[MUSIC PLAYING]
Every game or sport
has intense rivalries.
You're so bad.
You don't even understand it.
I'm so happy to be so bad.
And poker is no exception.
You're the greatest, buddy.
Hold on, let me
get your signature.
It's when a conflict
develops over time,
when the competition
becomes personal,
and when adversaries
become fierce foes.
Why does she, like, goes
after me every time?
I have no idea why.
Here are five of the
most notorious rivalries.
I thought maybe we'd just
get a little shippy shippy
right at the end.
[BELL RINGING]
Number 5 is less mano a mano
and more man against machine.
That man is an impatient Tony G.
I want to call the clock.
I want to call the clock.
Come on, on internet, you
play, like, in one second.
When you come here now,
you come to my game,
and you're wasting my time.
And the machine is the
computer-like brain
of internet pro Andrew Robl.
Action on Negreanu.
Bets $18,500.
Three 10s is a tough
bluff to pull off,
so Daniel is most
likely trying to rep
a big Ace or maybe a straight.
His bet is designed to
bluff Robl off a King maybe.
I don't think Daniel
thinks he could get
Robl to fold a big Ace though.
I was so crushed after
that final, I could cry.
I'm going to walk out.
If these guys are going to
come here, waste my time,
I'm going to walk
out of the game.
It's a joke.
[BLEEP] hell, he's thinking
20 minutes every [BLEEP]
hand he's playing.
[BLEEP] nit.
[BLEEP]
Here comes floor man Tom Kean.
All right, Andrew, we're going
to go through the same thing.
You play online, it's like
quick, two seconds, bang, bang,
they're pressing buttons.
They come here, they freeze up.
Daniel's done a good job of
making this look like a value
bet.
So Andrew has a legit
decision to make.
He seems to be doing a good
job of tuning Tony out.
He folds.
What?
After all that, he
finally threw it away.
I mean, I had a six, but--
Daniel shows the bluff.
You qualified.
I was so happy you
called the clock, Tony.
High-five for the assist
there just in case.
I don't think he had anything,
and he had to move in himself.
While in recent years, Daniel
has had a rivalry of his own
with Eric Seidel.
Yes, it's one and two on
the all-time money list.
They were far from friends,
but frequently shared a table
in Super High Rollers.
And Daniel seemed to always
get the better of his rival.
Eric and I are very
different people.
He's very quiet.
I'm not.
There's not much in terms
of camaraderie or words
said between us.
And let's not forget
this two-outer
from the EPT 8 grand final.
Blinds are up to 10,000 and
20,000 with a 3,000 ante.
Pocket 10s for Daniel Negreanu.
Wow, what's that, a 4x raise?
More than.
84?
Really?
Holy misclicks.
The small-baller
accidentally decided
to play with a bigger ball.
Gulp.
Eric Seidel, with pocket kings,
will three-bet to 210,000.
Got to wonder if
Daniel might think
Eric's three-betting
because Daniel
had that little freak-out.
I'm all in.
Whoops.
Aye-ya.
| call.
Seidel obviously calls.
The misclick got me.
Sick.
Sick.
That's kind of sick you
misclicked with 10s too.
I know, right?
Then I had to like--
then it forced
me to get a little crazier.
Yeah, because--
Really surprised to
see the shove there.
Daniel almost always just
calls in spots like that.
Yeah, but you're
going to hit a 10.
That'd be good.
Seidel is the player at risk,
but Negreanu is a huge underdog
here.
Even bigger dog now.
Really bad flop for Daniel.
Can't even hit any running
cards to save himself.
He's still got the same two
outs he started with, just
three less chances to hit one.
Now just one chance, just 5%.
Sometimes that shove will make
Daniel look like a genius.
This time, not so much.
Seidel set for the double-up.
A 10 on the river!
You were right.
Thanks, Tobias.
I run good.
I got incredible--
Gross.
All right, good luck, everyone.
Eric Seidel sent to the
rail in horrific fashion.
I thought you were
right too, but then it
started to look scary.
Daniel busted him in the
PCA Super High Roller also--
brutal.
That was fun.
From understated animosity to
a more tumultuous tangling--
the skirmish at number 3
occurred at the 2015 PCA
when Maurice Hawkins felt
slighted by Shyam Srinivasan,
and things escalated quickly.
Shyam adds $63,000 to his
stack and seems happy about it.
Antes.
Have you ever seen a man
get that much value out
of second pair with no kicker?
Is this where you,
like, do a backdoor
comment because you want to be
the coolest guy at the table?
Nah.
You already snicker after
every damn hand I play.
I don't say anything, because
I would care less, but--
Don't take anything personally.
That's personal, when you
win a pot and you say,
you ever seen somebody get
value out of the second pair
and [INAUDIBLE].
