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The Maven's Blog

 
17 Posts and 110 Comments
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March 2009 - Posts

  • Latest Update: The Maven

    By The Maven - Mar 26 2009, 10:15 PM

    I'll be representing Ari's Training  Center, one of four teams, this weekend in the Dream Team Poker Tournament.  It will be interesting to have tweleve of my top players here in Vegas all at the same time.  I originally contacted Daniel Negreanu with the intent of putting a PokerVT team together, but unfortunately he has other engagements.  All of that said, I'll be more than comfortable playing alongside a promising and marketable student, locoenlacabeza and one of my original mentors thelandlord1.  The tournament comes with an opening day cocktail party and should be an absolute shmooze-fest, which I'm looking forward to...


    I spent much of the week recording content and working on my online training site.  The site should be up and running in the next six months...should be state-of-the-art and a high quality product.  Monday night, we're scheduled to have a camera crew in the training center and I hope to have the video up on my website currently under construction.  I'm in the initial planning stages of doing a speaking tour at colleges up the west coast.  Myself and my team are considering renting an RV and traveling around college to college spreading the gospel of poker.


    Also, I did my first podcast with pocketfives.com today and really look forward to downloading and listening to it when it comes out...


    This is the last week of the Bluff Magazine Lock Poker challenge and it's trying times trying to beat SNO0OWMAN.  I had the pleasure to hang out and watch Brian "SNOOOO0OOOOWMAN" Hawkins play while traveling/training with Ari in Florida.  Brian was seven tabling $1500 HU SNG's at the time on a laptop on one of the beds of our hotel room.  Being so young and absolutely proficient at poker; I'll have to admit I was very impressed.  It's kind of funny because Ari and I sat down and specifically talked about how tough he would be in this competition once the list of competitors was announced.  I have the highest amount of respect for Brian as a person and as a player...it won't be a surprise to me when he signs a major sponsorship deal with one of the sites.  He's a performer and a producer and this is just the beginning of a world-class career.


    I'll try and keep you updated in the very near future with the latest that's going on in my neck of the woods.

    1 Comments on this post. Click here to post a comment.

  • More Than Meets the Eye

    By The Maven - Mar 19 2009, 08:07 PM

    I've spent the last couple of nights railing Ari.  He's on an unreal winning streak and I don't expect it to subside anytime soon.  The constant pressure, professionalism, outright aggression, and finesse is at the highest levels I've seen.  Ari's off to Atlantic City the next couple of nights to play in a deep stacked $1,500 event.

    On the student front...a student of mine chopped a $500 tournament at The Bellagio this week.  We're all gearing up for the Dream Team Poker Tournament being held at Caesar's Palace starting at the end of this month.  I'll be spending Passover in Texas with my family the first week of April...alongside traveling for another 12 days between Miami and New York (Brooklyn...Flatbush...11210!) where my mtt roots originally were spawned.

    I'm going to continue playing mtt's on Lock Poker throughout the month.  I recently won my first mtt on the site, a $10 multi with 85 entrants.  Started out heads up with a 3 to 1 ish deficit and went on to ground and pound out the win.  I really believe Lock Poker and the Cake Network have the easiest fields to beat compared with the other sites as a whole.  

    I'll be keeping everyone updated as to my plans and travels.  Wishing you all well.

    An interesting article about fighting paralleling well with the game of Poker, from the pages of the March 2009 edition of Inside Kung Fu, titled, More Than Meets The Eye:

    A friend who is taking jiu-jitsu asked me why it's not coming as easily to him as he expected. He was surprised that he still felt stuck in a position during his Gracie Combatives course. It felt like there was no way out. He wanted to know what he was missing; why couldn't he see the easy escape? I explained that it boils down to flying time. Being in that position enough times and experiencing that first-hand will allow you to be more sensitive with it, and then little by little before you know it, you see the opening, it is like playing chess; the more you play, the better you can read the adversary's mind.

    Over the years we've come across a lot of people with the attitude that they can use strength to power out of some of these moves. Although some people are so strong that they may be able to muscle their way out of some positions, we can not forget that the only reliable techniques are the ones that work without strength, because you could be the weaker of the two. Practice the correct techniques and they will work for you. Which is why, from the garage days until today, I still have a business where the weak become strong - the moves work.

