Richard Ashby

English poker player (born 1972)

Richard Ashby
Nickname(s)Chufty
Born1972 (age 51–52)
London, England
World Series of Poker
Bracelet(s)1
Final table(s)4
Money finish(es)11
Information accurate as of 5 July 2010.

Richard "Chufty" Ashby (born 1972 in London)[1] is a professional poker player from England. He was given the name 'Chufty' by his friends at University, due to Ashby's frequency of using the term "chuffed".

Ashby picked up poker at his local tennis club, as well as playing for pennies with his father.[2] In the mid nineties, he played his first tournament, a £10 Stud tournament. A few years later, he earned entry into the Aussie Millions. After he bust from the first tournament, he put his entire $4,000 bankroll on the line in a cash game and spun it up to $100,000. By the end of the week, he had lost it all.

Ashby's first recorded win came at the 2001 Grosvenor UK Open in Luton when he won £10,500 in the £100 Pot Limit Seven Card Stud Event.[3] Since then, he's accrued over half a million dollars in live tournament winnings including final table finishes at the 2007 Manchester GUKPT and the 2009 Aussie Millions, the latter of which earned him A$150,000 for his seventh-place finish.

However, Ashby openly admits that he needs to work on his live game, and is much better known as an online player, in particular on Black Belt Poker where was recently acquired as one of their sponsored pros in September 2010. Ashby can often been seeing playing on the site in some of the highest stakes available, and against many of the biggest names in poker.

Ashby's favoured game is Omaha and he is good friends with fellow Omaha specialist Ben Grundy. For a while, they played in the same games but eventually realised that it was a pointless exercise and decided to avoid each other from there on in. In addition to Grundy, Ashby considers France's David Benyamine to be the best Omaha player in Europe, although he cites Phil Ivey as the only player he would consider sitting out against.[4]

In July 2009, Ashby emerged as online poker's biggest cash winner when he earned a total of $1,824,074 over the four-week period. This success garnered him much interest, in particular on the Two Plus Two forums where the nosebleed stakes are avidly followed.

On 13 June 2010 Ashby won the World Series of Poker Event #21, a $1,500 seven card stud event, winning $140,467 in the process.[5] He followed that success less than two weeks later by finishing 2nd in World Series of Poker Event #43, the $10,000 H.O.R.S.E. World Championship, netting him $378,027 in winnings.[6]

On 24 September 2010 Ashby won Event #54 of the World Championship Of Online Poker, the $2,100 Pot Limit Omaha 6-max event. He was successful out of a field of 480 players, collecting his first WCOOP bracelet along with $185,760 in winnings.[7]

References

  1. ^ "Richard Ashby Wins Event No. 21: $1,500 Seven Card Stud ($140,467)". PokerNews.com. 13 June 2010. Retrieved 24 March 2024.
  2. ^ "FT Pro Profile". fulltiltpoker.com.
  3. ^ "Grosvenor UK Open 2001, Pot Limit 7 Card Stud". The Hendon Mob. Retrieved 4 December 2023.
  4. ^ "News Item". blackbeltpoker.com.
  5. ^ "Richard Ashby's profile on The Hendon Mob". The Hendon Mob Poker Database. Retrieved 24 November 2023.
  6. ^ "41st World Series of Poker - WSOP 2010, H.O.R.S.E. Championship". The Hendon Mob. Retrieved 24 December 2023.
  7. ^ "WCOOP Stats - All-Time and Up-to-the-minute - Most WCOOP Cashes by player". www.wcoop.com.

External links

  • Card Player profile
  • Hendon Mob profile
  • WPT profile
  • WSOP profile
  • Full Tilt Poker profile
  • Black Belt Poker Interview
  • v
  • t
  • e
2010s WSOP bracelet winners
Note: number in brackets represents the number of bracelets earned in that year
2010/
2010 E
2011/
2011 E
2012/
2012 E
2013/
2013 AP/
2013 E
2014/
2014 AP
2015/
2015 E
2016
2017/
2017 E
2018/
2018 E
  • Michael Addamo (2)
  • Steve Albini
  • Yaser Al-Keliddar
  • Calvin Anderson
  • Tim Andrew
  • Eric Baldwin
  • Ryan Bambrick
  • Johannes Becker
  • Jean-Robert Bellande
  • Yaniv Birman
  • Scott Bohlman
  • Justin Bonomo (2)
  • Farhintaj Bonyadi
  • David Brookshire
  • Joe Cada (2)
  • Joey Couden
  • John Cynn
  • Matthew Davis
  • Jessica Dawley
  • Shaun Deeb (2)
  • Ognyan Dimov
  • Benjamin Dobson
  • Roberly Felicio
  • Elio Fox
  • Adam Friedman
  • Phil Galfond
  • Mykhailo Gutyi
  • Galen Hall
  • Jeremy Harkin
  • Brian Hastings
  • Phil Hellmuth
  • John Hennigan
  • Jordan Hufty
  • Anderson Ireland
  • Martin Kabrhel
  • Ronald Keijzer
  • Arne Kern
  • Loren Klein
  • Chance Kornuth
  • Jay Kwon
  • Preston Lee
  • Ryan Leng
  • Philip Long
  • Nikita Luther
  • Timur Margolin (2)
  • Julien Martini
  • Dan Matsuzuki
  • Matthew Mendez
  • Michael Mizrachi
  • Benjamin Moon
  • Asi Moshe
  • Robert Nehorayan
  • Tommy Nguyen
  • Daniel Ospina
  • Giuseppe Pantaleo
  • Robert Peacock
  • Jeremy Perrin
  • Nick Petrangelo
  • Jordan Polk
  • Mario Prats
  • Brian Rast
  • William Reymond
  • Tamir Segal
  • Nicholas Seiken
  • Scott Seiver
  • Warren Sheaves
  • Jack Sinclair
  • Filippos Stavrakis
  • Norbert Szecsi
  • Mike Takayama
  • Longsheng Tan
  • Denis Timofeev
  • Ryan Tosoc
  • Hanh Tran (2)
  • Anson Tsang
  • Craig Varnell
  • Diogo Veiga
  • Paul Volpe
  • Guoliang Wei
  • Jeremy Wien
  • Gal Yifrach
  • Ben Yu
  • Andrey Zhigalov
  • Yueqi Zhu
2019/
2019 E
  • 1970s
  • 1980s
  • 1990s
  • 2000s
  • 2010s
  • 2020s