Donev Poker

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Few know how to truly compare and contrast the games of chess and poker like Ivo Donev, a World Series of Poker bracelet winner and International Master in chess.

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Donev, who hails from Austria, was one of 100 players to put up $50,000 to compete in the 2017 WSOP Poker Players Championship, an eight-game mix that pit some of the game’s deepest thinkers against each other over five days of action. Donev, who won his bracelet 17 years ago, ended up finishing fourth on Thursday for a score of $419,337. The event was won by high-stakes online poker pro Elior Scion of the United Kingdom for nearly $1.4 million.

The 57-year-old Donev has a chess rating of more than 2,300, making him one of the top players in the world. The only step up from International Master is Grandmaster.

Card Player had the chance to speak to Donev after he busted the Players Championship to talk about why he plays more poker than chess these days, as well as the limitations of comparing the two strategy games.

Brian Pempus: How did you feel at the final table?

Ivo Donev: It was a very strong final table. I’m a professional chess player; I’m an International Master. The eight-game mix is a strategy game like chess. I felt very good in the [Players Championship]. This tournament takes more skill than the no-limit hold’em main event. You have to change the gears in any game. You have to change your strategy.

BP: Poker has a significant amount of gambling in it. Can you compare it to chess?

ID: In chess, the luck is about three percent, while in poker it is 10 times more. Maybe 20-30 percent luck in poker. In one tournament, in the very beginning of the main event, the skill is 90 percent or more, but if the blinds get very high, the luck goes up and the skill goes down. In chess, the luck is only if you get a special variant in your defense or you draw a weaker player [to play against]. About 97 percent of chess is skill. Now computers are so strong in chess that they can beat every player. In chess there isn’t a lot of action, so it’s not so popular. In poker there is a lot of action, and a lot of money. It makes for good TV.

BP: Can chess do anything to increase the luck factor to give the game more action? I’ve heard of randomizing the position of the pieces in the back row.

ID: Yeah, that’s the rule from Bobby Fischer to make a little action. Maybe speed chess is more interesting for TV. The skill is very strong and luck is very small. It is too much work in chess for not a lot of money. I was a professional chess player for many years. I played [all over Europe]. I was a chess trainer and coach. I lived off of chess for over 10 years. It’s very difficult [these days] because sponsorship is very low. You can make more in one year from poker than in 20 years of chess. I still play in a chess league in Germany. It’s just once a month. I wrote a chess book, and now I’m writing a book on strategy in no-limit hold’em tournaments. I’ll finish it next year maybe. I work as a poker coach and a chess coach. You can find me on Facebook.

BP: Earlier this year there was a computer from a school in Pittsburgh that beat a group of four poker players in heads-up no-limit hold’em. Did you follow that?

ID: Yes, of course. I know in no-limit hold’em, heads-up, the computer is very strong, 100 percent. You don’t need too much skill like in the big tournaments, because you don’t have to change gears based on new players. It’s more complicated [at a nine-handed table]. Computers are best in heads-up.

BP: What was a bigger milestone for AI, when a computer beat the best chess player, Garry Kasparov in 1997, or some of the best poker players?

ID: They are similar, but I think it was more important when the computer beat the poker player because poker [is a more popular game]. Maybe one day we will see a computer play the WSOPmain event. It’s very interesting. Now everyone can have a computer in their phone that can beat the best chess players.

BP: Which game is more of an emotional roller coaster to play for a living?

ID: I think poker is more emotional, because in chess it’s one versus one. Also, if you lose, you lose very slowly. In poker there is big jumping. Sometimes you get lucky, boom, boom, boom, but other times you don’t play hands or you lose. In chess, everyone is friendly, every time. In poker, you have a lot of bad losers. Maybe he cries. In chess everything is quiet. People play for fun and not for a living. Here [at the casino], a lot of players try to play for a living and emotion is very high.

Ivo

For more coverage from the summer series, visit the 2017 WSOP landing page complete with a full schedule, news, player interviews and event recaps.

source credit: http://www.cardplayer.com/

Ivo Donev
Nickname(s)The Chess Master
ResidenceBregenz, Austria
Born25 December 1959 (age 60)
World Series of Poker
Bracelet(s)1
Money finish(es)14
Highest ITM
Main Event finish
None
European Poker Tour
Title(s)None
Final table(s)1
Money finish(es)7

Ivo Donev (born 25 December 1959) is a Bulgarian, with Austrian passport, who is a professional chess and poker player.

Chess[edit]

His father, Hristo Donev was a national master at chess.

Ivo Donev won the 1989 CSSR International Chess Tournament, progressing him to International Master status. When he and his family emigrated to Austria in 1990, Donev taught for a chess school at $10 per hour to support his study of computer science. Ivo Donev is the author of the chess book 'The most important ideas in the end game' in German language.

Poker[edit]

Donev studied the poker books of David Sklansky, Mason Malmuth, and Tom McEvoy and practiced using poker computer software.

Donev won a bracelet in the $1,500 LimitOmaha event at the 2000 World Series of Poker (WSOP), where he took home $85,800 for his first-place finish.[1]

In 2002, Donev made his one and only appearance on Late Night Poker. He finished 5th out of an impressive field including Peter Costa, Dave Welch and Ram Vaswani. In 2003, Donev finished as a semi-finalist in the World Heads-Up Poker Championship.

He was a professional chess player before starting his poker career. His currently #1 in the Austrian All-Time Money list, and was the first Austrian to reach $1,000,000 in major tournament winnings.[2]

World Series of Poker Money Finishes[edit]

  • 2000 $1,500 Limit Omaha - 1st place ($85,800)
  • 2001 $2,500 Seven Card Stud - 10th place ($5,530)
  • 2002 $1,500 Pot Limit Hold'em - 10th place ($5,670)
  • 2004 $1,500 Limit Hold'em Shootout - 6th place ($16,560)
  • 2004 $2,000 Pot Limit Hold'em - 3rd place ($47,700)
  • 2005 $2,000 Pot Limit Hold'em - 18th place ($6,955)
  • 2005 $2,500 Limit Hold'em - 21st place ($5,145)
  • 2005 $2,500 Pot Limit Hold'em - 10th place ($11,730)
  • 2008 £2,500 WSOPE - H.O.R.S.E.- 2nd place ($95,543)
  • 2009 $3,000 - N L Holdem- 64th place ($6,929)
  • 2010 $2,000 - Limit Holdem- 26th place ($6,237)
  • 2010 $2,500 - Limit/NL Holdem- 51st place ($4,512)
  • 2011 $1,500 - H.O.R.S.E.- 83rd place ($2,899)
  • 2011 $1,500 - Limit Hold'em Shootout - 55th place ($4,118)[3]

Personal life[edit]

He has two children, and lives in Lochau bei Bregenz, Austria.

His life and career is discussed in the James McManus book Positively Fifth Street.

References[edit]

  1. ^'Ivo Donev'. World Series of Poker. Retrieved 8 October 2010.
  2. ^'RedKings Sign Ivo Donev and Christian Heich'. Poker Network. Retrieved 8 October 2010.
  3. ^Justin Pechie wins limit shootout ESPN.com, 28 June 2011

External links[edit]

Ivo Donev Pokerstars

  • Ivo Donev rating card at FIDE

Ivo Donev Poker

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