Paul Phua & Phil Ivey: “When you’ve played so much, it’s difficult to get a huge thrill”

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 10 вер 2024
  • The latest in the new series of Paul Phua Poker School videos is a revealing interview with a true poker great, Phil Ivey. Paul Phua, who talks with him in the video, picks out the highlights.
    View part two of this video here: • Phil Ivey & Paul Phua:...
    Phil Ivey, the subject of this new Paul Phua Poker School video interview, is definitely one of the all-time poker greats. He has ten World Series of Poker bracelets to his name, having won the first when he was just 23. He has more than $20 million in live tournament earnings, even though he spends most of his time playing cash at high stakes.
    WHAT MAKES A GOOD PLAYER?
    Phil Ivey: It’s like in any sport or anything where anyone’s at a top level and they have to practise and put in the time and really analyse everything that they are doing. So it’s just like anything else, you know, basketball, golf or soccer. I mean, all the best players, they’re the ones that are putting in the work and practising the most.
    Paul Phua: You find those successful ones, you know, the top players, they really put in a lot of hours to improve their games. To analyse what they've done wrong in certain hands, those are the traits of good players. You know, they never stop improving.
    DO YOU STILL ENJOY PLAYING?
    Phil Ivey: It’s like when you’ve played so much and you’ve played for so many years, it’s really difficult to get a huge thrill. I mean, of course, if you’re beating someone that you’re close with, whatever, you beat them in a nice big pot, it’s kind of fun. Like if I beat Paul and it’s a big pot it’s kind of fun, or if he beats me and it’s a big pot it’s like ‘Ah-ha!’. But the actual thrill of like, ‘wow I’m betting a lot of money on it’, that’s not really there for me. I don’t really feel that. I haven’t felt that in quite some time, actually.
    I don’t feel like it’s a job because I enjoy playing poker. I enjoy sitting around playing cards. So I don’t look at it like I’m going to work, I don’t feel like that because I love doing what I do.
    Paul Phua: Some players you see after 6 or 7 years they begin to take a back seat, you know. They don’t play so many tournaments or cash games even. For me, I’ve been playing more like for 7 years. The sense of wanting to play is still there, but maybe not as much as in the beginning. You’d play any game, even $1 or $2 I’d play, you know, but not nowadays. Those days may be more about still learning the game, or to play more to improve, no matter what the stakes are.
    WHAT SHOULD PLAYERS DO WHEN THEY ARE LOSING?
    Phil Ivey: One thing about poker, unlike a lot of other sports, is that you are going to lose.
    There’s no way around it. You’re going to have bad days, there’s just no way around it. Sometimes you’re going to have bad weeks, I mean you have to get used to it. You have to get used to these swings and be sat there. All you can do is put in your best effort and play your best and do the best you can, and sometimes you just have to accept that you’re going to lose. You want to put your ego aside and just say, ‘You know what? I’m just not playing my best right now, it’s time to just take a walk.’
    Paul Phua: I think even more so with a short deck game. You can lose 7 or 8 flips in a row, you know, it’s not uncommon. Then you realise that maybe I should just quit and come back tomorrow.
    WHAT ARE THE CHALLENGES YOU FACE AT THE TOP OF THE GAME?
    Phil Ivey: Well, once you get to a certain level you are playing against the best players in the world. You know that’s what makes Paul so amazing is that he started off playing with some of the best players in the world, and now he is playing in games constantly with the best players in the world and he’s winning in those games. That really is just amazing that he’s figured out a way to win, and that’s difficult. Sometimes you may be the 3rd or 4th best player in the game, or 2nd best player in the game or whatever. You have to figure out ways to win, and that comes from being able to not play bad when you’re losing and being able to manage, and I think that’s the most important.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 27

  • @thomasl.8618
    @thomasl.8618 7 років тому +35

    I played with Paul back in 2008, really nice guy actually with great degen stories.

