Premier Poker League 4

PokerBaazi
IndustryOnline poker
FoundedOctober 2014; 6 years ago
FounderNavkiran Singh, Puneet Singh, Anirudh Chaudhry, Avneet Rana, and Varun Ganjoo
Headquarters,
ParentBaazi Networks Pvt. Ltd. (2014–present)
Websitewww.pokerbaazi.com

PokerBaazi is an Indian online poker room that offers their company users a chance to play poker professionally and win from others.[1][2]

Premier Poker League 4
  • The games include Texas Hold 'em (No Limit and Fixed), Omaha and Omaha Hi-Lo, 7 Card Stud and 7 Card Stud Hi-Lo. The stakes can range from.01/.02 to 100/200. In 2012 partypoker removed its high-stakes cash games with the highest stakes at $10/$20. Party Poker formerly offered a bad beat jackpot.
  • For the latest Premier League scores & stats in Matchweek 11, Season 2020/21, plus a live matchday blog, visit the official website of the Premier League.
  • The fourth season of the partypoker -sponsored Premier League put the unique televised tournament format on the map, and captured the imagination of players and fans alike in 2010.

History[edit]

Poker League 4 Us, Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania. Welcome to our Poker League site! We are a tavern league that plays at local taverns for free to win cash and other prizes!

PokerBaazi was founded in 2014 as an online poker start-up Company. It has five co-founders- Navkiran Singh,[3][4] Puneet Singh, Anirudh Chaudhry, Avneet Rana, and Varun Ganjoo.

Partnerships[edit]

In January 2018, PokerBaazi acquired a majority stake in the fantasy sports website BalleBaazi.com for an undisclosed amount.[5][6][7]In March 2018, PokerBaazi joined the Match Indian Poker League owned by the celebrity couple, Raj Kundra & Shilpa Shetty Kundra. It became the official title sponsor of Haryana Hawks.[8]

Events[edit]

Premier league poker 4 e18

In October 2017, PokerBaazi first conducted the biggest online tournament in India- The MoneyMaker- which had a prize pool in excess of Rs 1.21 Crore. It was a success and the company has rolled out six MoneyMakers since then.[9] PokerBaazi also runs PokerBaazi Premier League (PPL) four times a year. PPL is the biggest online poker series in India.[10] In April 2019, PokerBaazi launched a series of Free Entry Tournaments to target players who have either just started playing poker or are planning to give the game a shot.[4][11]

Brand ambassadors[edit]

In August 2016, the Bollywood film star Sunny Leone became the face of PokerBaazi.Later, in January 2018 the Indian professional boxer, Vijender Singh joined PokerBaazi as its brand ambassador.[2][12][13][14][15]

Social welfare[edit]

