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Poker Nations Cup

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Poker tournament

The Poker Nations Cup is an international poker tournament, televised on Channel 4 from March 2006 onwards.

The series is commentated by Jesse May and Barny Boatman. Padraig Parkinson covered for Boatman in preliminary match 2.

The series was filmed in Cardiff, Wales. Thomas Kremser was the tournament director, and the dealers were Marina Kremser and Stevie Pollak.

The event in 2006 was sponsored by 888.com. In 2007 888.com has been replaced by Partypoker as main sponsors. The event will also be televised on Channel 4.

Format

Six nations compete in the series, with six members to each team. Each team has a captain and an internet qualifier.

The captain chooses one player from the six available to compete in each of the six preliminary tournaments (each player on the team plays once, and once only.)

Points are awarded for the finishing position of each player in each preliminary event. These points are totalled and used to calculate chips in the Grand Final. Points are awarded as follows:

  • 1st: 10 points
  • 2nd: 7 points
  • 3rd: 5 points
  • 4th: 3 points
  • 5th: 2 points
  • 6th: 1 point

Team captains can choose to substitute team members during the Grand Final, where the winning team receives $100,000.

(NB: As members of a nation's team never face other members of the same team, there is no possibility of collusion, as is possible in other team-format poker tournaments.)

Teams

NB: The flags within this article show the country the player is representing. e.g.: below Scott Gray is identified with the Irish flag as that is the country he is representing, despite Gray being born in Canada.

 Great Britain  Denmark  Germany
Dave Ulliott Martin Wendt Michael Keiner
Joe Beevers Christian Grundtvig Christoph Haller
Tony Bloom Theo Jørgensen Andreas Krause
Julian Gardner Rehne Pedersen Roland Specht
Ram Vaswani Jan Vang Sørensen Katja Thater
Scott Griffiths Anders Jensen Sebastian Zentgraf
 Ireland  Sweden  USA
Noel Furlong Ken Lennaárd Robert Williamson III
Don Fagan Ayhan Alsancak Andy Bloch
Scott Gray Fuat Can Clonie Gowen
Rory Liffey Erik Sagström Thomas Keller
Padraig Parkinson Bengt Sonnert Kathy Liebert
Mahala Maria Roche Jens Lekström Gregory Jennison

: denotes Team Captain
: denotes online qualifier

Results

Preliminary rounds

Event Winner Runner-up Remainder finishing order
Preliminary match 1 Denmark Theo Jørgensen Republic of Ireland Padraig Parkinson
  • United States Andy Bloch
  • United Kingdom Scott Griffiths
  • Sweden Erik Sagström
  • Germany Christoph Haller
Preliminary match 2 Sweden Jens Lekström United States Gregory Jennison
  • Republic of Ireland Scott Gray
  • Denmark Anders Jensen
  • Germany Sebastian Zentgraf
  • United Kingdom Dave Ulliott
Preliminary match 3 Republic of Ireland Mahala Maria Roche Germany Katja Thater
  • Denmark Christian Grundtvig
  • United States Thomas Keller
  • United Kingdom Tony Bloom
  • Sweden Fuat Can
Preliminary match 4 Germany Roland Specht Denmark Rehne Pedersen
  • United States Robert Williamson III
  • Sweden Ken Lennaárd
  • United Kingdom Julian Gardner
  • Republic of Ireland Rory Liffey
Preliminary match 5 United Kingdom Joe Beevers Republic of Ireland Don Fagan
  • United States Clonie Gowen
  • Germany Andreas Krause
  • Sweden Bengt Sonnert
  • Denmark Martin Wendt
Preliminary match 6 United Kingdom Ram Vaswani United States Kathy Liebert
  • Denmark Jan Vang Sørensen
  • Sweden Ayhan Alsancak
  • Republic of Ireland Noel Furlong
  • Germany Michael Keiner

Grand Final

Team captains chose three players to compete in the Grand Final. Only one player started, who then had to be substituted by the end of the third level. The second player had to be substituted for the third player at the end of the sixth level. Blind levels ran twice as long as in the preliminary heats.

Team captains were also entitled to call a 60-second time-out with any player in their team once per game.

The Grand Final's television broadcast spanned over two episodes.

Starting Lineup First Players after 1st substitutions Players after 2nd substitutions
Denmark Rehne Pedersen Denmark Christian Grundtvig Denmark Theo Jørgensen
United Kingdom Joe Beevers United Kingdom Ram Vaswani United Kingdom Dave Ulliott
Germany Katja Thater Germany Roland Specht Germany Michael Keiner
Republic of Ireland Scott Gray Republic of Ireland Padraig Parkinson Republic of Ireland Don Fagan
Sweden Ken Lennaárd Sweden Bengt Sonnert N/A
United States Andy Bloch United States Kathy Liebert United States Robert Williamson III

2007 Event

The 2007 event aired in March 2007 featuring teams representing Great Britain, USA, Germany, Sweden, Denmark and the Netherlands with the winning team receiving $100,000 prize money.

External links

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