Lex Veldhuis Ecstatic at Ajax Win
It’s been a week or two to remember for Lex RaSZi Veldhuis for a few reasons
Hailing from North London, Luke Schwartz spent the early part of his poker career as just another online grinder. By 2009 however, Schwartz had begun playing some of the highest stakes available on Full Tilt, and was competing against the best. Playing under the screen name ‘__FullFlush1__’, Schwartz won big against players such as Tom ‘durrrr’ Dwan and the Dang brothers.
Schwartz was one of the big winners on Full Tilt in early 2009, banking $1,200,000 in February alone. Schwartz has also entertained online fans with his trash talk, not showing any respect to some of the game’s most respected players. For example Schwartz has told Patrik Antonius on Full Tilt chat “prob not the best idea to play the best in the world when you’re tired full stop”, and has informed Dwan “im the new guy now and everytime we play im gonna own your life”.
While Schwartz can back up his smack talk with his play on the virtual felt, it was this kind of behaviour that earned him a lifetime chat-box ban at Full Tilt, disappointing railbirds everywhere. Schwartz’s online success in 2009 led to his participation in the television series Late Night Poker and Party Poker Premier League IV.
Although he finished 8th in the Late Night Poker Finals, he performed with success in the Premier League, losing heads-up to David Benyamine for $200,000. These performances helped to show that Schwartz is not just an online specialist, he can also compete against some of the best live players aswell.
Wikipedia
Luke SchwartzWorld Poker Tour
Luke SchwartzPublished 10 years ago
Luke Schwartz Benches Online QualifierLuke Schwartz playing a big hand against online qualifier on PartyPoker The Big Game
Published 10 years ago
Luke Schwartz Backs into a WinnerLuke Schwartz's aggressive play pays off
Published 10 years ago
FullFlush 200NL Cash Poker SessionRecording of the live 200NL cash poker session on Full Flush - Follow PokerTube on Twitch.tv
Published 4 years ago
Jeff Gross Podcast #45: Luke SchwartzLuke Schwartz AKA FullFlush1 joins Jeff Gross to talk about everything about poker including online poker, mixed games, Doug Polk,...
Published 10 years ago
Luke Schwartz Barreling vs Roberto RomanelloLuke Schwartz going for a big three barrel bluff against Roberto Romanello
Published 10 years ago
Luke Schwartz Flops Big Draw vs Sam TrickettAction flop in a hand featuring Sam Trickett and Luke Schwartz
Published 10 years ago
Luke Schwartz Pulling a Big Bluff vs LindeLuke Schwartz trying to construct a big bluff in a hand against Linde
Published 4 years ago
The Best Poker Advice Luke Schwartz's Ever ReceivedIn this podcast, Luke Schwartz tells us the best poker advice he's ever received and how it changed his game. He discusses his pro...
Published 10 years ago
Luke Schwartz vs Andrew Feldman - Interesting River ActionLuke Schwartz taking a very interesting river line against Andrew Feldman
Published 10 years ago
Jennifer Tilly Slows Down vs Luke SchwartzJennifer Tilly takes a cautious line against Luke Schwartz
It’s been a week or two to remember for Lex RaSZi Veldhuis for a few reasons
British high-stakes grinder has been showing his opponents less than a little Christmas spirit
The OPL launch their 7-day, €6000-added HighStakes.com series this coming Sunday 16th December
Finally the poker world has found a boxing match worthy of Madison Square Garden.
Luke ‘_fullflush1_’ Schwartz tweeted a series of petty polls on Twitter, reigniting a long-standing feud between the poker pros.
Archenemies Doug Polk and Luke Schwartz re-ignited their long-standing feud
At least a couple of named pro players stated that they were unaware that MIPL even existed.
What do you do when you win over £40k at poker? If you’re Jake Cody, it’s the roulette all the way – and you get the casino owner to spin the wheel!
24-year old Moldovan chemistry student Dragos Trofimov has just proved that some hard work and online practice can be parlayed into huge live wins.
This week 4,820 players bought in directly or won a satellite to get a seat, creating a prize pool of $1.2 million after 1,210 re-bought after busting their initial stacks. This led to 900 players cashing. The initial first prize before the chop was a tasty $182,432.60.