Tue, 08/16/2011 – 09:39 – PokerPages Staff
Leading female poker player, Leo Margets has joined Lock Poker as the newest member of its PRO Elite team, it was announced on Monday.
The Spaniard, who burst onto the live tournament scene three years ago with a top 30 finish in the World Series of Poker Main Event, spoke of her excitement at the deal in a press release.
“I am incredibly happy and thrilled to join Lock! I am also super proud to be part of a family with so many extraordinary players, this new era that now starts is a huge motivation for me!”
Margets earned $352,832 for that deep run at the Rio Suite and Hotel in Las Vegas in 2008. Her maiden live tournament triumph followed in 2010 after taking down the Full Tilt Master Series for a $132,000 jackpot.
The former 888 Poker pro team member becomes the first female pro to join the Elite team ranks at Lock Poker. The likes of Chris Moorman, Brett Jungblut, Nicky Evans, Eric Lynch and Matt Stout all represent the popular poker room.
Margets will hope to flourish under the Lock Poker banner and CEO/Owner, Jennifer Larson, is confident that the Barcelona based pro will be an asset to the Merge Gaming Network site.
“Leo is a dream come true for Lock. She is brilliant, driven, incredibly talented and represents the brand perfectly. Having Leo join the team is just another step towards truly becoming the best online poker brand in the world.”
Thu, 08/11/2011 – 23:51 – PokerPages Staff
Team PokerStars Pro Joe Hachem took part in the opening day of the Epic Poker League Main Event on Tuesday. The 2005 World Series of Poker Main Event champion, who has earned over $11 million during his career, recounted a hand he played during the morning session.
With blinds at 300/600 100 ante, Hachem open raised to 1,800 from the small blind with A-9os and only the big blind made the call. “Going into this hand, what I knew about this player is that he hates to fold. I know that if I make any hand, I’m just going to fire on every street.”
The 9h-9c-4h flop improved Hachem to top set and he fired a 1,900 continuation bet. The big blind continued his interest in the hand. Hachem reveals that this flat call narrowed his opponent’s range to a medium pocket pair or a heart draw.
The action followed the same pattern on the turned 4c. Hachem led out for 3,700 and the big blind made the call. “Again, I bet pretty small in comparison to the pot, but I was setting him up for a call on the river that I want.”
Hachem did not slow down on the 2d river, firing a final bet worth 12,800. The former World Poker Tour winner admits he may have moved all in if his opponent had not suffered a bad beat only a few hands earlier. The big blind went into the tank before calling and Hachem took down the pot.
“I guess the moral of the story is, play the player. If you know that some is going to pay you off, get the most of it.”




