The Doug Polk Music Video
Doug Polk released a new video - a music video, no less - and it has all the makings of a huge hit. We're talking number one ....... with a bullet.
Californian Polk, born at the end of 1988 in Pasadena, has not only become one of the world’s best players, but also a leading light in the poker vlogging and training worlds.
He started out as an eSports player before poker took over his life while at college, where he gave up his degree to concentrate on poker full-time after running up an initial $20 deposit into more than $10K.
Within a few years he had become a specialist in heads-up NLHE and challenged the king of heads-up, Ben ‘Sauce123’ Sulsky to a series of matches totalling more than 15,000 hands in the autumn of 2013, at the end of which Polk was up a staggering $740,000. This also entitled him to the $100,000 side-stake for winning.
His online game was honed as part of the self-styled ‘Evil Empire’ crew alongside fellow high-stakes players Ryan Fee and Jason Mo, with Donger Kim and Jason Les as close associates, the crew sharing ideas and strategies to conquer the world of poker.
Although primarily noted for his online mastery under the name ‘WCGRider’, Polk’s live tournament winnings also stand at over $5million, and in 2015 he started up the training site Upswing Poker along with close friend Ryan Fee.
He was also part of the 4-man team to face the AI poker program Claudico in the first of several challenge matches, emerging as the biggest winner – although more recently a superior version of Claudico gained its revenge, Polk not being part of the losing team on that occasion.
Around the same time, Polk decided to start streaming and vlogging – and his intro ‘What’s up guys, Doug Polk here’ has become synonymous with excellent hand analysis and rather controversial views on fellow pros and events in the poker world’.
Polk’s outspokenness on certain subjects has led to many calling him arrogant, but he has developed a huge following in spite of, or perhaps because of, very public disagreements with the likes of Daniel Negreanu, Jason Mercier and others.
His beef with Negreanu started when Daniel claimed he could beat the $25/50 NLHE stakes with only 2 weeks of practice, which Polk described as “naïve”, whereas in Mercier’s case the falling out centred around Polk having him tagged as a ‘bad reg’ in his online tournament notes.
More recently he came under fire from English pro Luke Schwartz, who claimed among other things that Polk is a losing player online and therefore his training courses on Upswing Poker are a ‘scam’.
Official Website
Upswing PokerWikipedia
Doug PolkWorld Series Of Poker
Doug PolkWorld Poker Tour
Doug PolkPublished 9 years ago
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The Most Common Poker MistakesDoug Polk talks about common poker mistakes he sees from both online poker players and live poker players. Game selection is huge ...
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What Separates the Good vs the Best Poker Players?Doug Polk explains what separates the simply good poker players and the very best poker players. Polk talks about the number of ta...
Doug Polk released a new video - a music video, no less - and it has all the makings of a huge hit. We're talking number one ....... with a bullet.
Polk covered all the bases, taking a shade more than 24 minutes to explain exactly what his growing number of fans can expect from him in the near future.
The humans were taking one hell of a beating from Libratus even a visit in the final few days from Doug ‘WCGRider’ Polk couldn’t turn the match around.
The hand between two of poker's best players was analyzed on the latest episode of "Poker Hands With Doug Polk."
Doug Polk set out on a mission to determine whether the social media sensation has the poker chops that would allow him to win the amount of money that he claims.
Dwan finally finishing his challenge match with Cates? It’s never going to happen is it? Well, hang on, there may be light at the end of the tunnel...
A recent video of "Poker Hands with Doug Polk" took us back to the days of "High Stakes Poker" and a whopping $818,100 pot.
The recent launch of PokerShares by Mike ‘Timex’ McDonald prompted Doug Polk to take a look at the world of poker staking.
Polk felt compelled to explain why he has earned the right to give advice on poker strategy. His resume speaks for itself, and perhaps one day the poker newcomers will understand.
One of the most shocked facial expressions during a televised hand of poker was displayed by Tom Dwan during an episode of High Stakes Poker during the late 2000s.