As its CSR engagement, PokerBaazi has been involved in social welfare initiatives such as 2018 Kerala floods relief, Clean Yamuna campaign and sustainable food development systems for underprivileged kids in the past.[14][16][17] It also announced to donate a share of the rake collected during its PokerBaazi Premier League Special Edition towards the education of underprivileged girls along with the expenses for their school uniforms, midday meals & transportation.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^'India's poker startups industry worth $120 million slowly becoming a profit-making model'. Economics Times. 2016-11-04. Retrieved 2019-01-24.
  2. ^ ab'Vijender Singh is the new brand ambassador of PokerBaazi.com'. ETBrandEquity. 2018-01-22. Retrieved 2019-01-24.
  3. ^ ab'PokerBaazi announces PPL Special Edition, sponsors 14 underprivileged girls #PlayForACause'. Indian Express. 2019-03-16. Retrieved 2019-04-22.
  4. ^ ab'PokerBaazi launches redeemable free entry Poker Tournaments'. Business Standard. 2019-04-03. Retrieved 2019-04-22.
  5. ^'PokerBaazi to score with BalleBaazi'. Techtrail. 2018-04-03. Retrieved 2019-01-26.
  6. ^'BTI Executive Search expands India operations'. Outlook India. 2018-04-03. Retrieved 2019-01-26.
  7. ^'BTI Executive Search expands India operations'. Business Standard. 2018-04-03. Retrieved 2019-01-26.
  8. ^'PokerBaazi.com is the official Title Sponsor & Shareholder of Haryana Hawks that is competing in Match Indian Poker League'. TVNews4u. 2018-03-21. Retrieved 2019-01-26.
  9. ^'PokerBaazi's Moneymaker Returns With It's [sic] 5th Edition'. SportsKeeda. 2018-05-09. Retrieved 2019-01-26.
  10. ^'PokerBaazi Premier League Returns with a Summer Edition'. PokerFuse. Retrieved 2019-01-26.
  11. ^'Learn, Play & Win For Free - PokerBaazi Launches Exciting Free Entry Poker Tournaments!'. LBB. 2019-04-08. Retrieved 2019-04-22.
  12. ^'Indian Site PokerBaazi Sign Up Boxing Champ Vijender Singh'. HighStakesDB. 2018-01-22. Retrieved 2019-01-26.
  13. ^'PokerBaazi rope in Vijender for reach in Hindi heartland'. Inside Sport. 2018-01-23. Retrieved 2019-01-26.
  14. ^ ab'Vijender Singh spends time with underprivileged kids in Gurgaon'. Times of India. 2019-01-24. Retrieved 2019-01-26.
  15. ^'As e-sports pitch hots up, online gaming firms rope in big celebrities'. Money Control. 2019-03-07. Retrieved 2019-04-22.
  16. ^'PokerBaazi Hosts Welfare Event for Underprivileged Children with Vijender Singh'. Sportz Wiki. 2019-01-23. Retrieved 2019-01-26.
  17. ^'Boxer Vijender Singh interacts with underprivileged children at PokerBaazi welfare event'. Yahoo News. 2019-01-23. Retrieved 2019-01-26.

External links[edit]


Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=PokerBaazi&oldid=973543603'
Paul Seaton

The birth of deep game theory in a league format poker tournament, fancy dress headwear and a confrontation that still gets talked about today — the partypoker Premier League Poker opened up all sorts of avenues in the game when Season Four was unleashed to the public back in 2010.

In Part One of our look back at the iconic series, the series' main commentator, Jesse May, talked about what made Season IV unique and exciting, including the drama that built up throughout the preliminary heats. As play moved towards the final, it got even juicier. A clash had been brewing between loud-mouthed British player Luke Schwartz and the more reserved French poker pro David Benyamine, and it eventually came to a head.

Schwartz and Benyamine Clash

“When I first met Benyamine, he had come to Las Vegas from France as a guy with a great sense of humor,' May recalled. 'He was good for the game. By the time that Season Four took place, he was on a bit of a bad run, and he was a total Vegas denizen.”

Benyamine was a cold member of the group, 'showing up and then going home almost like he wasn’t part of the whole thing,' according to May. By comparison, Schwartz was much-loved by players and crew.

Benyamine was rumored to be a last-minute replacement and it proved to be an addition that would lead to some sparks at the table. During that season, the two had this famous confrontation that showed Schwartz' characteristic way of making things personal at the table.

“Schwartz was probably our best winner. Negreanu, and Laak, who was the chip leader going into the final table, were both awesome. But it was probably the last Premier League Hellmuth ever played.”

The Poker Brat would not come close to winning and continued his terrible run in the show. By 2010, Hellmuth had found four seasons of the format tough to beat, due at least in part to some rivalries on the felt that didn't help his cause.

“Between Tony G, Negreanu, Luke Schwartz, and Roland De Wolfe, they did not let him have a second. They were relentless.”

Season Four Changes, Putting the Party in partypoker

The way the points worked was unique. With a league format having failed years before in Vegas with a tournament that contained luminaries like Gus Hansen and Chip Reese, Premier League Poker needed to get it right. They’d tried three years of leaving all the payouts to the final, but in Season Four they awarded prize money during the heats. Filming took a fortnight, end to end.

“We were all locked up in the M Hotel. It’s not really on the Strip, it was a mile south from Mandalay Bay. It’s a nice place, total luxury, but everyone - apart from Benyamine - was holed up in the same place, people like Mad Marty Wilson and Eddie Hearn for a fortnight straight. It was a total scene.”

Filming was only the half of it. The event was sponsored by partypoker, and they lived up to their name, bringing all of the party.

“The games would go for two a day. I’d start at 11 a.m. and finish at midnight. Everybody would be at the bar, in the restaurant or at the craps tables. It was absolute mayhem.”