You're the greatest, buddy.
Hold on, let me
get your signature.
All right gentlemen,
let's go ahead
and play ourselves some poker.
I concur.
Yeah, that's what we need to do.
And stop commentating
like you-- hey,
they got a mic back
there somewhere.
I've got one.
Give him the mic, Richard.
He can commentate hisself.
He's the greatest.
How about you just make your
money and keep your mouth shut?
Let's not drag
Richard into this.
Get your ego involved.
Why don't you get that?
Because you already
got a big ego.
This is great.
Queen-Jack against King-Jack.
Maurice has raised.
I hope they're not done.
Ego in poker, he go broke.
I can say whatever I want.
Trust me, I play
poker every day.
Ego in poker, he go broke.
There's a three-bet from Shyam.
And you really don't need
to three-bet a hand that
plays this well post-flop.
Definitely some chatterbox
play at work here.
How much more is it?
Does it matter?
You're calling.
Let's find out how
much value you're
going to get out of
your hand now, buddy.
Oh, dear.
Smart-ass comment.
Check, buddy.
Go ahead, manipulate
the situation.
Top pair for Maurice.
This is just-- this is yes.
I check.
I did the check thing.
Unfortunately for
Shyam, a c-bet here
is what he's supposed to do.
He does continue for $31,000.
All in.
Wow.
Can I get a count, please?
All in.
Ego in poker, he go broke.
Actually, not a bad shove.
Better learn how to play
poker without ego, buddy.
Your ass will go
broke eventually.
Win, lose, or draw--
be a man.
Play a man's game.
He doesn't speak for
all of us, ladies.
I hope I win.
And I promise you,
I'm going to be a man.
I won't say nothing.
I'll just drag the
pot like a champ,
because I'm a born champ.
Shyam folds.
Shyam folds.
Ego in poker, he go broke.
We get it.
See how much value I
got out of 10 high?
Well, some players prefer to let
their chips do the talking, all
their chips.
[BELL WRINGING]
At number 2, we find
Vanessa Selbst and Dan Shak,
both renowned for
taking unconventional
lines, neither averse
to taking risks.
They can often be found
playing big buy-in events,
and always seem to butt heads.
There's been a lot of drama.
I don't know, we just have
a history of playing really
big pots against each other.
A couple of times recently, he's
made some really big shoves.
I'm all in.
I know that I just had a
good hand and called him.
Call.
But obviously, it was a
cooler situation for her.
Is that real?
And I feel bad, because
you know, I consider her,
you know, if not the
best in the game, one
of the best in the
game right now.
I hope you get them
Thank you, Vanessa.
I appreciate it.
He's had my number
in a number of--
a couple major final tables.
The Super High Roller, back at
the PCA, I was second in chips.
She was first.
I honestly had a bad read,
thought I had the best hand.
All in.
And Shak shoves!
OMG, ICM suicide.
The announcers said it was
ICM suicide on my part,
because it was on the bubble.
He's not representing
that many hands.
I have a really strong hand.
It just boils down to
one of those situations
where I'm just going
to call every time.
I call.
Vanessa calls!
And Dan Shak is at risk of
bubbling the Super High Roller.
She made an amazing call.
But I knew, in any case,
I had a lot of outs.
And you know, I'm not
afraid to take a risk.
It's a 10!
That was not supposed to happen.
Given how absurd it
was given the situation
with all those tiny
stacks, we shouldn't
have been playing that
big a pot at that stage
of the tournament.
I just lost, like,
2 million chips.
I lost 2 million chips.
You know, obviously, I won
the last two big confrontation
hands with her.
But over the years, she probably
has gotten the best of me
way more than I've
gotten the best of her.
And now Vanessa
Selbst can celebrate.
Congratulations.
These just have been a
couple of high profile hands
in key situations.
[CHEERING]
[BELL RINGING]
Now, is anyone shocked that Tony
G appears twice on this list?
You know it.
He's had his fair share of
verbal brawls at the tables--
You come to my game, and
you're wasting my time.
--none more impassioned
than his squabble
with a multi-bracelet
winning man-child.
I love you.
You're the best, Phil.
You guys are the best.
I'll have to clean you out
every time I play with you.
I love it.
Oh, I'm going to
butcher you so badly.
I hope you've got
lots of rebuys.
You're the worst
player at the table.
You don't even know it.
I love to be the worst player.
It's the rivalry
so entertaining,
the Big Game built an
entire episode around it.
At number 1, Tony G
versus Phil Hellmuth Jr.
All right, I open for the pot.
Pot.
And you looked, right?
Well, I think I looked.
66.
Allegedly, I looked.
Tony.
I'm all in.
Pot limit, brah.
Without looking?
Without looking.
Pretty sure he looked.