    In time, as you gain experience, unless it's a locked-up finishing move, you should be able to figure out how to get out of any position. It may even require for you to just wait, especially if the opponent is holding too tight, because then chances are he can't do much, either. That is why it is important to focus on the relaxation aspect, so that you can "see" better without the stress of having to fight to survive. Gracie Jiu-Jitsu is so logical that if you have a problem and you work aat it, over and over, believe me you will develop the knowledge that will help solve the problem.You having a hard time is directly related to you not having enough experience to improvise.

    Many years ago, a student said to my father, " Master Helio, I want to have private lessons with you." My father asked, "Why"? "Because I roll with your sons and although they are only 14, 15, and 17 years old, they always do well against me. And I want you to train me so that I could beat those kids." And my father said to the student, "I'll be glad to teach you some classes and some techniques, but if I show you how to pass their guard today, if you try it again tonight, you probably will not succeed." Intrigued, he asked, "Why not?" "Because in spite of their young age, they have enough hardwired input in their brains that they can improvise faster than you."

    When I first started teaching ju-jitsu here in America in my garage, I had to convince a lot of other martial arts students and instructors by letting them put boxing gloves on and trying to hit me. They'd throw a punch and then, in a very friendly manner, I'd embrace the guy and take him to the ground. I'd do it again...a couple more times, and pretty soon they'd sa, "What the heck..." My opponent wouldn't know exactly what was going on but he saw the result. He couldn't touch me and I knew it was frustrating. What was I doing? Basically nothing. But I know the right time to get in, the right way to hook the leg, the right way to hold him down, how to stay mounted, when to squeeze my knees, when to spread my hands, and loosen up the hands, when to put the hand on the collar, how deep; there's all these little body movements that a person doesn't see. You don't see it, but it's there. There's much more than meets the eye.

    Rorion Gracie



    2 Comments on this post. Click here to post a comment.

  • The Maven...Update!!!

    By The Maven - Mar 12 2009, 05:08 PM

    As you may have already read, I've been competing in the Bluff Magazine Lock Poker Challenge this month.  It's been a tough grind, but I'm happy to say that I've doubled my initial bankroll of $200 and plan on increasing my profits throughout the month.  I have a handful of students at the house who've been watching and rooting me on, which I appreciate.

    I want to give a big shout-out to Shaun Deeb and Snooooooooowman for their great accomplishments thus far.  Feel free to keep tabs on all of us via www.lockpoker.com/challenge

    I'm also happy to announce that I've begun recording footage in creation of my own online training site.  Nothing is easy (or cheap), but with a couple of months of hard work...I'm more than confident that the site will be state-of-the-art and will help better spread my information/system throughout the poker world.  

    Poker Pro Magazine has a full page article on me in their March edition and I'll be featured on the front cover of next month's Bluff Magazine (for winning their 2008 Online Player of the Year Award).  Be sure to pick up the magazines at your local bookstore.  I also plan on playing in the Bluff Magazine Dream Team Poker Tournament at the end of this month...I'm trying my hardest to put together a team of players from PokerVT (along with four teams of students from Ari's Training Center).

    I'll try and keep you all updated in the near future.  I appreciate you reading my blog.  Take care and have a great week!  


    D


    7 Comments on this post. Click here to post a comment.

  • Lock Poker Bluff Challenge!!!

    By The Maven - Mar 03 2009, 06:45 AM

    Well, I'm off to the races in the Lock Poker Bluff Magazine Challenge.  Anyone that hasn't signed up for Lock Poker...I'm of the opinion that it's on the up and up, a dynamic new site on the Cake network...

    I'll be competing in the challenge all month and I'm very happy to be participating!  The field of players is literally second to none.  It will be interesting to see how it develops. 

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vgJr8Le5etk

    I'll include a quote from Donald Trump's book Think Big and Kick Ass:

    People always ask me, "How did you get so rich?"  The way I do things has allowed me to succeed financially far beyond what I had expected.  I have known many celebrities, billionaire businesspeople, and superstar sports figures.  It is not easy to explain in a couple of words, but I have noticed that all these successful people have traits that set them apart from the pack: their attitudes, actions, persistence, and passion, plus a whole slew of other qualities that separate the winners from the losers.

    To be successful you have to separate yourself from 98 percent of the rest of the world.  Sure, you can get into that special 2 percent at the top, and it is not just by being smart, working hard, and investing wisely.  There is a formula, a recipe for success that the top 2 percent live by and that you too can follow to be successful...







    1 Comments on this post. Click here to post a comment.

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