Sunday, May 31, 2009

LeSORE Loser...


It's easy for someone to celebrate after winning, but it takes a bigger man to accept defeat. “King James” sure knows how to rejoice after a big win, but apparently he still hasn’t learned how to accept defeat after he loses.


From the Cleveland Plain Dealer:

LeBron James slipped on a baseball cap, shoved his golden earphones over his ears to block out any noise, and walked out of the visitors' locker room at Amway Arena.

Past the outstretched hands offering him the Game 6 box score that summarized the 103-90 loss to the Orlando Magic.

Past the media that tried to ask him about his 25 points on 8-for-20 shooting, his lowest offensive output of this Eastern Conference finals.

He walked straight to the Cavaliers team bus without offering his insight to the end of the best regular season in franchise history, the team with the league's Most Valuable Player, the Coach of the Year and so much promise.

It was much like the way James walked straight off the court Saturday when the final buzzer sounded without offering a single handshake of congratulations to any Magic players as confetti fell.


We have all been in that situation where you are mad and don’t want to talk to anyone, but this is poor sportsmanship. If he doesn’t want to talk to the media, then fine, (Even though every other player and team that has been eliminated had to do it) but to not go over and at least shake Dwight Howard’s hand? That is classless.


As LeBron James, you have to be bigger than that.


Hopefully the LeBron hype will die down for a little bit now, even though I did love the puppet commercials. It probably won’t though...most likely just fan the flame of what will happen in 2010.


Saturday, May 30, 2009

The Puppets Continue

I think this might be one of my favorites so far

Friday, May 29, 2009

Caucasian

This video is HILARIOUS!

2009 World Series of Poker...What You Need to Know


I felt like I haven’t showed enough love to my poker fans out there, so I hope this makes up for it.


2009 40th ANNUAL WORLD SERIES OF POKER

(Presented by Jack Link's Beef Jerky)

Rio Hotel & Casino - Las Vegas, Nevada

May 26 - July 15, 2009

(Coverage on ESPN beginning July 28)

Compiled by Matt Willis and Pete Newmann


DEFENDING MAIN EVENT CHAMPION

Peter Eastgate (youngest Main Event winner in WSOP history)



TOP THINGS TO KNOW

1. The 40th annual World Series of Poker will start May 26 in Las Vegas, and will finish with the $10,000 buy-in Main Event beginning on July 3rd. For the 2nd straight year, the final 9 players will return in November to crown a Main Event champion. The 2009 WSOP will feature 57 events in a variety of games, with the winner receiving a bracelet. 54 of which are "open" events, meaning anyone can enter. There will be 10 World Championship events and the $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. Championship. The $50,000 event is also known as the Players' Championship and will feature the high-rollers playing 5 different games.


2. Last year, Peter Eastgate became the youngest Main Event champion in WSOP history and made nearly $9.2 million. That puts him 2nd all-time on the WSOP money list, behind only Jamie Gold, the 2006 Main Event champion. Nobody has won back-to-back Main Event titles since Johnny Chan in 1987-88. Eastgate is also the 3rd foreign-born winner in the last 4 years.


3. Despite the large number of players that come to the WSOP, in each of the last 5 years at least one player has defied the odds and won multiple bracelets. Last year it was John Phan who won two bracelets, but he finished 4th in the Player of the Year race, behind winner Erick Lindgren.


4. After peaking at 8,773 entrants and a $12M 1st-place prize in 2006, numbers dipped in the 2007 WSOP. But despite the state of the economy, the number of entrants grew from 6,358 in the 2007 Main Event to 6,844 in 2008, pushing the winner's share of the purse back over $9 million.


5. But the Main Event isn't all that's going on at the 2009 WSOP. Erick Lindgren will try to defend his 2008 Player of the Year title, and Johnny Chan and Doyle Brunson will both try to match Phil Hellmuth's record of 11 WSOP bracelets. With extra events this year, a player could also match Nikolay Evdakov's record of 10 cashes, set last year.



TOP THINGS TO KNOW NOTES & GRAPHICS

1. The 40th annual World Series of Poker will start May 26 in Las Vegas, and will finish with the $10,000 buy-in Main Event beginning on July 3rd. For the 2nd straight year, the final 9 players will return in November to crown a Main Event champion. The 2009 WSOP will feature 57 events in a variety of games, with the winner receiving a bracelet. 54 of which are "open" events, meaning anyone can enter. There will be 10 World Championship events and the $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. Championship. The $50,000 event is also known as the Players' Championship and will feature the high-rollers playing 5 different games.


2008 WSOP Main Event

Final Table- Winnings

1st- Peter Eastgate: $9.2M

2nd- Ivan Demidov: $5.8M

3rd- Dennis Phillips: $4.5M

4th- Ylon Schwartz: $3.8M

5th- Scott Montgomery: $3.1M

6th- Darus Suharto: $2.4M

7th- David Rheem: $1.8M

8th- Kelly Kim: $1.3M

9th- Craig Marquis: $900K


2. Last year, Peter Eastgate became the youngest Main Event champion in WSOP history and made nearly $9.2 million. That puts him 2nd all-time on the WSOP money list, behind only Jamie Gold, the 2006 Main Event champion. Nobody has won back-to-back Main Event titles since Johnny Chan in 1987-88. Eastgate is also the 3rd foreign-born winner in the last 4 years.


3. Despite the large number of players that come to the WSOP, in each of the last 5 years at least one player has defied the odds and won multiple bracelets. Last year it was John Phan who won two bracelets, but he finished 4th in the Player of the Year race, behind winner Erick Lindgren.


Won Multiple Bracelets in a Year

WSOP Since 2004

2008- John Phan: 2

2007- Tom Schneider: 2

2006- William Chen: 2

2006- Jeff Madsen: 2

2005- Mark Seif: 2

2004- Scott Fischman: 2

2004- Ted Forrest: 2


Most Bracelets Won- In Single WSOP

2002: Phil Ivey- 3

1993: Ted Forrest- 3

1993: Phil Hellmuth- 3

1973: Walter "Puggy" Pearson- 3


4. After peaking at 8,773 entrants and a $12M 1st-place prize in 2006, numbers dipped in the 2007 WSOP. But despite the state of the economy, the number of entrants grew from 6,358 in the 2007 Main Event to 6,844 in 2008, pushing the winner's share of the purse back over $9 million.


5. But the Main Event isn't all that's going on at the 2009 WSOP. Johnny Chan and Doyle Brunson will both try to match Phil Hellmuth's record of 11 WSOP bracelets. With extra events this year, a player could also match Nikolay Evdakov's record of 10 cashes, set last year. And after Erick Lindgren won a bracelet last year, the debate will restart as to who is the best player to never win a bracelet.


Most Bracelets- WSOP History

Phil Hellmuth: 11

Doyle Brunson: 10

Johnny Chan: 10

Johnny Moss: 9