4/14/2010 – Many strong players are branching into poker. This is especially true of women, since their chess tournament prizes often hardly cover travel expenses and incidentals. And when in addition players discover they have a natural talent for poker they take to it as a lucrative alternative source of much-needed income. One player such, IM Almira Skripchenko, has done this with great success.
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Top poker award for Almira Skripchenko
The 2010 France Poker Awards
designed to reward the best players of the year 2009. The awards ceremony was
held during the European Poker Tour in the Casino Barriere de Deauville. The
trophys were awarded by a jury and Internet votes. In the end chess player Almira
Skripchenko won the prize as "best lady".
The "best lady" prize was won by a chess IM, Almira Skripchenko
Right after winning the award Almira finished third at the France Poker Tour,
which can be considered the French Championship of Poker. Players took part
in qualifications all around France and on the Internet (more than 50,000 people
tried to qualify). The final was organised in Paris in January.
The players before the final round of the France Poker Tour
The main sponsor of the event was Winamax,
and all of the members of their professional team participated. There were 634
players in the final at the Aviation Club de France, one of the most prestigious
poker room's in the world situated at Champs Elysées. The best French
poker players, professionals and amateurs, battled for the title of French Poker
Champion.
Almira made it to the through to the final table (nine players) and finished
third. The prize pool for the event was more then 600,000 Euros, with 152,580€
going to the winner, 93,200€ to the runner up and 59,100€ to her –
slightly more than female players win at chess events.
Interview (in French) with Almira by Michel Abécassis, a journalist
and former European Bridge
Champion who is now a professions poker player
And for those of you who might be curious about how Almira came to poker and
to find out more about the similarities between chess and poker here is an interesting
interview in one of the most respected card players' magazine.
Generation Next – Chessboards or Green Felt
Rebecca McAdam talks with IM Almira Skripchenko
Almira “Chessbaby” Skripchenko is a woman of many talents. She
appears to do well with anything she sets her mind to, and, in recent times,
has increasingly become a great threat at the poker table. She did not progress
from her previous profession into poker, but instead juggles both, allowing
them to complement and aid each other. Originally born in Moldova (at the time,
the Soviet Union) she has lived in Paris for the past 13 years. She came to
the game as a professional chess player and from the beginning has a strong
presence at the felt [poker table]. She holds all the factors of a tough opponent
– intelligence, determination, ambition, and capability, not to mention
beauty, so Card Player just had to find out more.
Rebecca McAdam: Can you tell me a little about
yourself?
Almira Skripchenko: I’m 33 and I am a professional chess
player, holding the title of Woman Grandmaster. My parents were both chess teachers,
so I started at the age of six, and at the age of 14 I was the champion of the
Soviet Union in my age group. I then won the World Championship in my category
when I was 16. I became the European Champion in 2001, and my best world ranking
was number 3 in 2003. I won several major womens’ tournaments, and I was
the French Champion three times — in 2004, 2005, and 2006.
Almira at thirteen, 1989 in Moldova
RM: How did you become interested in poker?
AS: I discovered poker in 2003 thanks to my friends, chess
grandmasters. They played very often at the Aviation Club in France, and one
evening I asked them if I could take part in a poker tournament in which they
were playing. It was still a romantic period in France for poker, tournaments
were organized with small buy-ins which wooed many new players. The only problem
was that I didn’t know how to play hold’em!
I said to myself that it can’t be more difficult than chess and my friends
explained to me the rules and elementary strategy in a ten minute taxi ride.
The same evening I made it to the final table of this €50 rebuy tournament
and finished fifth eliminating both of my professors on the way to the final
table.
I have been absolutely bewitched by the game ever since. I didn’t have
much time to practice it since I continued my chess career, but I played at
the Aviation Club every time I could, and I had some good results. I also played
on the Internet, mostly concentrating on tournaments, with a very classic educational
process starting with sit ‘n’ go and then multitable tournaments.
RM: Was there a moment when you realized you
could really get somewhere by playing poker?
AS: Well actually I do not look at poker as a validation of
my abilities. I don’t think that a good result at a tournament helps you
to get somewhere. For me it is a personal challenge to understand, to try to
get better and master a game. Everything I do, I try to do professionally. I
think that chess players are already formed to be good poker players, they possess
fundamental qualities to perform, especially in tournaments – capacity
to concentrate for a long time, analytical skills, calculating variations or
probabilities, and patience.
Of course there are many adjustments to make — as chess players we are
used to having to find the best move in the position, the “absolute truth”
supported by the calculations, and in poker you can never be sure about the
exactitude of your calculations. It is a game of incomplete information and
you should integrate many other factors in your decision making.
The only satisfaction I can get after a good result is that after a post-mortem
analysis I would notice that my understanding of the game has improved. So basically
I am always disappointed since I am learning and discovering new things all
the time.
"Play from your house, and enter the court of the royals", reads
the Winamax advertisement that can be found in every poker Magazine [click
to enlarge]. That is Almira, looking a bit taken aback, at the man in boxer
shorts.
Poker requires a lot of discipline, and I think that it is not ideal for the
concentration to play on the Internet, since the conditions very often are not
optimal to focus completely on your game – unless you have an office where
you go to play poker every day and where you could isolate yourself from all
other problems.
RM: Do you think you will stay long in poker
then?
AS: As long as I can still learn something, and that means
long enough. Next year I have to concentrate more on my chess, since I will
play the Womens’ World Championship. I am torn between these two fields,
and after this event I think that I will finally be able to devote myself to
poker completely.
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