Hello online gambling friend and welcome to my casino blog. You will find interesting news as well as strategy and advice articles in the blog, which is regularly updated. My favorite game is online poker and I play at Titan Poker. Make sure to use a titan poker bonus code if you wan to join me there. Send me an email and let's play together. Also feel free to comment on my posts but note that all comments are moderated. Spammers not welcome.

HORSE tournaments

Posted by pokerwinner | games | Sunday 20 June 2010 1:02 am

A new popular form of poker at online casinos is “mixed games”.

This form of poker lowers the advantage that a specialist in one type of poker may have and highlights the true ability of a player who can play multiple variations of poker. Many people think that the HORSE tournaments and other mixed games are the best criteria for judging the actual skills of a poker player.

HORSE tournaments have recently increased their popularity since their introduction at the 2006 WSOP. This is the biggest event in the $50,000 buy-in.

HORSE is a combination of five versions of poker. The variation player is changed after a certain period of time or a fixed number of hands played, according to the poker room and tournament structure. A HORSE game includes Texas Hold’em, Omaha Hi/Lo, Razz, Seven Card Stud and Stud Hi/Lo, in this order. To succeed in a HORSE tournament, you must be able to play skillfully at each of the five variations of poker tournaments included in HORSE.

HORSE tournaments have become a very popular game for professional high stakes players getting tired of only playing Texas hold’em. Most players know how to play Hold’em and Omaha. Razz and Seven Card Stud are less known, so we’ll take a quick look at them.

In Razz, the high value cards are not important. The lowest hand wins the pot. The format of play is similar to Seven Card Stud High. The Ace is considered a small-value card. Straights and flushes do not count. The 5-4-3-2-A is the best possible hand, called the wheel.

Seven Card Stud is a game with antes where the goal is to get the best possible hand from your seven cards. Of these, four are dealt face up and three face down. To start a hand, each player must pay the antes and then everyone gets three cards, two face down and one face up.

The player with the lowest face up card is the first to act. This player is first to start the betting, either paying half the lower limit or making a bet equal to that limit. After all players have made their bets, they receive another card face up and the player with the highest combination of cards face begins another round of betting.

During this round, the betting is still at the lower limit. The bets are followed by distribution of a third card face up and the game continues as in the previous round, except that the bets are now at the upper limit. This limit is maintained for the next two rounds, where they distribute a final card face up and one face down. In a show down, the player with the five highest cards wins the pot.

HORSE is a very interesting poker variation but do not start playing it until you understand at least one or two variations well. As HORSE is indeed a very complex game.

Chris Moneymaker

Posted by pokerwinner | poker | Thursday 17 July 2008 10:23 pm

Yes this is true we both love online poker, if you are reading this blog.

I have heard about online poker in 2003 but I waited a few years before opening an account. That year was memorable for online poker, as this is the year when Chris Moneymaker won the WSOP main event, bringing this online card game to the mainstream.

An unknown to professional poker circles, Chris appeared from nowhere to get the Gold bracelet. He joined this prestigious poker event by enrolling through a $37 satellite tournament after getting his PokerStars marketing code bonus. What an extraordinary return on investment.

Chris Moneymaker, a young 27 years old playing poker on the Internet, won a $10,000 entry fee to the WSOP main event, from a satellite tournament hosted by PokerStars (36 other PokerStars players have also won their entry from other satellite tournaments). The people at PokerStars have not stopped since to push WSOP satellite tournaments as they want a share of this poker cake. The rest is history.

On Saturday, May 24 at 10:30, Chris Moneymaker won the main event of the 2003 World Series Of Poker. He became the 34th world champion and pocketed $2.5 million for his effort. This was the first time (but not last) that a winner of the WSOP main event qualified by playing on the Internet. The old timers of poker could do nothing against him, including poker pro Sammy Farha who finished second.

Chris Moneymaker lives in Spring Hill (suburb of Nashville) in Tennessee, where he is alternately accountant by profession and server in a restaurant. With his wife Kelly they were the proud parents of a three months old girl at the time when he prevailed at the final table.

His passion for poker began after seeing the movie Rounders, and to be honest he is just one among thousands like that. This is a great movie, to say the least, one of the best poker movies.

Chris had been playing poker on the Internet for only three years: he told the press that the main event of the WSOP was the first live tournament in which he had participated. Chris only knew poker tournaments on the Internet. By the way, his name is not a pseudonym for an online poker player nickname, his real name is Moneymaker, as incredible as it may sound. This is truly destiny.

Chris explained that when he won his seat to the $10,000 WSOP no-limit Texas Holdem main event at pokerstars, he wanted to sell it for $8,000 to recover some money and pay bills. But as it was not possible to sell his pokerstars ticket, he determined to go to Vegas anyway and to try his luck. He was very well inspired indeed.

For the final hand, Chris with 54 called his opponent Sam Fahra who had JT. The flop came J54; Sam hit top pair while Chris got two pairs. The turn card was a blank, but the river card gave two pairs to Sam but a full house to Chris. That was the hand of victory for the new poker champion.

Chris Moneymaker said that his earnings would be used to pay for higher education for his little girl. In addition he donated $ 25,000 (1% of earnings) for research against cancer. Chris Moneymaker later became a poker pro sponsoring the poker room pokerstars, and this was a truly win-win situation. Chris got the money he wanted, pokerstars the notoriety it needed.