Roland De Wolfe

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A wealthy Dubai-based investor is suing a casino in London after accusing two poker players of colluding against him at high stakes.

Roland De Wolfe (born 1979 in London) is an English professional poker player and a former writer for the poker magazine Inside Edge. After winning first prize in an event at the 2004 Gutshot Poker Festival, he went on to make a money finish in the $1,000 No Limit event of the 2005 World Series of Poker. Roland De Wolfe (born 1979 in London) is an English professional poker player and a former writer for the poker magazine Inside Edge. After winning first prize in an event at the 2004 Gutshot Poker Festival, De Wolfe went on to cash in the $1,000 No Limit event of the 2005 World Series of Poker.

According to the Telegraph, an expert witness in the case claims that Iraj Parvizi was cheated by poker players Josh Gould and Roland de Wolfe.

De Wolfe has wins on the EPT and WPT, in addition to a WSOP bracelet in 2009.

Roland

Court filings said that the witness, who claims that he once was the world’s “best professional poker cheat,” has given testimony that Parvizi lost £185,000 in a game that was “utterly corrupted by collusion on the part of Josh Gould and Roland de Wolfe.'

Roland De Wolfe Wife

The witness—Richard Marcus—studied video footage of the hands, the report said.

De Wolfe and Gould were allegedly working as a team against Parvizi.

Les Ambassadeurs casino denies that it had any knowledge of the alleged cheating that was going on in the poker game. It called the allegations “embarrassing.”

Parvizi is suing the casino for £10 million for allegedly failing to prevent the alleged collusion. That figure represents the amount he claims he lost during poker sessions from 2010 to 2013, all of which he now claims were tainted.

According to a Daily Mail article from earlier this year, the dispute began when Les Ambassadeurs sued Parvizi, after he cancelled checks to the casino for the £185,000 worth of chips used during the allegedly shady poker game.

Parvizi counter-sued.

One of the players in the game told the Daily Mail that Parvizi’s claims are ridiculous.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, one of the high-rollers who played with Parvizi dismissed his claims as absurd. 'No one would need to cheat to beat Iraj. We’re professionals and he’s terrible, so it’s like Brazil versus San Marino in football.
“As a professional player, you sometimes need credit and you rely on your reputation. I’d rather lose than collude.” He added that regular players would have considered the £185,000 that Parvizi lost that night to be “nothing.”

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The World Series Of Poker (WSOP) has created some fantastic stories over the years and one such story involved one of our own, the United Kingdom’s Roland de Wolfe.

De Wolfe headed to the 2009 WSOP with two parts of the coveted Triple Crown in place. He won the World Poker Tour Grand Prix de Paris in July 2005 and followed that up with the European Poker Tour Dublin Main Event title in October 2006.

The 2007 WSOP saw de Wolfe come close to completing his Triple Crown with a sixth-place finish in a $2,000 No Limit Hold’em event and an 11th place finish in a £5,250 buy-in Pot Limit Omaha event at the WSOP Europe in London.

Another close call occurred the following year when de Wolfe busted from the $5,000 Limit/No Limit Hold’em event at the 2008 WSOP in fourth. It looked as if de Wolfe would never get his hands on a WSOP bracelet.

He then headed to the 2009 WSOP and made deep runs in a trio of events before the star aligned in the $5,000 Pot Limit Omaha Hi/Lo event.

A field of 198 players bought into what was the 27th event on the 2009 WSOP schedule. It was the first-ever $5,000 PLO8 event the WSOP had run so there was much anticipation about who would enter. A star-studded field was expected and poker fans weren’t disappointed.

Roland de wolfe

Such luminaries as Barny Boatman, Mike Matusow, Mike Sexton, Kathy Liebert, and Chris Bjorin all bought in. As did Jason Mercier, Eli Elezra, Chris Ferguson, Jeff Lisandro, and Bruno Fitoussi. The field read like a who’s who of poker.

