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The Poker After Dark format featured an "intimate look at one table as it develops over the week." [2] Blinds start at $100/$200 and slowly escalate.Commentator Ali Nejad's commentary is limited, allowing viewers to hear much of the table talk among the players, all of whom are mic'ed. [2] (The table talk occasionally reveals that the "week-long" series is taped in one long session.)
Hellmuth won his first Poker After Dark tournament in the first episode of the third season, winning $120,000. [47] Hellmuth returned two weeks later and claimed his second Poker After Dark title, winning another $120,000. [48] Hellmuth is the Season 3 champion of Late Night Poker. [49] In 2000, he won the Poker EM 7-Card Stud Main Event in ...
This category is for people who have won tournaments in the Poker After Dark television series. It only includes the tournament episodes of the show which has a determined winner and does not include the show's cash game episodes.
Laak was a winner of NBC's Poker After Dark, earning the weekly prize of $120,000. The tournament was titled "Phil Phil" because both Phil Laak and Phil Hellmuth were contenders. Apart from Laak and Hellmuth the table consisted of Doyle Brunson, Antonio Esfandiari, Jennifer Harman, and Erik Seidel. [12]
Harman has appeared on the GSN series High Stakes Poker and on the NBC series Poker After Dark, where she won Week 8's tournament. [11] In 2007, Harman finished as runner-up in the inaugural World Series of Poker Europe, where she lost in the HORSE event to Thomas Bihl. [12] Harman was also a member of "Team Full Tilt" at Full Tilt Poker.
Despite being a 77%-23% favorite, Patrik won only the last of the three times, as Jamie hit a full house on the first two. At the time, it was the largest pot ever on High Stakes Poker. Antonius has since lost a pot of almost $600,000 to Tom Dwan on an episode of the Poker After Dark high-stakes cash game. Tom straddled the hand to $1,200 and ...
In 2017, he began appearing regularly on live poker shows including Live at the Bike hosted in The Bicycle Hotel & Casino in California and has appeared on the reboot of Poker After Dark. One of his most notable hands was against professional poker player Matt Berkey in the November broadcast of Poker After Dark for $459,000.
He used the term on Poker After Dark, apparently after his friends teased him about the hand, no further explanation given. [51] However, Esfandiari also used the term on the commentary track of the World Poker Tour Season 2 DVD set, so the term dates back to at least 2004. 96 The Dirty: 69, sexual reference [8] Big Lick