Negreanu Twitter

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  1. Franny Negreanu Twitter

Negreanu slammed the last $25K in and Polk snapped with for trips, revealing Negreanu's bluff. Negreanu got a big chunk back when he three-bet jacks, faced a four-bet and got it all in for about $52K. Doug Polk has taken more than $1 million off Daniel Negreanu in their poker challenge match. Polk won $298,984.93 on Wednesday to push his lead to $1,002,595.59 in their heads-up No-limit Hold. Negreanu won about $27,000 in their first match of the second half on Jan. He continued the heater by winning $98,579 on Jan. 6, $27,945 on Jan. 8, and $132,648 last Monday.

303.8k Followers, 220 Following, 1,191 Posts - See Instagram photos and videos from Daniel Negreanu (@dnegspoker).

08:48
29 Apr

The Shaun Deeb/Daniel Negreanu verbal boxing match on Twitter has gone into overdrive, with DNegs stating of Deeb:

'I don't trust you not to angle shoot. Nor do I trust that you won't cheat.'

This week's falling out – far from the first between the pair – resulted from Deeb's recent ‘Markup police' hatchet job on the likes of Allen Chainsaw Kessler and TwitchTV poker streamer Johnnie Vibes, as we reported previously.

Sa lotto results 2020. Daniel's defence of Kessler led to a protracted exchange of tweets, resulting in the PokerStars man stating: 1879 silver dollar value today.

'Your goal here is abusing and bullying people. Cause it's who you are dude.'

Deeb, one of the most-talented but least-liked pros in the game, was quick to fire back…


…which brings us back full circle to Negreanu's tweet at the beginning of this article.

DNegs posted a couple of angle-shoot stories to back up his claims…


…and then the fight descended even further into name-calling, with Negreanu harking back to their previous bout of verbal fisticuffs, in which Deeb appeared to wish a divorce upon Negreanu, newly-engaged to Amanda Leatherman at the time.


With the duelling pros reaching an all-time low in their feud, in stepped the ‘referee' to prise the pair apart…


…with Brandon Shack-Harris as one of the few voices of reason…


With the WSOP still a good few weeks away, there's still time for the players to put their differences aside before they potentially meet across the felt, but there are precious few people who would bet on that happening.

Dan negreanu twitter

Just before the holiday season started, Daniel Negreanu and Doug Polk reached the halfway point of their 25,000-hand $200-$400 no-limit hold 'em heads-up grudge match.

Negreanu was down about $770,000 over the first 12,500 hands. Per the pre-match agreement, the player who was losing at that point had the option to quit. On New Year's Day, the six-time World Series of Poker bracelet winner announced that the match would be played to its completion.

It's Jan 1st 2021 and we have reached the halfway point of the challenge having played 12,500 hands.
As agreed upon in the rules I have the option to quit.
That is not going to happen.
The second half resumes Monday, Jan 4th 2:30pm

— Daniel Negreanu (@RealKidPoker) January 1, 2021

The duo played their first session since Dec. 23 Monday and Negreanu put a small dent in Polk's lead, winning slightly more than $27,000 over 500 hands and about three hours of play.

With his win, Negreanu is down a total of $743,248 over the 13,000 hands. In a post-game interview on the GGPoker YouTube channel, Negreanu said that he is looking to just chip away at the amount a little at a time.

'With a long-term goal, there are little checkpoints to see whether you're on track or not,' said Negreanu. 'Whether that is weight loss or whatever. I always believed in setting a big goal with smaller ones withing it. So I looked at the situation, down about 19 buy-ins at the haflway point… Let's say we are playing 500-hand sessions. If I win one buy-in per session, we win. Obviously it's not going to go like that though.'

Heading into the match, which started at the start of November with 200 hands of live poker, there was speculation over how Negreanu would fare against Polk's extensive experience with solvers and high-stakes heads-up poker in general.

In many ways, it was being considered as a battle between exploitative play versus game theory optimal. Obviously, as Negreanu was open about working with solvers himself and hiring a team of coaches to help him improve, that narrative faded away. But the Canadian said that he had begun to notice a shift in Polk's play, which may hint at Polk using some exploitative strategies of his own.

'A lot of the stuff he was doing in the early sessions, like in the first month, he doesn't really do as much as he did,' said Negreanu. 'There was a constant barrage where he was betting one and half [times the pot] on turn and then three times [the size of the pot] on the river. Either A.) he ran into a whole bunch of those spots early or b.) he's made a conscious decision to use that strategy less often… There's a couple other subtle things that I can't share, obviously.'

Raymer twitter

Just before the holiday season started, Daniel Negreanu and Doug Polk reached the halfway point of their 25,000-hand $200-$400 no-limit hold 'em heads-up grudge match.

Negreanu was down about $770,000 over the first 12,500 hands. Per the pre-match agreement, the player who was losing at that point had the option to quit. On New Year's Day, the six-time World Series of Poker bracelet winner announced that the match would be played to its completion.

It's Jan 1st 2021 and we have reached the halfway point of the challenge having played 12,500 hands.
As agreed upon in the rules I have the option to quit.
That is not going to happen.
The second half resumes Monday, Jan 4th 2:30pm

— Daniel Negreanu (@RealKidPoker) January 1, 2021

The duo played their first session since Dec. 23 Monday and Negreanu put a small dent in Polk's lead, winning slightly more than $27,000 over 500 hands and about three hours of play.

With his win, Negreanu is down a total of $743,248 over the 13,000 hands. In a post-game interview on the GGPoker YouTube channel, Negreanu said that he is looking to just chip away at the amount a little at a time.

'With a long-term goal, there are little checkpoints to see whether you're on track or not,' said Negreanu. 'Whether that is weight loss or whatever. I always believed in setting a big goal with smaller ones withing it. So I looked at the situation, down about 19 buy-ins at the haflway point… Let's say we are playing 500-hand sessions. If I win one buy-in per session, we win. Obviously it's not going to go like that though.'

Heading into the match, which started at the start of November with 200 hands of live poker, there was speculation over how Negreanu would fare against Polk's extensive experience with solvers and high-stakes heads-up poker in general.

In many ways, it was being considered as a battle between exploitative play versus game theory optimal. Obviously, as Negreanu was open about working with solvers himself and hiring a team of coaches to help him improve, that narrative faded away. But the Canadian said that he had begun to notice a shift in Polk's play, which may hint at Polk using some exploitative strategies of his own.

'A lot of the stuff he was doing in the early sessions, like in the first month, he doesn't really do as much as he did,' said Negreanu. 'There was a constant barrage where he was betting one and half [times the pot] on turn and then three times [the size of the pot] on the river. Either A.) he ran into a whole bunch of those spots early or b.) he's made a conscious decision to use that strategy less often… There's a couple other subtle things that I can't share, obviously.'

The two are scheduled to play two more times this week on Wednesday and Friday. It appears as though they will play three times a week until the challenge is completed. Assuming 500-hand sessions, the match will be completed by mid-March.

Franny Negreanu Twitter

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