ESPN.com To Feature Bluff Magazine Poker Content
ESPN.com announced today that Bluff Magazine, America’s largest poker magazine, which will bring a wide range of the popular magazine’s poker-related content and information to the ESPN Poker Club section of the leading sports site. The combined collection of content will join with ESPN.com’s free online poker game to offer poker fans a complete online destination.”This agreement will allow ESPN.com to build on the hugely successful launch of ESPN Poker Club this past February and offer poker fans …
Related Online Poker and Poker Industry News:
- ESPN.com to Feature Bluff Magazine Poker Content
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- Bluff Magazine Hits Europe
- Bluff Magazine and ESPN Name Phil Ivey Poker Player of the Year
- Phil Ivey voted 2005 Bluff Magazine Poker Player of the Year
- ESPN and Bluff Magazine Launch Fantasy Poker Challenge
- Elite Poker Rooms announces Partenership with Bluff Magazine
- Woman Poker Player Purchased
- Bluff Magazine Teams up with Mansion Poker For WSOP Main Event Bubble Insurance
- Bluff Magazine in Conjunction With the Poker Players Alliance Issues a Statement on Unlawful Internet Gambling
- Bluff Magazine Launches European Version
- Bluff Magazine Announces 2008-09 Bluff Poker Tour
Poker glossary:
- OFFSUIT - Not of the same suit. "I held A-Q offsuit" or "The flop was 10-6-2 offsuit". When speaking of 5 or more cards, not all/ of the same suit, i.e., no flush, as in "button had A-K-10-8-7 offsuit."
- PAY OFF - Calling a bet with little expectation of winning, unless the opponent is bluffing.
- BET FOR VALUE - Betting a hand that, in the long run, is expected to win more than it loses. Antonym: BLUFF.
- RERAISE - To raise after an opponent has raised.
- TAP - In no-limit games, to wager all of one's money in one bet.
- BURN - To discard the top card of the deck prior to dealing, usually done for every dealing round except the first. The theory being that if somehow the cards are marked (illegally) no one will know what card will next be dealt, only what card will be burned. This makes marked cards less of an advantage, hence tends to reduce cheating.

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