Poker Tales - Andy Beal vs The Corporation

9 years ago
Poker Tales - Andy Beal vs The Corporation
20:48
02 Jan

Andy Beal

Born in Lansing, Michigan, Andy is a son of an engineer and a state employee. At a young age he showed he had a sense for business, starting his career by repairing broken TVs and reselling them for a profit. As he grew older, so did his appetites, and from small real estate investments Andy made millions and eventually billions of dollars investing in all sorts of business, with enormous success. In 1998 he opened Beal Bank in Dallas and as the years progressed, his business ventures spread across the face of America, increasing his wealth beyond most people’s dreams.

Beal started playing the game of poker during his college years, and it is believed that some of his early investments were made with money he won playing poker. As his wealth grew, he wanted to play in higher stakes games and did exactly that. In 2001 he made his way to Las Vegas casinos and sat down in the highest games that were spread, $800 - $1600 limit hold’em games.

The stakes were not high enough for the billionaire and he started asking to play higher, which the pros at first gladly did, increasing stakes gradually, to $1k - $2k and all the way up to $4k - $8k. But the billionaire was still not happy, as he wanted to play for much more money, and was willing to lose or win millions. Andy’s requests to play higher soon lead to the birth of The Corporation.

The Corporation

The stakes Andy wanted to play were insane for any pro, and none could afford to play him so high. A number of highest stakes pros including Doyle and Todd Brunson, Jennifer Harman, Gus Hansen and eventually Phil Ivey pulled their cash together

The encounters between Beal and The Coorporation lasted for years, as he visited Vegas multiple times for short trips, each time increasing the stakes, which by 2005 were up to $100k - $200k limit. At one point it seemed that Andy might just walk away busting The Coorporation, as he took them down for over $13 million and the pros were pretty much broke.

The Outcome

The Corporation was on its knees in 2006, having lost over $13 million. They managed to pull together one last million, and decided that Phil Ivey, who had made a name for himself as the best all around player, should play the billionaire heads up.

The final match started on February 21st 2006. With the blinds $30k - $60k, a limit hold’em match would decide the fate of The Corporation. All eyes were on the 30 year old pro and the super aggressive style that Ivey played proved to be too much for Beal. Over the course of just three days, “No Home Jerome” had won back all the money others have lost, and another $3 million on top of it. Once all was said and done, Andy pledged to never again play the pros, and has never issued them a challenge again.


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Stewart resides in Edinburgh Scotland, and is a key member of the 180Vita team. An early member of the company, Stewart has worked on all of the companies major brands and projects, and is specifically involved in the core operations of PokerTube - Our flagship poker media website.Read more

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