Recently in Raymond Rahme Category

July 3, 2008 5:14 PM

2008 World Series: Looking to go two better...

So we’re underway - several hundred people, just one flight of four to play their ‘day 1’ - in the outer reaches of the Rio hotel.

This is all in stark contrast to the landscape flying into Las Vegas. Whether from Europe or the States; over Canada’s lakes, the flat landscapes of the Dakotas and the deserts of Utah and Nevada; for thousands of square miles you fly over some of the least populated places on the planet.

Then you get to Las Vegas and that all changes. Then you get to the Amazon Room and it changes some more. Here, right now, I’d suspect there are enough people standing per square yard to make this the most populated place on the planet.

That makes trying to find one person in these crowds a mighty task...

“How are you?”

Okay, it was easier than I expected.

This was Team PokerStars Pro Raymond Rahme. It’s unusual in a poker tournament to engage in these types of pleasantries. Normally your average poker player adopts a professional degree of tunnel vision; ignoring the outside world in favour of confining the world to their seat, their cards, their chips and the faces of the people at their table. But Raymond never really signed on to that club. He’s always come across as just a guy who plays cards, and has done all his life. And he plays them well.

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To anyone who remembers the events that took place here twelve months ago Raymond’s record should stand out in much the same ways as his shock of white hair does from the other side of the Amazon Room. Last year he cashed third in the World Series main event, winning a colossal sum of over $3 million, and since then has cashed around the world from Las Vegas to Australia; from Italy to Monte Carlo.

As anyone who has seen or played against Raymond will verify, he’s not one to fit into any of the popular moulds of player gracing the game today. No headphones or sunglasses, no attitude or ego. Instead Raymond brings his reading glasses and lighter, his two tournament essentials. Did I mention he’s also the All Africa champion?

One player who might not make any such mistake is Richard Fohrenbach, the former PCA final tablist and perpetual PokerStars qualifier is attuned to who’s good and who’s bad at this level of play, having travelled all over the world to get his poker wings. But as is standard in these early stages the others at the table are a collection of hopefuls that no one can say for sure will remain at the end of the day.

But we’re here for the duration, a long day of hope for some, disappointment for others. Already the telltale signs of eliminations – slow walking players on their way from tables, looking dejected and texting someone – have been spotted heading for all doors.

As one tournament official was overheard saying, as one player was thumped in a hand in the cruellest way...

“That’s what keeps ‘em coming back... those one-outers on the river.”

***

Not yet afflicted by one-outers is PokerStars qualifier Shane Wright, who spoke earlier to our video blog team. He got here through the WSOP Steps qualifiers on PokerStars.


Watch WSOP 08: Shane Wright Online Qualifier on PokerStars.tv

June 11, 2008 10:10 AM

Raymond Rahme wins All Africa event

After Raymond Rahme became the first person ever from the continent of Africa to make the final table of the World Series Main Event, there was no doubt he would be a star at home. That, indeed, happened. Now, his star has risen even higher.

Rahme is the newest champion of the All Africa poker tournament and more than $125,000 richer.

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This was Rahme's fifth attempt at victory in the All Africa event. Previous tries had seen him finish in 15th, 4th, and 3rd places.

"I played very well to get to the final 27 with a good stack, taking out a lot of top players, and making the final table," he said. "I then got into a lot of big pots and had good reads on the best players."

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Rahme collected more than 1,000,000 Rand, equal to more than $125,000.

In the past eleven months, Rahme has cashed in many big events, including in-the-money finishes in Australia, Italy, and Monte Carlo.

"I was over the moon with this win. Although I always played the All Africa well, the win always evaded me," he said. "It has been a tough year proving a lot of people and critics wrong. I have become a hero and I enjoyed every miniute of it."


April 12, 2008 12:25 PM

EPT Monte Carlo: PokerStars Player Lounge

There's exclusive and then there is really exclusive.

Getting to Monte Carlo to play in the PokerStars EPT Grand Final is an accomplishment in itself. The buy-in alone is enough to make this tournament among the most exclusive in the world. Here, though, among the elite players in the field, there is a certain place only a select group can go.

The PokerStars Player Lounge is open only to those folks who have made their way here through PokerStars. A quick walk though the room (outfitted with cold drinks, plasma TVs, cames, and soft leather seats) is a bit surreal.

In the corner, Daniel Negreanu is beseeching his Wii controller.

"Why won't it get over?" he shouts as his Wii bowling ball misses a strike by seven pins. Within seconds, he blames himself. "It's me," he admits.

Just a few feet away, Joe Hachem sits heads up in a Battleship Poker match. Just beyond that, Chis Moneymaker is tense and he battles all comers in a fooseball match.

If you're a PokerStars player here in Monte Carlo, feel free to come on down for a cold drink or a chat with a member of Team PokerStars Pro. You'll be greeted by these lovely ladies, Pip and Beatrice.

For more of a look around Monte Carlo and a few words from Team PokerStars Pro Raymond Rahme, check out the latest video blog.


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