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Iceberg ahead! This week our own PokerVoyeur continues his obsession with absurd coolers with this 5-handed, cold deck nightmare from the European Open III sponsored by, who else...Party Poker...An icy cold one at the European Open III.
Check out more of his other favorite poker videos here.
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"I have spent half my life trying to get away from journalism, but I am still mired in it -- a low trade and a habit worse than heroin, a strange, seedy world full of misfits and drunkards and failures." - Hunter S. Thompson, U.S. satirist
Journalism and poker have a lot in common.
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| Poker Tools |
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EValuator™
Many times in a poker session you face a difficult decision regarding whether to call a bet or fold your hand. Whether or not you decide to call should be based on your belief of the expected value of that decision. Unfortunately, managing all the variables of that decision – the pot amount, the pot odds, your hand, your opponent’s range of hands, your win percentages against those range of hands, the probability of the various holdings, etc., etc. – is often overwhelming.
Our exclusive EValuator™ helps you to determine the expected value (EV) of the call decision based on your estimate of your opponent’s possible range of hands. Click here to start using the EValuator now.

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| Famous Hands |
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The Final Hand from the 1995 World Series of Poker Championship Event
In 1995, Dan Harrington was sitting with 9d, 8d. Howard Goldfarb had Ah, 7c. Goldfarb raised pre-flop to $100,000 and Harrington called. The flop came 8c, 2c, 6d. Goldfarb decided to bluff by moving all-in after Harrington checked with top pair. Harrington called immediately as if he knew that Goldfarb moved in with nothing. The turn and river offered no help to Goldfarb and Harrington won the title and the $1,000,000 prize money.
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