was in back of me. It was opened [on the flop] for like 8,000. I made it 16,000. He came back and made it 35,000, and I put him all-in after the flop, which was Where Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry GreenWhere Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry GreenWhere Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry Green. He was mortified that I came back over the top of him, and he had the only hand that he would probably call me with. Besides two aces, he had Where Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry GreenWhere Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry Green.

I turned around to Doyle, pointed my finger at Doyle, which shows you what my mood was, and he jumped up and said, “Ten-deuce of clubs?”

I said, “Yes,” because I figure I have a straight and I have a flush draw. He really had me cornered, but I could have still caught a red queen, or a red seven, I could have made tens and deuces, it could have come deuce-deuce, and that was the one that crushed me. It really was sad. That was the same year I took second place in the Super Bowl of Poker, as well. David Sklansky ranked the top 16 poker professionals in the world and put me number six. I was the only amateur among them in 1981.

Obviously that distinction and recognition meant a lot to you?

Oh yeah, I used to go there to have fun and play. When they used to play hold’em, I’d never join in the games at all. I didn’t know a thing, and then I bought Doyle Brunson’s book. After I read it I said, “Oh, ohhh, ohhhhhhh, this is a pretty good game.” Then I played it a little, but I still love my games of lowball ace-to-five.

Did you think poker would ever grow to be as big as it is today?

I think Jack Binion had the right idea. I think he was the real father of making this as gigantic as it is . . . I thought, “My gosh, who would ever be interested in poker?” Lo and behold, the interest in poker is so intense it’s phenomenal. I really credit Jack Binion over anybody with the expansion of poker. Of course, when you have it legitimized by ESPN , and it shows the face, breadth and width of poker, it makes it a sport people can enjoy whether they’re in a wheelchair or an Olympic athlete . . . It’s played in nursing homes, and it’s played in private homes. It’s played in casinos, bars, and it’s played by everyone.

Look at how the international community has embraced the game. And the youngsters. I have six grandchildren older than 60 percent of the remaining 282-player field [in the WSOP Main Event]. None of my grandchildren play at this level.

What do you think of today’s fields? Is it harder to navigate?

You asked me earlier about Stu Ungar. I think that Stu would have a tough time with these young phenoms because as great as he was, and believe me he was a great player, there’s about 90 percent of today’s players that are within a hair’s breadth. It’s kind of like trying to compare Barry Bonds to Babe Ruth or Reggie Jackson, you know, from different eras.

What has become of your WSOP bracelets?

I have three bracelets. My wife has one, my son has one, and I have one. I didn’t even know I was getting a bracelet [for my first win], I didn’t even know you got bracelets. Jack Binion was so generous and so great. Great with the players. In the old days, you knew the brush people, the floor supervisors, dealer, the names, and every player’s, where they came from, whether they were married, and whether they had leaks in their play. Now you get to the table and you’re forever finding information that you need to know. It’s on-the-job training.

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Where Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry Green

Where Are They Now: 1981 World Series of Poker Main Event Runner-Up Perry Green


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