Tom Dwan 2020
One of poker’s most infamous high-stakes poker players is back in Las Vegas and teasing the return of one of the game’s most popular television shows.
Tom Dwan, who is known to many poker fans by his old online poker screen name “durrr,” tweeted a pair of videos Tuesday afternoon that featured a star-studded cash game lineup with six-figure stacks in play.
“High Stakes Poker coming back guys,” tweeted Dwan. “Hope I run as good as last time.”
Attached was a video that showed Phil Hellmuth, Phil Ivey, Jason Koon, Brandon Adams, Ben Lamb and John Andress. It’s tough to make out the exact amount of money on the table, but the visible stacks looked to have between $50,000 and $100,000 in play.
“What’s it been? Like seven years since High Stakes Poker was on or something?” asked Dwan to the table in the attached video.
High stakes poker coming back guys. Hope I run as good as last time pic.twitter.com/m8auOjG2ic
Tom Dwan Net Worth. Despite his slightly rocky career that involves significant losses as well as the frequent wins, Tom Dwan has still managed to build up a sizeable sum from his poker cashes. Tom Dwan’s net worth is currently over $10 million. Dwan is still an active player in the field, and it’s thought it would be a considerable amount. This website is operated by MT SecureTrade Limited (“us”, “our”, “we” or the “Company”), a company incorporated under the laws of Malta with registration number C56545 and registered address at @GIGBeach Triq id-Dragunara, St. Julians, STJ 3148, Tom Dwan Poker 2020 Malta. PokerGO is your exclusive destination for classic seasons and all-new episodes. Watch poker’s biggest stars like Tom Dwan, Phil Hellmuth, Mike Matusow, and Phil Ivey battle celebrities such as Jennifer Tilly, Paul Pierce, Don Cheadle, and Julie Yorn in this can’t miss poker show.
— Tom Dwan (@TomDwan) October 27, 2020
Just a few minutes later, Dwan tweeted a video that showed him playing pocket sevens, proving that cards were in the air and action was underway.
Dwan's opponent could choose the game (either No Limit Hold'em or Pot Limit Omaha)-any player who drops below 75 BBs must reload If Tom 'durrrr' Dwan is up $1 or more after rake after the 50,000 hands have been completed, then Dwan's opponent will have to pay Dwan $500,000, in addition to anything that was won during the course of the challenge. Tom Dwan Wiki Biography. Thomas Dwan Jr, was born on 30 July 1986, in Edison, New Jersey, USA, and is a professional poker player, probably best known for appearing on such TV programs as “Million Dollar Cash Game”, “National Heads-Up Poker Championship’ and “High Stakes Poker”.
— Tom Dwan (@TomDwan) October 27, 2020
High Stakes Poker was a poker television show that had seven seasons and 98 episodes and aired on GSN between 2006-2011. It was hosted by Gabe Kaplan and A.J. Benza for the majority of the show’s lifespan before Norm Macdonald took over for the final season.
The show centered around airing nosebleed stakes cash games with some of the best players in the game. It ended up as the backdrop for some of poker’s most memorable hands, as some of the biggest pots ever seen were played on the show.
Last month, Nick Schulman tweeted that PokerGO had committed to reboot the show later in 2020. Since then, PokerGO has teased December 16 as the date to mark on calendars in a ‘coming soon’ social media post.
It is with great pleasure to confirm the return of the esteemed, the legendary, the only, the original, the iconic, really needing no introduction the world over, back for another run. 2020, details soon pic.twitter.com/7le94kzsCA
Is Tom Dwan Married
— Nick Schulman (@NickSchulman) September 17, 2020
Tom Dwan Now
Dwan was the centerpiece in several of the most historic hands from the old seasons. With just top pair, he bluffed Barry Greenstein off pocket aces and 2008 World Series of Poker main event champion Peter Eastgate off trips in season 5. He also pulled the trigger on a triple barrel bluff against Phil Ivey that included a $268,200 river bet with nine-high in season 6.
Tom Dwan 2020
Dwan also played one of the biggest pots in televised poker history when he cracked Greenstein’s aces in season 5.
You can see some of those hands in the videos below: