David Burke Poker

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Palm Beach County- Venues- Hurricane Bar Lounge Hurricane Bar Lounge. 7PM START Tuesdays 7pm, 9:30pm & 11:00pm. Top Chef Duels is an American reality competition series which premiered on August 6, 2014, on Bravo. The culinary show is one of the several spin-off series of the popular cooking competition show Top Chef aired on the same network.

Top Chef Duels
Genre
Presented byCurtis Stone
Judges
  • Curtis Stone
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes10
Production
Executive producers
Camera setupMultiple
Running time42 minutes
Production companies
  • Magical Elves
Release
Original networkBravo
Picture format480i (SDTV)
1080i (HDTV)
Original releaseAugust 6 –
October 8, 2014
External links
Website

Top Chef Duels is an American reality competition series which premiered on August 6, 2014, on Bravo.[1] The culinary show is one of the several spin-off series of the popular cooking competition show Top Chef aired on the same network.[2] Announced in January 2014 as Top Chef Extreme,[3] the series features eighteen contestants who have previously competed in Top Chef and Top Chef Masters.[1] During each episode, two of the contestants face each other in various culinary tasks. The winner is picked at the end of an episode to compete in the championship finale. The series is hosted by Curtis Stone. Besides hosting, Stone is also a judge together with Gail Simmons, while Wolfgang Puck, Hugh Acheson and other celebrity guest judges make numerous appearances throughout the series.[1]

CJ Jacobson won the series and was awarded $100,000, and an opportunity to appear on the Food & Wine magazine.[4]

Episodes[edit]

Winners are listed in bold
No.TitleOriginal air date
1'Richard Blais vs. Marcel Vigneron'August 6, 2014
Richard Blais (Top Chef: Chicago runner-up and Top Chef: All-Stars winner) vs. Marcel Vigneron (Top Chef: Los Angeles runner-up)
2'Shirley Chung vs. Brooke Williamson'August 13, 2014
Shirley Chung (Top Chef: New Orleans finalist) vs. Brooke Williamson (Top Chef: Seattle runner-up)
3'Mike Isabella vs. Antonia Lofaso'August 20, 2014
Mike Isabella (Top Chef: All-Stars runner-up) vs. Antonia Lofaso (Top Chef: Chicago finalist)
4'CJ Jacobson vs. Stefan Richter'August 27, 2014
CJ Jacobson (Top Chef: Miami contestant) vs. Stefan Richter (Top Chef: New York runner-up)
5'David Burke vs. Takashi Yagihashi'September 3, 2014
David Burke (Top Chef Masters season 5 contestant) vs. Takashi Yagihashi (Top Chef Masters season 4 contestant)
6'Dale Talde vs. Tiffani Faison'September 10, 2014
Tiffani Faison (Top Chef: San Francisco runner-up) vs. Dale Talde (Top Chef: Chicago and Top Chef: All-Stars contestant)
7'Jen Carroll vs. Nyesha Arrington'September 17, 2014
Nyesha Arrington (Top Chef: Texas contestant) vs. Jen Carroll (Top Chef: Las Vegas finalist)
8'Stephanie Izard vs. Kristen Kish'September 24, 2014
Stephanie Izard (Top Chef: Chicago winner) vs. Kristen Kish (Top Chef: Seattle winner)
9'Art Smith vs. Kevin Gillespie'October 1, 2014
Kevin Gillespie (Top Chef: Las Vegas fan favorite) vs. Art Smith (Top Chef Masters season 1 contestant)
10'Finale'October 8, 2014

David Burke Poker Player

Burke

References[edit]

David Burke Poker

  1. ^ abcKondolojy, Amanda (June 4, 2014). 'Bravo Media Expands Emmy Award-Winning Franchise With Premiere of 'Top Chef Duels' on Wednesday, August 6'. TV by the Numbers (Press release). Tribune Digital Ventures. Retrieved September 1, 2015.
  2. ^'Bravo Unveils 15 New Series, 3 Projects In Development, 16 Returning Series'. Deadline Hollywood (Press release). Penske Media Corporation. April 8, 2014. Retrieved June 6, 2015.
  3. ^Nededog, Jethro (January 16, 2014). 'Bravo Orders Spinoff 'Top Chef Extreme' to Series'. TheWrap. Retrieved September 1, 2015.
  4. ^Dehnart, Andy (October 9, 2014). ''Top Chef Duels' ends with a rapid-fire finale'. HitFix. Retrieved September 4, 2015.

