Poker Magazine



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By: Ed Moncada

Check - Greg “FBT” Mueller
You ever wonder what you get when you mix the insane competitive streak of a professional athlete, the mind of an advanced poker player, the hyperactivity of a 13-year-old without his Ritalin, and a comic wit that’ll have you constantly on the verge of busting your bladder with laughter? Probably not… but in case you did, the solution is Greg Mueller.

Greg is a former professional hockey player turned pro-poker player who primarily goes by the nickname “FBT”, which he says stands for Full Blown Tilt. This guy is comedy. He’s constantly
cracking jokes and pulling pranks on everyone at the table (dealers and floor personnel included). He’s also probably the easiest guy to spot in a 1,000-person casino, because he’s a 6’4” perpetual commotion machine. Don’t let his shenanigans fool you, though. Behind the tableclown distractions is an extremely perceptive and calculated poker player who banks all your moves and tendencies and fluidly adjusts to your play. Greg is a lightning fast learner who absolutely hates to lose.

Based in Vancouver, Greg’s been in the poker scene for a while and enjoyed strong and consistent results. While he was initially almost exclusively a side game player, focusing primarily on Limit Hold’em, Greg has started to polish up his no limit poker both in cash games and tournaments in the past year and a half, cashing four times at this year’s World Series of Poker.

One of Greg’s most impressive skills at the table has nothing to do with how he plays his cards; it’s in his deal-making abilities. He always gets the best of it. This is a guy who always gets everything he wants in a deal, and has you smiling and asking him out for beers. Mel Judah witnessed his deal-making magic once. He later came up to Greg and said to him, “The next time I make a deal at a final table, I’m making sure you negotiate it for me.” Not bad for a Canadian meathead, eh?

Check - Robert Mizrachi
The oldest of the four Mizrachi brothers, Robert Mizrachi is the guy who brought superstar Michael “The Grinder” Mizrachi into the poker world. It must be nice to be able to claim that one of the best players in the world used to sit behind you at the poker table just to watch and learn.

While Robert hasn’t had the same tournament success that Michael has had, his results easily hold their own. They include a half a million dollar win at last year’s Master Classics of Poker in Amsterdam. He has a highly aggressive yet flexible tournament style, with the ability to get away from hands some players would be willing to risk their stacks with. Robert knows how to build a stack, even when dealt the most marginal of starting hands, and he plays a game that at times can trap even the best of players.

Robert is very close to some of the top young players today and manages these relationships well. He shows savvy away from the table, typically acquiring percentage ownership of many of these players early in tournaments through trades or purchase. If an opportunity arises you might even find him further bartering his acquired points in the late stages of tournaments. He’s always on the lookout.

When asked about early lessons Michael may have learned from him, Robert responds: “Teaching him money management was a failure at first, but it’s a funny story. I remember the first time I took him on a poker trip. It was a weeklong trip. I had spread out his poker budget by placing money in seven different envelopes, one for each day of the trip. We went to play poker, and I came back to the hotel room at the end of the first night only to find seven empty envelopes sitting on the bed.”