Cold Deck Pushes Newest Triton Poker Champion to Glory in High Roller 2c6j3g
It took a brutal kings versus aces bad beat to produce the latest champion on the Triton Poker Series this…
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“You get your chips your way, I’ll get my chips mine.”
Philip Dennis Ivey Jr. is a poker enigma. Often recognised as the dollar-for-dollar best poker player who has ever played the game, Ivey, once nicknamed ‘No Home Jerome’ for playing with counterfeit ID in Atlantic City, New Jersey, is one of the all-time greats. Winning 10 World Series of Poker bracelets, Ivey is second only to Phil Hellmuth on the all-time list of WSOP event winners.
A young Phil Ivey quickly became known not only as a tournament legend, but a cash game crusher too. No-one except Ivey knows how many millions he has won at the poker tables of Macau, but it runs into the tens of millions. Called ‘the Phenom’ in his early days, Phil Ivey also became known as ‘The Tiger Woods of Poker’ when, during the height of his Full tilt Poker fame, he seemed virtually unbeatable other than by luck.
Ivey’s uncompromisingly aggressive style almost contradicts his elusive, non-confrontational style away from the felt. Rarely giving interviews, Ivey’s enigmatic reputation has only grown over the years with the regularity that he evades true analysis of his life. A master of the game at the felt, a unique character away from it, Ivey’s later years have been full of examples of a quick wit and dry, sardonic attitude to the game he has dominated.
In recent years, Phil Ivey has attracted some attention for a controversial case in London where he was accused of ‘edge sorting’ at baccarat where he won $10 million only to have his winning withheld by the casino. The attending court case that followed was perhaps Ivey’s only public misstep in a career that has been largely played out off the felt, with the golden boy of the first ‘poker boom’ previously in the limelight only when he’s been at the felt.
To date, most players and fans agree that Phil Ivey is the benchmark for skill in poker encapsulated in one player. Plenty consider Ivey the ‘G.O.A.T.’ – the Greatest of All-Time. What about you?
Year | Event | Place | Prize |
---|---|---|---|
2000 | $2,500 Pot Limit Omaha | 1st | $195,000 |
2002 | $1,500 7 Card Stud | 1st | $132,000 |
2002 | $2,500 7 Card Stud Hi-Lo | 1st | $118,440 |
2002 | $2,000 Limit S.H.O.E. | 1st | $107,540 |
2005 | $5,000 Pot Limit Omaha | 1st | $635,603 |
2009 | $2,500 Omaha/Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo | 1st | $220,538 |
2009 | $2,500 No Limit Deuce to Seven Draw | 1st | $96,367 |
2010 | $3,000 H.O.R.S.E. | 1st | $329,840 |
2013 | A$2,200 Mixed Event | 1st | A$51,840 |
2014 | $1,500 8-Game Mix | 1st | $166,986 |