World Poker Tour Host Vince

20.06.2020
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“May all your cards be live and all your pots be monsters!”

Lynn Gilmartin is an Irish Australian TV host, presenter, anchor and reality star best known as the anchor of the World Poker Tour on Fox Sports. Lynn Gilmartin Wiki Born in Dublin, Ireland on November 3, 1984, Lynn and her parents moved to Melbourne, Australia in late 1986. May 22, 2017  Los Angeles, CA (May 22, 2017) – World Poker Tour® today announced that Mike Sexton, co-commentator of the WPT® for the past 15 seasons alongside Vince Van Patten. May 25, 2017  Mike Sexton: Legendary player and host Mike Sexton, the Poker Hall of Fame member and poker legend who has been the voice of the WPT since it launched in 2002, is dropping the mic. He’s walking away and taking this, and a myriad of other memorable poker phrases he made famous, with him. Apr 16, 2013  Co-host of the World Poker Tour on television (and former actor and professional tennis player), Vince Van Patten, sat down with our Live Updates team for the third edition of WPT Flashbacks. The WPT television show currently features commentary and analysis by Tony Dunst and Vince Van Patten. Dunst joined the World Poker Tour as host of the WPT Raw Deal during Season 9 after winning the role through an open casting competition.

Mike Sexton has uttered this, his famous catch phrase, for the last time on the World Poker Tour. Sexton has been the face and voice of the WPT since its inception 15 years ago, but on Monday, May 22, he announced that he will be accepting a position as Chairman of partypoker, an online poker site that he helped found in 2001. Sexton’s seat in the commentary booth will now be filled by Tony Dunst, who has been with the WPT since 2010 and has filled in for Sexton as an analyst before.

The 69-year-old member of the Poker Hall of Fame is not only known as one of the games best-known ambassadors but also as a great player in his own right with a WPT title of his own, a World Series of Poker bracelet and the Tournament of Champions title.

Sexton took to Twitter to make the announcement.

Thx to WPT</a> for GREAT 15 yrs! I wish them nothing but the best. This position w/<a href='https://twitter.com/partypoker'>partypoker is an opportunity & challenge I couldn't pass up

— Mike Sexton (@Mike_partypoker) May 22, 2017

In a press release from partypoker, more details about Sexton’s new role with partypoker were detailed. As Chairman Sexton will act as an ambassador, but he will also have several other areas of the business to oversee. The release includes several goals for Sexton as Chairman, including investing in software development, improving customer service and loyalty programs, creating a friendly environment for amateur players by adding value to smaller events and combating third-party software, invest marketing budgets in the community, oversee the growth of the partypoker Live tour, and more.

“This is a huge and well-deserved honor for Mike,” said Card Player Publisher Barry Shulman. “It is also an equally huge development for the poker community at large, who will benefit because there is somebody at the top who truly ‘gets it.’”

Sexton included a statement in the press release.

“This is an emotional time for me because I have decided to leave the World Poker Tour to focus on this new role. I was at partypoker from the start, before there was even a name or a single virtual card was dealt. I experienced the crazy times of the poker boom when we became the number one site in the world, I remember people sleeping on the office floor when we were all working 24-7 get the software launched and I remember the first partypoker Million on a cruise ship which overlaid $500K. It was devastating for me to see the decline of partypoker when we were forced to pull out of the US and then watch from the side lines as our competitors remained and benefited from our customer base. I am really looking forward to working with people that love the game like I do. We are not aiming for second place. We are all in. Shuffle up and deal!”

Sexton had further thoughts to share in a press release from the WPT.

“It has been an honor and a privilege to work with the World Poker Tour since its inception in 2002. When the World Poker Tour launched, it was a dream come true, and to be there from the beginning and see how the WPT changed the poker world forever by essentially turning poker into a televised sport has been amazing. And to do it all this time with my co-commentator from day one, Vince Van Patten, has made it even more special. Fifteen years later, another dream of mine came true when I won my first WPT title, and I now have the opportunity to play in the exclusive WPT Tournament of Champions for years to come. It’s been quite a ride over these 15 seasons, and one that I’ve been extremely blessed to take. I’d like to thank Steve Lipscomb for his vision to create the World Poker Tour, Adam Pliska for bringing the WPT to incredible heights, and the entire WPT family for all they do and have given me. I’d like to mention everyone, but there’s simply too many to name. They know who they are, and without them, the WPT wouldn’t have become what it is today.”

With Sexton moving on, Tony Dunst will join Vince Van Patten as a full-time commentator. Of course, Dunst had nothing but positive things to say about the man he is stepping in for.

“Mike Sexton set the standard for what it means to be an ambassador, and the positive impact he had on my career and the broader poker community cannot be overstated,' said Dunst. 'I’m honored to be taking his seat in the booth next to the legendary Vince Van Patten; and while I intend to bring my own style to the position, Mike will be a lasting inspiration for how I carry myself and treat people within poker. The success and popularity of the World Poker Tour are the result of the culture he created here.”

Like Sexton Dunst is also a WSOP bracelet winner and a WPT champion. His new role will officially start with the broadcast of the latest WPT Choctaw main event in August of this year. There has not yet been a replacement announced for Dunst’s role as the host of the ‘Raw Deal’ segment of WPT broadcasts.