Well, you can't be all in.
66.
Tony reports it with Ace-King.
All right.
All right.
You slowed down.
You slowed down a bit.
Are you going to save the rest?
Not if he believes
you haven't looked.
Wow, all that talking
makes me think he's strong.
I was for sure going
to call before that.
15 on top, Tony.
He's saying he
hasn't looked though.
He most certainly looked.
Did no one see him?
Did you look at
your cards at all?
I mean, it's--
Look, the people at home
know I haven't looked.
Well, if you haven't looked,
I guess I'll just move in.
All right.
Phil ships, and Tony calls.
All right, you're close.
You're up there.
Oh, you lied.
Of course I lied.
It's poker, Phil.
What do you think this is?
Wow.
What do you think, I'm blind?
How many times do
you want to run it?
Well, I asked you if
you had looked or not.
You want to run
it how many times?
I'll let you choose, Tony.
Three times.
I mean, I always lose, so--
you kind of deserve
to lose the first one.
I do deserve.
I hope you win one.
Why would you lie?
I mean, that's
considered totally not--
uncool, man.
I mean, it's not right.
I feel it's just a game.
That's etiquette though.
I mean, you never-- you
don't say you were blind
when you were blind.
Phil, what happens on this
table in play is just a game.
We tell whatever we want.
When do you tell the truth?
So all the rules
of poker are just
thrown out the window for you?
Well, call the floorman
if you think I--
my hand might be dead then.
You don't say you haven't
looked at your cards
when you've looked
at your cards.
You don't do that.
OK, well then I'm wrong.
It's like a rule of poker.
It's like-- it's--
Well, why did you call?
--horrible etiquette.
Because I thought you
hadn't looked at your cards.
Well, I mean, come on, Phil.
Well, if you want $25,000
this bad, you can have it.
You have to pay
attention to the game.
How many times are we dealing?
Phil, if you're a
professional player,
you would pay attention
to me looking at my hand.
Karmically, he deserves
to lose all three.
What a villain.
I drink your milkshake.
So they're going to
run it three times
with the winner of each run
taking a third of the pot.
Flop-- King, 9, trey.
Tony pairs his King,
Phil drawing nearly dead.
How happy are you now,
that it's not running once?
Turn's a Jack.
That's bad for me.
I need that Jack
on the next round.
That's really bad for me.
Well, unless you get one now.
Yeah, unless I get one now.
Which means you won't get
any more, win any more.
Terrible card for
Phil, one less Jack he
can hit on the next run.
Give him the Jack.
River-- Ace of diamonds.
That's kind of fair.
Let's even out the deck a bit.
You know, Phil,
I-- like, for me,
I just went to
undersell my hand.
I don't know if the way--
I do it any way I can,
because it's a heads up pot.
That's me.
I'm sorry if that's mean.
You just admitted it
was bad etiquette.
You want to retract?
I'm sorry if I bullied you.
I'm sorry.
I don't want to bully you.
I'm sorry.
I feel bad.
Tony, look, no problem.
Nice hand, man.
I mean, you know, you
showed your true colors,
which is bad for you here.
Here comes flop number two.
7, 5, 10-- no help to Phil.
You really-- I
don't think you're
the kind of guy that wants
to show your true colors all
the time.
Well, it's just your true
colors can't escape you.
You are who you are, Phil.
I'm sorry, that's the way I am.
Turn number two-- Ace of clubs.
Phil's not even holding a club,
so no flush draw can save him.
He's looking for one of
the two remaining Jacks.
River-- another 5.
And Tony G takes the second run.
Don't rush.
Don't rush.
We might keep you in.
Flop number three--
Queen, Queen King.
And Phil picks up some outs.
I have a good feeling
about this one,
but the math is just
so strong against.
How can I get there?
No, you'll get there.
How can I get there?
You will.
You will.
It's just too nasty.
Everyone wants you to get there.
Turn-- 7.
No help to Phil.
OK, the last 10-- three 10s.
You can take insurance too.
Yet another needle from Tony.
Our final river-- Phil's
going to need a 10.
It's a Jack.
Whoa, he got there.
That's not cool.
No, he didn't.
No, sorry.
I was just joking, Phil.
Did you believe me again?
No, I didn't believe you.
Is that bad etiquette too?
So Tony, so look, you're
loaning me $50,000, right?
Yeah.
OK, look, I don't accept it.
OK, no problem.
But good game, man.
All right, I'm sorry,
Phil, I really am.
I'm sorry.
I think you should retire.
I think it's over.
I think you're not
there anymore, Phil.
And one of those two is now
an elected representative
of the people.
Get the hell out of here.
Well, I hope you enjoyed our
countdown of ripping rivalries.
Check out our other top
5s at pokerstars.tv.
