Ray Romano Poker Royal Flush
Actor and comedian Ray Romano witnessed one of the most unlikely World Series of Poker hands of all time at the 2008 main event, when one player at his table with a massive hand was eliminated by the best hand in poker.
We introduce the show and then talk: The ultimate bad beat that's been going viral - quads vs quads vs straight flush (0-11:40), The WSOP quad aces vs royal flush hand w/ Ray Romano (11:40-14:40), our own personal worst poker beat stories (14:40-22:15), radio and poker superstar Cakes with great insight from the mind of an amateur player who went deep in a Main Event (22:15-55:00), we recap. The first of three starting days of the 2018 World Series of Poker $10,000 Main. (71,300), and the well-known comedian Ray Romano (61,100) all bagged up along with plenty of first-timers.
- Not if there are 3 people in a pot and the best hand doesn't have the chip count to match players 2 and 3 (who have raised the pot beyond the count of the best hand). Then the second best hand would lose to the best but still win chips against the worst hand of the 3. Thus the worst hand in poker would be player 3 (or 4, 5, 6).
- Shaun Deeb and Ray Romano Headline Episode 1 of 2016 WSOP Main Event.
- Quad aces, a royal flush, and Ray Romano all wrapped into one tasty hand at the WSOP. Hellmuth As a 91% favourite on the river to win the hand, and the entire tournament, you can't help but feel a little sorry for the Poker Brat when Jesus produces a miracle.
Japanese pro Motoyuki Mabuchi saw his pocket aces become four of a kind on the river, and he splashed his chips across the felt to go all-in, absolutely sure that he had the best hand.
Ray Romano Poker Royal Flush Toilet
Phillips, however, was holding the perfect cards. The Ace of diamonds that gave Mabuchi his quads also completed Phillips’ royal flush. That’s a brutal way to exit the tournament.
Ray Romano Poker Royal Flush Kit
It’s likely that we’ll never see another hand like this. Considering that the odds of any four of a kind are 1-in-4,164 and the odds of a royal flush are 1-in-649,739, the odds of both hands facing off in a showdown are an astronomical 1-in-2.7 billion.