Related Articles
Vince Van Patten in 2019
BornOctober 17, 1957 (age 62)
OccupationActor, tennis player, commentator
Years active1970–present
Spouse(s)
Betsy Russell
(m. 1989; div. 2001)

Children3
Tennis career
Height5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
Turned pro1978
Retired1987
PlaysRight-handed
Prize money$433,522
Singles
Career record109–116
Career titles1
Highest rankingNo. 26 (November 2, 1981)
Grand Slam Singles results
French Open1R (1981, 1985)
Wimbledon3R (1985)
US Open3R (1982, 1983)
Doubles
Career record43–72
Career titles1
Highest rankingNo. 24 (September 15, 1986)
Grand Slam Doubles results
French OpenQF (1981)
Wimbledon3R (1984)

Vincent Van Patten (born October 17, 1957) is an American actor, former professional tennis player, and the commentator for the World Poker Tour.

  • 4Tennis Grand Prix Championship Series finals

Personal life[edit]

Van Patten was born in Bellerose, New York, as the youngest son of actor Dick Van Patten and his wife, Pat (née Poole), a former June Taylor dancer. He is of Dutch, English, and Italian descent.[citation needed] He was first urged into show business at age nine by his father's agent. He appeared in more than thirty commercials, including Colgate toothpaste, before his father was cast in the TV series, Arnie, and moved his family from Long Island to Los Angeles.[citation needed]

From his first marriage to Betsy Russell he has two sons: Richard and Vince. His second marriage, on April 15, 2003, was to The Young and the Restless actress Eileen Davidson; they have one child together.[1]

Vince is related to several other well-known actors, actresses, and singers through blood and by marriage. Biggest slot machine payouts. Casino close to ardmore ok. Vince is a brother of James and Nels Van Patten, a nephew of Joyce Van Patten and Timothy Van Patten, and a cousin of Talia Balsam.[1]

World poker tour tv hosts

Acting[edit]

Throughout the 1970s, as a child actor Van Patten guest-starred in over three dozen classic television series including Bonanza, The High Chaparral, Medical Center, Adam-12, The Courtship of Eddie's Father, Wonder Woman and a variety of television movies. He also had roles in the films Charley and the Angel (1973), and Chino (1973).[1] Aged 16, he was cast in Apple's Way, a CBS drama series in which he played the son of an architect who leaves the big city to rear his family in rural and fictional Appleton, Iowa.[1]

In the fall of 1975, aged eighteen, he appeared as John Karras in a 12-week CBS drama series Three for the Road. The story line is that of a father and two sons, grief-stricken over the death of their wife and mother sell their house, buy a recreational vehicle, and roam throughout the United States.[2]

Three years later, he co-starred in The Bionic Boy, a two-hour ABC attempted spinoff of the popular Lee Majors vehicle, The Six Million Dollar Man that never went to series. In 1978, he starred in the cult film classic, Rock 'n' Roll High School. He starred in several other films in the 1970s and 1980s, including the 1979 action thriller Survival Run (aka Spree), Yesterday (1981) as a Vietnam war veteran, the slasher film Hell Night (1981), Gidget's Summer Reunion (1985), The Dirty Dozen: The Deadly Mission (1987) and Camp Fear (1991). He starred, wrote and produced in The Break (1995), distributed by Lions Gate with Martin Sheen.[1]

Tennis[edit]

Van Patten was also a professional tourtennis player who in 1979 was awarded the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) Rookie of the Year award. The highlight of his career came in 1981 when he defeated John McEnroe and two other top ten world ranked pros to win the Seiko World Super Tennis tournament in Tokyo. His career high ranking in singles was World No. 26, reached on February 11, 1982.[citation needed]

In singles, Van Patten reached the third round of the US Open twice, in 1982 and 1983, and Wimbledon once, in 1985. In doubles his best Grand Slam event result was reaching the quarter-finals of the French Open in 1981, partnering with Mel Purcell. His highest doubles ranking was World No. 24, reached in September 1986.[citation needed]

Tennis Grand Prix Championship Series finals[edit]

Singles (1 title)[edit]

ResultW/LDateTournamentSurfaceOpponentScore
Win1–01981Tokyo, JapanCarpetMark Edmondson6–2, 3–6, 6–3

Poker[edit]

Van Patten learned to play poker from his father, actor Dick Van Patten, at age 14. He finished in the money at the 2010 World Series of Poker main event. He finished 481st in a pool of 7,319 entrants and received winnings totalling $27,519. (This amount was awarded to finishers 460th thru 531st.)[3] He was crowned 'king of the Hollywood home games'[citation needed]

He is a commentator on World Poker Tour. The first four seasons were broadcast on Travel Channel; seasons five and six on Game Show Network, and, from the seventh through to the current season, it now airs on Fox Sports Networks.[4]

With Robert J Randisi, he wrote The Picasso Flop (ISBN0892960701), a novel about Vegas poker.[5]

References[edit]

  1. ^ abcdeVincent Van Patten on IMDb
  2. ^'Three for the Road'. Internet Movie Data Base. Retrieved March 16, 2011.
  3. ^'Event #57: No-Limit Hold'em Championship'. World Series of Poker website. November 9, 2010. Retrieved December 27, 2012.
  4. ^Profile, pokerlistings.com; accessed March 2, 2016.
  5. ^'The Books: The Picasso Flop by Vince Van Patten and Robert J. Randisi'. Hachette Book Group USA. Retrieved March 2, 2016.

Bibliography[edit]

  • Holmstrom, John. The Moving Picture Boy: An International Encyclopaedia from 1895 to 1995. Norwich, Michael Russell, 1996, p. 319.

World Poker Tour Female Host

External links[edit]

World Poker Tour Website

  • Vincent Van Patten at the Association of Tennis Professionals
  • Vincent Van Patten at the International Tennis Federation
  • Vincent Van Patten on IMDb
  • Van Patten profile, PokerListings.com

World Poker Tour Girl Host

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