June 2008

  • June  2008
  • Features
    Cover Story: Doyle Brunson – Bluff bumps into a living legend
    Annette_15: How to win a tournament without looking at your cards
    EPT Grand Final – All the thrills and spills from Monte Carlo
    WSOP Preview – Sponsored by Betdaq.com
    Thrills
    Snapshot – WPT Championship
    The Beat – With Neil “Bad Beat” Channing
    Bluff Newswire – Hold the front page!
    Wicked Chops Irreverent poker backchat
    J Tilly – Going deep at the LAPC
    Poker Like a Rock Star – The Magician is back
    PRO-Spective
    Jennicide – Poker player in Playboy shocker!
    Bonomo – Opening up your game
    On the Road – Dr Pauly’s WSOP flashback
    Phil Gordon – Phil looks at the WSOP rule changes
    Annie Duke – Annie prepares you for the WSOP
    Grassroots – Supporting poker in the community
    Virtual Felt
    Online Report – All the latest from PokerVerdict.com
    Exception to the rule – The Q&A on online PLO
    Wisdom
    Mike Caro – More Wisdom from the Mad Genius
    Being Phil Laak – Crazy action in LA
    Action Jackson – Paul Jackson at the GGBPT Nottingham
    Pickleman – Meet poker’s newest superhero
    Full Tilt – Tips from the pros
    Joe Navarro – Tips from the FBI
    WSOP Academy – Greg Raymer on changing gears
    Dr Tom – Reading Tom Sambrook is a +EV move
    Rizen – Playing your best game
    Plus EV – Dennis Schrijvers attacks some flops
    Calendar – June tourney picks

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Just a few months shy of his 75th birthday, Doyle Brunson has seen it all in the poker world. His résumé you already know: ten World Series of Poker bracelets, a World Poker Tour title, $5.3 million in career tournament earnings and author of arguably the most important poker strategy book ever written, Super System. He’s also beaten the highest stakes games the poker world ever known, including being a part of the now-famous Andy Beal heads-up matches.

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Armed with just a single Post-it note and a Jedi-like prescience, Annette_15 famously won a $4, 180-player tournament without looking at her cards. Playing cheap tournaments blind can be a great way of honing your instincts and situational awareness. Here’s some invaluable advice from Norway’s foremost diminutive poker diva.