Red Tooth Poker Tournament
Posted By admin On 15/04/22- Redtooth Poker Tournament Table
- Redtooth Poker Tournaments
- Redtooth Poker Tournament Schedule
- Redtooth Poker Tournament Rules
Join our poker tournaments. Our extensive satellite schedule means poker players of all experience levels can get access to the UK’s biggest live poker events, at a fraction of the normal buy-in. From the GUKPT and our nationwide 25/25 series, right up to the gargantuan Goliath Poker Tournament. We offer some of the biggest UK-only poker.
- Redtooth Poker Update. As everyone is aware Covid19 has massively affected all aspects of life. Unfortunately due to Grosvenor Casino’s being unable to host any external tournaments until January, we are now having to put steps in place to make cancellations to the RPT 2020 and amendments to outstanding events including National Finals and Regional Finals.
- Travis Poker Timer is a stand alone program that runs on your OS X or Windows computer. It manages your tournament game, organising players, calculating blinds, chips and prizes. Travis Poker Director is a poker league management system that integrates directly with the poker timer.
Redtooth, the UK-based pub poker operator, has seen turnover exceed £2 million, a jump of 20 percent according to Morning Advertiser, the pub trade weekly.
Redtooth Poker Tournament Table
Redtooth Poker Tournaments
The report says growth in live pub poker tournaments was 47 percent in 2009 with over 80,000 poker players now registered with the company.
Director of the company Steve Saul told the paper that, '… our live pub poker business [has] been a huge hit for licensees and their customers. We keep things simple for the operator and we keep customers in the pub for the evening.
“There’s been a lot of talk about food being the big focus for pubs but operators mustn’t overlook the fact that people also go to pubs to be entertained. We’re offering a cost effective solution to those quiet week nights.”
Redtooth Poker Tournament Schedule
Redtooth Poker Tournament Rules
Following on from my recent post about taking up live poker again, Chris and I headed to Alea last Sunday to play in a £15 freezeout tournament. The session started off with a little excitement as a colleague of mine from the AHS had just called in a panic to tell me she had missed her stop at Reading to change for Guildford and was almost in London. Now, to be fair, she hails from a land with no trains and where everyone has personal drivers so the whole public transport thing is a bit new to her, but it did mean that I started the night coming up with rail related jokes (and a little concern that she may end up travelling around the home counties for all eternity) rather than focusing on my game.
The first few hands were fairly tense affairs as a few players were in fold or shove mode despite us having relatively large starting stacks (10k with 25/50 blinds). I made some inroads early on and had trebled my starting stack by the first break by being quite aggressive and trying to force folds preflop or before the turn. I had to calm down after the break following a table move as the tournaments most aggressive player was sat to my left who was happy to shove all in with rags. Luckily for me, I managed to call his bluff when I hit my flush to his middle pair. This set me up nicely for my first live poker final table.
I started to play very defensively on the final table waiting for other players to knock each other out. Within an hour we were down to the final three, but with us all having even stacks we got bogged down in small pots and defensive plays. In the end I reraised a value bet with KQ suited and was not toally upset when they turned over A6. I flopped a straight and flush draw but they turned their Ace and it held. I was done in 3rd place for a £55 payout. Not bad for my first final table. Means my overall live career is in profit.