Final 18 Reach The Money

Only 18 players received a payout and it was Mickey Appleman who was the unfortunate soul to burst the money bubble. Appleman was short stacked and shoved from under the gun with and was looked up by Armando Ruiz in the big blind holding . A board sent Appleman to the rail and the remaining 18 players into the money.

Nine of those in the money players fell by the wayside before Day 2 concluded. Jeff Lisandro and Andy Bloch were among the casualties late into Day 2.

The final table of nine players returned to the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino on June 15 and de Wolfe found himself sandwiched between Antony Lellouche and Alex Kravchenko, which was far from ideal. Andrew Black, Robert Campbell, John Racener, and chip leader Scott Clements were among the other finalists.

Lellouche was the final table’s first casualty, crashing out in ninth-place for $29,965. Armando Ruiz joined him on the sidelines soon after before the elimination of a certain John Racener, then a relatively unknown quantity, fell in seventh. Racener would go on to finish second in the Main Event the following year.

Andy Black saw his tournament end in a sixth-place finish and in cruel circumstances. Black and Campbell got their chips into the middle with similar hands. Black held and Campbell the . A chopped pot looked the most likely outcome but the board put paid to those plans.

Clements was still the chip leader and in control of the tournament. He extended his lead when he sent Kravchenko to the showers in fifth place.

De Wolfe made up some ground by helping himself to Campbell’s chips but Clements still had twice as many chips as the Triple Crown chasing Brit.

Heads-Up Set: Bracelet Within de Wolfe's Grasp

Cached

The tide turned when de Wolfe won a massive pot from Clements, courtesy of a spade flush on the river. De Wolfe’s looked in serious trouble against Clements’ but the board propelled de Wolfe into the chip lead.

Clements and De Wolfe clashed again shortly after that hand and it resulted in Clements crashing out in third for $101,064.

This gave de Wolfe a huge chip lead over Brett Richey but victory was far from a done deal, especially as de Wolfe admitted he’d hardly played any PLO8 in his career.

The moment de Wolfe and the British poker community had been waiting for finally occurred at just before 3:00 p.m. on June 15, 2009. it was heads-up in a raised pot on a flop and de Wolfe checked. Richey fired a bet of 140,000 and de Wolfe announced he was all-in, essentially betting the pot. Richey came over the top and de Wolfe made the call.

De Wolfe:
Richey:

De Wolfe held two pair against Richey’s top pair and wrap. The turn failed to alter the holdings, and the unnecessarily improved de Wolfe’s hand, busting Richey in second-place for $152,618 and crowning De Wolfe a WSOP champion.

Event #27 - $5,000 Pot Limit Omaha Hi/Lo Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Roland de WolfeUnited Kingdom$246,161
2Brett RicheyUnited States$152,618
3Scott ClementsUnited States$101,063
4Robert CampbellUnited States$72,121
5Alexander KravchenkoRussia$53,881
6Andy BlackIreland$42,993
7John RacenerUnited States$36,200
8Armando RuizUnited States$32,105
9Antony LelloucheFrance$29,965

Other Triple Crown Winners

This victory saw de Wolfe become only the second player in history, behind Gavin Griffin. There are now eight such winners, Griffin, de Wolfe, Jake Cody, Bertrand Grospellier, Davidi Kitai, Mohsin Charania, Harrison Gimbel, and Niall Farrell.

Roland De Wolfe's Age

De Wolfe came close to a second bracelet in 2010 with a fourth-place finish in the £10,350 buy-in WSOP Europe Main Event in London, which was won by fellow Brit James Bord.

Roland De Wolfe - Poker Legend PokerNews

The last we saw of de Wolfe in action was in December 2010 when he final tabled the A$6,300 Main Event at the Asia Pacific Poker Tour Sydney festival. He’s since vanished from the poker world, although there are rumours he still plays but in private cash games. Whatever de Wolfe is up to these days, nothing will top the day he became a Triple Crown winner.