  • @phantompower
    @phantompower 7 років тому +52

    Paul Phua is actually a pretty cool guy.

  • @EricSmyth2Christ
    @EricSmyth2Christ 7 років тому +6

    That's a great thing he said at the end. It's better to have a strong and consistent B game. I usually play pretty solid compared to everyone else, but if I play for 6-10 hours, I quickly become worse than everyone else, even if they too have been playing 8 hours. I need to work on my C game, or learn to quick after a few hours.

  • @josephgeorge7385
    @josephgeorge7385 7 років тому +1

    Thanks for posting Paul very insightful

  • @greedmarks7478
    @greedmarks7478 5 років тому

    mr. Paul said something important here, so I need to go back to poker even tho I'm broke not only with bankroll, but also my personal account.

  • @TrondArneAusdal
    @TrondArneAusdal 7 років тому +2

    Super nice! Id love to play i Asia, Seems nice :-)

  • @MsDisperado
    @MsDisperado 7 років тому

    very nice video. thank you

  • @Thisisaweirdthing2makeusdo
    @Thisisaweirdthing2makeusdo 6 років тому

    Trueteller and rui cao both in this vid. I have never seen there faces before

  • @edifysalim5359
    @edifysalim5359 5 років тому

    swing is the hardest adversity in poker, have to believe in yourself unless you gotta be mind fuck by the game

  • @rambojohnj.6117
    @rambojohnj.6117 6 років тому +8

    Practice should make someone better at poker, but, unlike basketball, soccer or "normal" sports, though, poker still has that "luck" element that is completely out of your control.
    You could do everything right in a hand, and even though you are a 98% favorite, still lose.

  • @magiet12
    @magiet12 7 років тому +2

    short deck = 6+ holdem?

    • @tofighuseynov3449
      @tofighuseynov3449 7 років тому

      magiet12 no you play with half of the deck 26cards holdem

    • @magiet12
      @magiet12 7 років тому

      thx!

  • @JuJu916JuJu
    @JuJu916JuJu 5 років тому +1

    No, it just means you lost passion for the game. But then again ivey never really showed much emotion in poker to begin with

  • @SuperDangerousMouse
    @SuperDangerousMouse 6 років тому +1

    2:40 --- "I think even more so with a short deck game. You can lose 7 or 8 flips in a row, you know, it's not uncommon." Relative to a normal deck? or is a flip 50/50 in both cases? Perhaps what he perceives as a "flip" isn't a flip.

  • @jeffbrock1757
    @jeffbrock1757 7 років тому

    I practise all the time

  • @PedalTheGlobe
    @PedalTheGlobe 7 років тому +1

    Look at Phil's Klingon type forehead. Large frontal lobe=high logical reasoning.

    • @michaelforrester2658
      @michaelforrester2658 6 років тому +2

      PedalTheGlobe Vulcans would make good players, zero tilt. 😂

  • @jimmyj5768
    @jimmyj5768 7 років тому +6

    I've been playing opker awhile and never heard of these guys, so they must not be good

    • @Thisisaweirdthing2makeusdo
      @Thisisaweirdthing2makeusdo 6 років тому +7

      Clearly a troll

    • @diegoalvarado916
      @diegoalvarado916 6 років тому +7

      Yeah they are both small time guys. Just getting started

    • @johnkim8907
      @johnkim8907 6 років тому

      Jimmy J I never heard about you!

    • @louiearagon9663
      @louiearagon9663 6 років тому +2

      You obviously don't know what you're talking about especially since you can't even spell POKER correctly 🤔

    • @crazyeric2327
      @crazyeric2327 6 років тому

      Lol where you been playing poker? Didn't think they did trips to mars yet?

  • @spleeeen4it
    @spleeeen4it 6 років тому

    There is one reason rich poker got rich playing poker, it's because they are the luckiest, simple as that. Luck out weighs skill in poker, no skill involved in2 7 beating aa in a hand, it's the luck of the cards.