When they weren’t raising hell at the craps table, they were raising each other at the felt. Outside of that time, everyone wanted to be in the commentary truck, which for May was a new phenomenon.

“Players who normally you couldn’t have got them to do commentary if you’d put a gun to the heads, they knew that they could get in there and see how everyone was playing because you could see all the cards. Nobody turned it down.”

A packed house in the casino, it would be just the same in the truck.

“It would be me, Roland and Luke, with Phil hanging his head through the door. It was the greatest ever having all those guys in there doing commentary.”

Of all the characters May shared live air with, de Wolfe was the most unique. The British player has disappeared from the world of tournament poker these days, but back then, he was an enigma off the table - and in the broadcast truck.

Premier League Poker 4 E04

“One time, we were in the box and he came in with a bowl of cashew nuts. These production trucks look like spaceships, there are levers and buttons and monitors and plugs all over the place. Without realising it, Roland had taken these cashew nuts and plugged up every single input hole in the truck. He’d ruined a million-dollar truck, not intentionally, just because he needed something to do with his hands while watching poker.”

Premier Poker League 4 2018

Evolving Game

2018

The series came on the back of a WSOP Main Event final table which featured Joseph Cheong raising all-in with ace-high, a move which wasn’t as readily made as it is today. Schwartz did even more of that in Season Four of Premier League Poker.

'For whatever reason, Schwartz never really won the big tournaments that everyone had predicted him for, but he was such a natural at no limit hold’em. Vanessa Rousso had opened under the gun and it was clear to everyone at the table that she wasn’t that strong. Schwartz raised and Yevgeniy Timoshenko, who was a really sharp player, re-raised Luke with king-jack off-suit or something.”

Back to Schwartz, typical options would be fold or fold quicker, but Schwartz went in a different direction. The man was made for TV poker.

“Schwartz just shoved all-in with 6-4 off-suit. Now that sort of thing seems more standard, but in terms of TV poker, it was quite a unique move to four-bet shove with nothing. That was how the game was changing. The old school certainly didn’t play like that.”

The uniquely complex format was paying off, with audience numbers up and players loving the action in each heat. When it came to the final, Phil Laak had the lead, while Schwartz had stacks of chips too. But it was Benyamine who had the last laugh, beating Schwartz heads-up. You can watch that match in the clip below:

Televised Poker Leaves Premier League Format Behind

Premier poker league season 4

The strategic element to the season had made waves in poker, and as May says, 'It would change every hand and that’s what made it really exciting.' May can definitely see the format being popular if it came back today.

Premier Poker League 4 Star

“They had the Poker Masters the last couple of years in Vegas which has a point element to it, but it wasn’t integral to it. I’d love to see Dominik Nitsche, Fedor Holz and those guys get involved in this kind of league format.”

The league format is something May believes is needed in no limit hold’em, not least because 'the best heads-up player in the world can’t beat the best computer right now.' But May himself, once heralded as ‘The Voice of Poker,’ won’t be expecting to return to the commentary booth.

“You’ve got guys like Nick Schulman and Ali Najed, who are a great team; they’re so clever and great personalities. The whole thing about televised poker is that it needs to evolve to keep people interested.”

Poker

Maybe TV poker has evolved in the last nine years, and commentary with it. May feels like he was always watching - and commentating - as a fan.

Premier Poker League 4 Piece

“My style of commentary would be more what you’d call railing - sitting there and appreciating it. That was what I liked best about the Premier League - it felt like it was an evolving part of the game.”

There can be no doubt that Premier League Poker pushed the format into prominence in a way that league format poker hadn’t achieved before. It would continue in that direction for its remaining seasons.

“Every Premier League after that, we started getting the game theory onto the screen in a deeper way. In the later years, we really started to get the cream of the crop, with Dwan, Selbst and Seiver - real top of the tree players. But I’ll always love the line up in Season Four.”

Premier Poker League Season 7

Whether league format poker will return is a tough question to answer. But Premier League Poker Season Four, for many participants and viewers, will go down as one of the most epic forays into the televised league poker format.

Premier League Poker Season 5

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    Premier League PokerpartypokerDavid BenyamineLuke Schwartz
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    David BenyamineLuke Schwartz