When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. The Hendon Mob - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hendon_Mob

    The Hendon Mob is also a website that includes the biggest poker player database worldwide, that collects the results of every poker tournament in the world since 2000, indexed by location, date, and player. The origin of the information contained in the database was queried in a court action brought by rival website Pokerpages.com, and ...

  3. Global Poker Index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_poker_index

    The Global Poker Index uses data from the biggest poker database The Hendon Mob, known for collecting results of tournaments around the world and for being the reference in tournament results. They currently host results for over 325,000 poker tournaments.

  4. Barny Boatman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barny_Boatman

    Barny M. Boatman (born 10 January 1956 in St Pancras, London [3]) is an English professional poker player and the oldest member of the poker-playing foursome known as The Hendon Mob. He is the older brother of Ross Boatman, and resides in Archway. [4]

  5. Luke Schwartz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luke_Schwartz

    In recent times, he has taken on some of the biggest names in online poker such as Urindanger, durrrr, and Ziigmund, at the biggest stakes with some success. Luke Schwartz has played in the Party Poker Premier League [ 5 ] several times including Party Poker Premier League 4 where he finished second and won $200,000, beaten by David Benyamine .

  6. John Kabbaj - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Kabbaj

    Jean-Michel (John) Kabbaj (born 19 June 1973 in Birmingham, Warwickshire) is an English professional poker player, referred to by The Hendon Mob as their unofficial fifth member. Before poker [ edit ]

  7. Stephen Chidwick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Chidwick

    Chidwick had his first major poker cash in the 2008 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure with a victory in a $1,000 No Limit Hold'em event for $88,760. [2] He plays online under the alias "stevie444" and "TylersDad64" on various online poker cardrooms. [3] In 2009, Chidwick finished runner-up in the Full Tilt FTOPS Event #17 winning $142,155.30. [4]

  8. Sam Trickett - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_Trickett

    On 13 November 2011, Trickett won the Partouche Poker Tour Main Event in Cannes and won €1,000,000. [3] On 3 July 2012, Trickett placed second in the WSOP's Big One for One Drop, a US$1 million buy-in event that is now the highest buy-in tournament ever. [4] He won $10,112,001, making him Great Britain's all-time most successful poker player. [5]

  9. Robert Varkonyi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Varkonyi

    Varkonyi first started playing poker as an undergraduate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. [1] After his graduation in 1983 (with degrees in EECS and from the MIT Sloan School of Management), he was an investment banker in Brooklyn, New York for a number of years before beginning to play tournament poker. [citation needed]