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#331
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first off i wanted to apologize to the guy whose friend says he dealt this hand, it appears he mostly got it right, though lord knows what considering running it twice after the river means. (also lord knows how you don't get all in with the nuts on the river?)
to the guy with the moronic crap about the richest people in the world all being "arabs," man you are dumb. what's great is your stupidity is cemented either if your post is your honest opinion, or if it's what you think of as some great "level." |
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#332
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[ QUOTE ]
dont forget to notify the moderator when theres a seal basher amongst u cold little wet shivering seals. [/ QUOTE ] You accuse people of faux intelligence yet the best you can come up with is this. I agree that this speculation is meaningless but you are clearly the unarmed one here. Think, then post. Or better still, think and move on to the next topic if you have nothing worthwhile to post. |
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#333
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i think there are a few obvious reasons for bobby not to push the river
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#334
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[ QUOTE ]
Oh and I'm reminded of the famous line from Life of Brian: "He's not the Messiah. He's a very naughty boy!" [/ QUOTE ] Excellent! |
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#335
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Is aba + or - in this game? Also, I would think the area that would be hardest for aba would be the slow pace of a live game. I think if the live players have an advantage over aba, i would think it would be there, and that ABA might end up bluffing a little too much or something. |
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#336
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[ QUOTE ]
only a moron would win a million dollars at a cash game and then turn around and give the gov't 40% of it. you keep the damn $400,000 and use it as part of your bankroll so that you can make more. you pay taxes on your tourney winnings and other earnings only because you have no choice. maybe when you hit the age of 50 do you give uncle sam "the world's biggest strong arm thief" a cut of your winnings. maybe 10% at the most. [/ QUOTE ] Are you Richard Hatch? The Survivor Season One winner who everyone in the f'ing world knew won a mil yet still didn't pay taxes on it and received a jail sentence for his actions? This is the new leader for dumbest post of the month. If you are 'crushing' the 2/5 tables and pocket a few extra hundred a month and don't pay taxes, who cares? If you are a high profile poker player you damn well better expect the IRS to be keeping an eye on you. I am sure Brian's name is programmed in some IRS' civil servant's crawler and any mention of him is lumped into folders along with every other high roller who sits down at a table with x dollars in front of them. |
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#337
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Mr. Townsend's post did not say anything about Bobby not raising on the river. I think he means he moved in and Bobby called. I may be wrong and often am. Bobby played his Broadway straight rather normally. I don't care how rich you are, it must be big time sweet to have somebody bluffing 600K at you on fifth street when you have the nuts.
In his book, Bobby Baldwin describes making a $44,000 call in a backroom game in Lubbock forty or so years ago. After the cards were out Bobby called with wired sixes and a scary board because of a read. Mr. Townsend describes many wealthy, soft players in the big game. Doyle confirms this easy aspect of the biggest games. It is always best to target the weakest players and make your moves and play your big pots with them since they may make an error. Deciding you are going to bluff Bobby Balwin before a pot starts is an ego thing, a young man's thing, an expensive error that not only will he always remember, we will too. This is also the plot of every poker movie and pool movie. The young guy tries the champ, ala the Hustler and Cinninati Kid, get beat then comes back wiser and stronger and uses this loss as learning. Best of luck, Brian. |
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#338
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[ QUOTE ]
One might think that when making such ridiculous claims, you'd want to explain yourself. But perhaps you expect your reasoning to be so 100% spot on and obvious that it doesn't need explaination. How is intelligence not a huge asset? And by "distanced", I guess the "other" smart: mature, reasonable etc. [/ QUOTE ] Any claim that someone better suited then 99% of the population for ANY career outside of poker, simply based on intelligence and this obscure trait of 'distanced,' is dumb. Yes, I am spot on with that assesment. Brian = Smart poker player -- yes, most of the time. Good corporate employee -- who the f knows? See, that is the point. |
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#339
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Sbrugby's results for 2007 from HighStakes.nu:
Hold'em Results Sessions Hands Hours $3.142.267,55 680 85702 665,22 Omaha $-313.184,95 590 70791 824,75 This doesn't include his MoneyHungryHoes sessions. |
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#340
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[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] [ QUOTE ] So in recap, IDK where sammy got his money from [/ QUOTE ] Sure you do. Sounds like maybe you know when he first got it, but like everyone else you don't have a clue where it comes from. I seriously doubt it is anything illegal. The arabs are the richest people in the world but they don't go around boasting about it because they don't want to engender any more hatred from the west. If Exxon made 17 billion in one quarter or whatever it was what do you think the countries and the families that actually control production and own the land are making? Anyone that thinks the top 25 or so richest people in the world aren't Arab families is naive. I don't care what Forbes says, no way Buffet, Microsoft and some Euro-dude selling furniture are richer than the Arab families that control the oil. I'll take millions of barrels of oil every day over an operating system, an insurance peddler and a furniture maker. It makes perfect sense that from this fountain of money a small protion would trickle into the poker economy as does an unwillingness to disclose the source. Didn't anyone read Mario Puzo's Fool's Die? "In this country you have to get rich in the Dark". There are no SEC filings or sets of books to audit when it comes to oil producing nations. [/ QUOTE ] The richest man in the world is now a Mexican. After that, you've got Buffett, Gates, the Indian Lakshmi Mittal who is worth about $40 billion because he owns a large part of the steel industry. No-one in the Middle East can compete with this because the wealth is spread across large families: "Estimates place the total size of the royal family at 5000-plus princes, each one of whom is given $500,000 as a sort of start-up fee at birth. The family propagates at the alarming rate of between 35 and 40 princes each month. (For his personal pleasure, the founding king Ibn Saud kept four wives, four concubines, and four slaves, whose numbers he replenished frequently. He married into 30 tribes, a series of arrangements that supposedly helped knit the country together.) The incredible wealth of this family is entirely based on American investment in and development of the country's oil fields, namely by Aramco, a joint venture of Standard Oil and Texaco. And the family has made money hand over fist, with annual oil revenues jumping from $4 billion in 1972 to $111 billion in 1981. Since the family runs the country, most of that money goes to them. Very little gets passed along through its medieval religious government to ordinary people." http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0141,ridgeway3,29134,6.html So there's a lot of money, but it's not as concentrated as one guy owning most of a company. I'd take Gates' bank balance over any Saudi prince any day. [/ QUOTE ] lol u must be kidding, and u clearly don't now how these things go in those countries. In those countries u have no IRS reporting every single dime u earn, like in the USA or Europe. Their net worth, and even their yearly income are based on rough estimation from outside there community. Hell they are the IRS and they basically own the country. Why should they give us a accurate estimation of their wealth, they are not obligated to do so. I would take half of what the emir REALLY has over Gates' bank balance ANY DAY ANY TIME |
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