Top 10 Online Poker Stories of 2007 (1 of 2)
Must be the holidays. Found myself watching part of the “Top 25 Most Memorable Swimsuit Moments” on E! last night -- shouldn’t Wicked Chops be all over that one? -- when I remembered ’tis the season for these sort of year-end countdown lists. Decided I would go ahead and add at least one of my own to the slag heap. (Yeah, that “at least” is a threat. Have an idea for one other list which I may or may not get to before the month is up. Depends on my energy level during the holidays. And whether I can manage to avoid further E! specials.)Was looking back through some old posts and initially thought I might compile a “top poker stories of 2007”-type list. Decided instead to narrow the scope a bit and just talk about stories of particular interest to players of online poker. After a bit of fuss I finally was able to isolate ten such items about which I wrote at least one post this year, and so am presenting them in reverse order of significance -- the bottom five today, top five tomorrow.
Please note that the process of selection followed here was utterly arbitrary and thus should be understood accordingly. Among the criteria I used to determine which items made the list was that I had to have written a post about the subject. Since I didn’t write about every damn thing that happened in online poker, we’re looking at a necessarily subjective enterprise here. In other words, the stories making this particular top ten all caught the interest of yours truly, an average jingle-brained sap who plays online poker. Not only are the rankings disputable, then, but the list itself is incomplete (e.g., no mentions here of Annette Obrestad playing MTTs without seeing her hole cards, the United States’ multibillion-dollar-battle with the World Trade Organization, or Mark “TheVOid” Teltscher losing $1.2 million for multi-accounting in the WCOOP, etc.).
Beginning, then, at the end . . .
10. Humans Triumph in “First Man-Machine Poker Championship”
Relatively speaking, the story might well represent a smallish blip on the online poker landscape. But the research being conducted in the area of artificial intelligence will have its implications, perhaps sooner than later. As Jonathan Schaeffer, leader of the Computer Poker Research Group, stated in a PokerNews article about the match, “One of these days -- within 5 to 10 years -- two-person, limit Hold ’em will be solved.” Don’t believe it is overstating the case all that much to say the achievement of such a goal should have some affect on the online poker landscape.
9. Tony G Poker & Doyle’s Room Leave the U.S.
Of course, Doyle’s Room made a somewhat surprising return to the U.S. back in October. One would hope a list like this twelve months from now would contain other stories of online sites returning to the U.S. market, but something tells me that probably ain’t gonna be the case.
8. Harrah’s Says No to WSOP Third-Party Registrations
As we neared the start of this year’s WSOP, I wrote a post back in May about the rule in which I editorialized a bit about how fewer online qualifiers might affect the quality of play at the WSOP.
7. Chris Vaughn-Sorel Mizzi Account-Purchasing Scandal
First mentioned the story here, then ended up commenting on it again a couple more times -- once in response to a discussion on Beyond the Table about the scandal, then in another post written after hearing more talk about it on PokerRoad Radio. Speaking of poker podcasts, Tim Peters (of Literature and Poker) made a good point earlier this week in a post where he remarked on how the Pocket Fives podcast has somehow neglected (thus far) to mention this huge story for online poker.
6. Bots on Full Tilt Poker
Come back tomorrow for the top five.
Labels: *the rumble













2 Comments:
Great idea for a post. Can't wait until tomorrow!
I agree with Karridy! Great post.
Oh...could the number one item be you and I winning are tokens for AIPS??? I guess I'll have to wait for tomorrow. Christmas is coming early in blogland!
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