Sure, they will stack you with some random hand occasionally, but you have a positive edge every time you play them. Over time you will accumulate money and they will lose it, period all you need is to play as many hands as possible. Secondly, poker strategy never works in a vacuum. It is never a case of ‘do x for $$$ every time’. The Most Memorable Televised Poker Hand of All Time When you hear the words 'televised poker,' you probably think back to the early 2000s and recall either the WSOP broadcasts on ESPN or the World Poker Tour shows on the Travel Channel. The is the best possible hand you can get in standard five-card Poker is called a royal flush. This hand consists of an: ace, king, queen, jack and 10, all of the same suit. If you have a royal flush, you'll want to bet higher because this is a hard hand to beat. The highest valued poker hand and one that you are going to want to be dealt out to you when your fellow players all have high valued hands is the Royal Flush hand. The hand is simply made up of a set of five cards which are the Ace, King, Queen, Jack and Ten cards, and to be a Royal Flush they must all be in the same suit.
Was Chris Moneymaker’s legendary bluff versus Sammy Farha the best hand in World Series of Poker history? That’s what we’ll find out when it comes up against five others to find ‘the most memorable WSOP TV hand’ of all time…
The 50th Anniversary edition of the WSOP will feature a ‘First Fifty Honors’ gala held at the end of June, with a number of awards being voted on and handed out, including the title of ‘WSOP’s favorite bad boy’ – sure to be a hard-fought affair!
Back to Moneymaker, though, and ‘the bluff of the century’ as commentator Norman Chad termed it.
Moneymaker shoved his entire stack in the middle as the poker world watched on in awe – an all-in bluff heads-up that could have cost the hitherto unknown accountant his place in history.
The soon to be famous Tennessean, however, wasn’t quite so worried – telling The Las Vegas Review Journal:
“I never really thought he was going to call. I just thought he had, at best, one pair, and I didn’t think he would call with one pair”.
Despite Farha’s suspicion that his soon-to-be illustrious opponent had bricked the river - “You must have missed your flush draw, huh?” was Farha’s guess – he folded the best hand and would go on to lose out on the most-coveted gold bracelet of all.
The former accountant whose name became synonymous with the global rise of poker – both live and online given that he had satellited his way into the Main Event – won’t be a shoo-in for the new title.
With five other hands up for the honour – as well as a public vote which could boost that number of options for the online vote – it could be a close-run affair, but big Chris has a double shout at winning.
Have a look yourself and see which of the six would be the ultimate WSOP hand of poker!
Sammy Farha vs. Chris Moneymaker, 2003 WSOP Main Event
Chris Moneymaker vs. Phil Ivey, 2003 WSOP Main Event
Johnny Chan vs. Erik Seidel, 1988 WSOP Main Event final hand
Connor Drinan vs. Cary Katz, 2014 WSOP Big One for One Drop
Matt Affleck vs. Jonathan Duhamel, 2010 WSOP Main Event
Scotty Nguyen vs. Kevin McBride, 1998 WSOP Main Event final hand