External links[edit]

  • Top Chef Duels on IMDb
  • Top Chef Duels at TV Guide

David Burke Poker Game

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Top_Chef_Duels&oldid=966077844'

Quite often, when playing the major tournament circuit, you’ll find yourself with no chips at a final table despite recently having a decent shot at a title. When you go from having lots of equity to none, crazy things start happening in your mind. I’m going to let you into my world and enlighten you to what I do to stay sane when things go wrong when there is a lot of money on the line.

I had the pleasure of being in this situation twice at the Foxwoods World Poker Finals. I final tabled the $500 preliminary event, which had around 250 entrants. When we were down to six players, I got all-in with J-J vs. Q-J but lost to a turned Queen that send me to the rail, cashing for $5,888. All in all, it wasn’t a bad payday, but it was nowhere near what I wanted.

David Burke Poker Club

A few days later, I found myself playing eight-handed in the $10,000 World Poker Tour Main Event. I had around average chips and got all-in with K-K vs. A-J for a 60-big-blind pot, which, if I won, would have put me in great shape to make a deep run at the final table. Instead an Ace turned and I was down to 8 big blinds, which I quickly lost with a standard button push. I ended up cashing for around $54,000. In both situations, I went from having a ton of equity to only a small cash with the turn of a card. Despite cashing for around $60,000, I was unhappy with the result. While you cannot change the outcome of the cards, you can control your reactions to the results.

While you are still at the table, you must remain calm and collected, especially if you still have chips in front of you, as I did in the main event. It will do you no good to berate the players, the dealer or God. Doing so will only make you look like an idiot, which you just might be if you do such things. When you get all-in with 70% equity, you have to realize you are not going to win 100% of the time. When you get it in with 70% equity for all your chips, you are going to go broke 30% of the time. If this isn’t acceptable to you, poker probably should not be your game of choice.

After I bust in a spot where I am generally annoyed with the result, I make a point to make the rest of my day as great as possible. On both days, I went out to David Burke’s Prime, which is amazing. I had a glass of wine and a delicious dinner. I also watched a few hours of television on my iPad, which helped take my mind off the poker. When I busted from the main event, I had enough time to hit the gym and get a massage at the spa. While I’m pretty quick to get over losing a major event, most people would have a tough time remembering a bad run after a nice, relaxing evening.

It should be noted I think you should avoid playing poker or gambling in the casino after a major loss. Sure, you will occasionally win, but I would bet good money that on average, after busting from a major tournament when lots of money was on the line, the average player is a huge loser over the next 12 hours. The best course of action is to simply avoid gambling and find something else to occupy your time. While this may not be the most exciting way to spend your time, especially if you like being in action, it will save you significant money in the long run. Accept that this is part of tilt control you must master before considering yourself a great poker player, because poker is not played only on the felt.

David Burke Poker Rules

One final concept worth mentioning is you shouldn’t beat yourself up too hard when you bust in a bad way. I recently busted from a tournament where I know I played my bust out hand poorly. I simply did the math wrong at the table and came up with the wrong conclusion, causing me to bubble one of the biggest tournaments of the year. While I was definitely sad about the result, I made a point to learn from my mistake and move on.

Next time a similar situation arises, I will make the optimal decision, which is all that really matters. As long as you learn from your mistakes and don’t repeat them, busting, even in a fairly bad way, isn’t all that bad.
There will be many more tournaments in your future. Letting one bad day alter your mood for the next month will only make you miserable. Being miserable is the real disaster, because poker should be an activity that makes you happy and enriches your life.

Thank you for taking the time to read this blog post. If you enjoyed it, please share it with your friends. If you want to continue working on your poker skills, be sure to sign up for your free 7-day trial to my interactive training site, PokerCoaching.com.

David

Be sure to check back next week for another educational blog post. Thanks for reading!