Posts Tagged ‘Full Tilt Poker’

Full Tilt Poker Suspends Brian Townsend For Cheating/Colluding

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

Brian Townsend, Cole South and Brian Hastings have been accused of colluding to cheat Isildur1 out of millions of dollars. The allegations began surfacing soon after Brian Hastings won $4.2 million in one day while playing Isildur1 online at Full Tilt.

According to an interview with ESPN.com, the three players worked together to analyze and find weaknesses in Isildur1′s game.

“Honestly, I give most of the credit to Brian Townsend here. I mean, Brian is honestly the hardest worker I know in poker,” Hastings told ESPN.

“He analyzed a database of heads-up hands that Isildur1 had played and constructed ranges of what Isildur1 was doing in certain spots. The three of us discussed a ton of hands and the reports that Brian made, so I’m very thankful to him and to Cole as well.”

According to Full Tilt’s terms and conditions, sharing hands and information on opposing players is illegal.

Full Tilt Poker defines an unfair advantage as a user accessing or compiling information on other players beyond that which the user has personally observed through his or her own game play” (from item #8 of the Full Tilt T&C).

Townsend has said he will take complete responsibility for the infraction, and explained in his blog exactly what the infraction consisted of.

“I had about 20k hands of play on Isildur and I acquired another 30k hands” wrote Townsend.

“Of the three I was the sole one to break the T&C of Full Tilt. The three of us never shared hands where mucked hands were shown besides a few hands I posted on weaktight.org, and in fact all the information I received could be taken from watching the game.”

Townsend combined his own showdown hand histories with another 30,000 hands from South and Hastings to run reports on Isildur1′s game. They then had a detailed strategic discussion which led directly to Hastings having the succesful session he had.

“At that level, to be successful, you really have to take advantage of the little things,” Hastings told ESPN. “They can help make the difference. That’s why [analysis and discussion] is so important.”

The breach of Full Tilt’s Terms and Conditions is considered a relatively small infraction. It is believed that a majority of serious online players are assumed to commit daily using software or websites to acquire or view hand histories from hands they were not specifically a part of.

As a result, Full Tilt has decided to suspend Townsend’s Red Pro status on their site for a period of 30 days. It is assumed that during this suspension Townsend will no longer receive any of the benefits or rewards from being a Red Pro, potentially costing the online pro thousands of dollars.

Townsend does deny all allegations of colluding, ghosting and multi-accounting.

“Cole, Hastings and I live about 3000 miles from each other,” he wrote. “I have never played on Brian H’s or Cole S’s account.

“I analyzed the database I put together, and the three of us chatted about my analysis, and optimal strategy against Isildur,” he wrote. “Any discussion we had occurred away from the table when we were not playing a session.”

Townsend was suspended previously by Full Tilt in 2008 for six months after he admitted to moving down in stakes and playing under a secondary username – “Stellarnebula”.

It is against the site’s terms and conditions to have more than one active account at any time.

At the time this article was written, Townsend ($1.5 mil), South ($210k) and Hastings ($3.8 mil) have taken a combined total of over $5.6 million from Isildur1.

As a result, Isildur1 currently sits with over $2.6 million in losses on the year, and appears to have either lost his bankroll or his spirit. The Swede’s last session came Sunday, resulting in a $25k loss from games as low as $10/$20 Pot-Limit Omaha.

You can track your opponents hands online, legally, by using Online Poker Tracking Software.

Rush Poker – Revolutionary New Poker Format Released at Full Tilt Poker

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

The evolution of poker is here. Rush Poker is the world’s fastest poker game, designed to minimize the wait between hands – and it’s only available at Full Tilt Poker.

Unlike a standard ring game, when you play Rush Poker you will join a large player pool and face a different table of opponents every hand. When you fold, you will immediately be moved to a new table for your next hand. To play even faster, there is the Quick Fold button to fold hands right away – even if it’s not the player’s turn to act.

Rush Poker at Full Tilt

Be warned: Rush Poker is the most intense poker experience in the world.

Isuldur1 and Patrick Antonius Play for Largest Pot in the History of Online Poker

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

Over the past couple of weeks a player known as Isildur1 has been causing quite the buzz playing huge stakes online at Full Tilt Poker. Not only is he playing huge stakes but is also competing against some of the best poker players in the world.

I have watched Isildur1 play against top notch pros including Phil Ivey, Patrik Antonius, David Benyamine, Tom Dwan and Ilari Sahamies. No one quite knows exactly who Isildur1 is but I have heard some rumors that it may be Victor Blom, a 20 year old pro player from Sweden.

Some of the biggest pots have occured when Tom “durrrr” Dwan and Isildur1 have faced off to play heads-up at the $500/$1000 No Limit Holdem deepstack tables on Full Tilt Poker. It was reported that Dwan lost over $2.3 million over a few days while playing huge stakes versus Isildur1.

Phil Ivey has been playing heads up versus Isildur1 recently and has been doing much better than Dwan has done recently. I saw Ivey win a $250,000 pot playing heads up No Limit Holdem versus Isildur1. Ivey had over $900,000 at one table the other day and seems to be handling Isildur1 quite well.

But, the largest pot in online poker history took place when Patrik Antonius and Isildur1 played heads up Pot Limit Omaha. Patrick ended up winning a pot worth over $1.35 million.

Here is the details of the hand:

Patrik Antonius (BB): $1259450.25
Isildur1 (BTN/SB): $678473.50

Pre Flop: ($1500.00)
Isildur1 raises to $3000, Patrik Antonius raises to $9000, Isildur1 raises to $27000, Patrik Antonius raises to $81000, Isildur1 requests TIME, Isildur1 calls $54000

Flop: ($162000.00) 4 5 2 (2 players)
Patrik Antonius requests TIME, Patrik Antonius bets $91000, Isildur1 requests TIME, Isildur1 raises to $435000, Patrik Antonius raises to $779000, Isildur1 calls $162473.50 all in

Turn: ($1356947.00) 5 (2 players – 1 is all in)

River: ($1356947.00) 9 (2 players – 1 is all in)

Final Pot: $1356947.00
Patrik Antonius shows A 3 K K (a straight, Five high)
Isildur1 shows 6 9 7 8 (two pair, Nines and Fives)
Patrik Antonius wins $1356946.50
(Rake: $0.50)