International Federation of Poker
The International Federation of Poker (IFP) is a non-profit organization whose stated purpose is to "serve as the global governing body for poker".[1][2][3][4] IFP is incorporated as a legal entity pursuant to articles 60 to 79 of the Swiss Civil Code and is headquartered in Lausanne, Switzerland.[1]
History
IFP was founded in Lausanne on April 29, 2009.[5] IFP is structured as an International Sports Federation and is recognized by the Court of Arbitration for Sport.[3]
Goals
The goals of IFP are to promote the development of poker worldwide and to secure its recognition as a Mind Sport based on strategic skill, played without any discrimination of race, sex and creed. IFP also seeks to assist its national Member Federations in securing legislation that gives players the right to play poker safely and legally, both online and in bricks & mortar establishments.
Poker’s recognition as a ‘Mind Sport’
In April 2010, IFP secured provisional membership of the International Mind Sports Association (IMSA) at IMSA's annual congress in Dubai.[6]
Tournaments
As part of the first UK Mind Sports Festival, IFP hosted its inaugural tournaments in November, 2011, in London’s County Hall:[7] the IFP Duplicate Poker Nations Cup (now Match Poker Nations Cup), a team event contested by IFP’s Member Federations, and the IFP World Poker Championship, also called ‘The Table’, in which individual players compete for the title of World Champion. The only organisation to mount international tournaments using Duplicate Poker, in its own version known as Match Poker, IFP staged the opening hands of the 2011 IFP Nations Cup in the capsules of the London Eye.[7]
Membership
Membership of IFP consists of National Poker Associations and Federations from around the world.[8] The IFP currently has 43 national Member Federations including the original seven Member Nations.[8]
The seven founding Member Nations of IFP, which today form the nucleus of its Executive Board, are:
- Confederação Brasileira de Texas Hold'em (Brazil)
- Dansk Pokerforbund (Denmark)
- Fédération Française des joueurs de Poker (France)
- Stichting Nederlandse PokerBond (Netherlands)
- Russian Sport Poker Federation (Russia)
- Ukrainian Poker Federation (Ukraine)
- UK Poker Federation (United Kingdom)
Additional national Member Federations that have joined IFP since its foundation include:
- Asociacion de Poker Texas Hold'em de Argentina (Argentina)
- Armenian Poker Federation (Armenia)
- Poker Federation of Australia (Australia)
- Austrian PokerSport Association (Austria)
- Belarusian Sport Poker Association (Belarus)
- Poker Federation of Bosnia & Herzegovina (Bosnia & Herzegovina)
- Bulgarian Federation of Tournament Poker (Bulgaria)
- Canadian Poker Federation (Canada)
- Federación Nacional de Poker Deportivo (Chile)
- Federations Costarricense de Poker Deportivo (Costa Rica)
- Cypriot Poker Federation (Cyprus)
- Asociace Pokerových Klubů o.s. (Czech Republic)
- Estonian Tournament Poker Federation (Estonia)
- Suomen Pokerinpelaajat Ry (Finland)
- Georgian Sport Poker Association (Georgia)
- Deutscher Poker Sportbund (Germany)
- Greek Poker Federation (Greece)
- Magyar Póker Szövetség (Hungary)
- Pókersamband Íslands (Iceland)
- Irish Poker Federation (Ireland)
- Japan Poker Association (Japan)
- Republic Federation of Amateurs and Poker Players (Kazakhstan)
- Sport Poker Federation of Kyrgyzstan (Kyrgyzstan)
- Latvian Sport Poker Federation (Latvia)
- Lithuanian Sports Poker Federation (Lithuania)
- The Macedonian Poker Federation (Macedonia)
- Federación Mexicana de Juegos de Cartas de Habilidad y Deportivas, A.C. (Mexico)
- Mongolian Sport Poker United Association (Mongolia)
- Pakistan Poker Federation (Pakistan)
- Związek Pokera Sportowego (Poland)
- Federatia Romana de Poker (Romania)
- Serbian Poker Federation (Serbia)
- Poker zveza Slovenije (Slovenia)
- IFPo de España (Spain)
- The Swedish Poker Federation (Sweden)
- United States Poker Federation (USA)
- Asociación Poker de Venezuela (Venezuela)
Internal structure
The supreme authority of IFP is the Congress, the assembly of all the members of IFP on a one-country-one-vote system. Congress meets once a year. The Executive Board of IFP is elected by Congress for a period of three years and is the managing body of IFP. The Board elects a President from among its members for a term of four years, which can be renewed. IFP's first president was Anthony Holden.[9]
IFP's President and Executive Board take counsel, at their discretion, from an Advisory Board of poker luminaries including, among others, Al Alvarez, Doyle Brunson, Humberto Brenes, Gus Hansen, Mel Judah, James McManus and Tom McEvoy.
IFP Books
IFP established its own publishing imprint in association with Limehouse Books in November 2011.[10] Its first title, published in August 2012, was The Rules of Poker, edited by David Flusfeder, chairman of IFP's Rules Committee.[11]
See also
Notes
- 1 2 "International Federation of Poker: About the IFP"
- ↑ "Poker Federation seeks global role" Nic Szeremeta, Poker Europa (June 2009)
- 1 2 "International Federation of Poker: Governing Body for the Industry?" Earl Burton, Poker News Daily (September 25, 2009)
- ↑ "International Federation of Poker established in Lausanne, Switzerland" Lou Krieger, Keep Flopping Aces (June 10, 2009)
- ↑ "New International Poker Governing Body Established" Brendan Murray, Card Player (June 10, 2009)
- ↑ "IFP Becomes Member of IMSA" Sportcal: Sports Market Intelligence (April 30, 2010)
- 1 2 "International Federation of Poker: Events"
- 1 2 "International Federation of Poker: Member Nations"
- ↑ "Anthony Holden Heads Up International Federation of Poker" Jennifer Newell, Poker Works (June 25, 2009)
- ↑ "International Federation of Poker: IFP and Limehouse create IFP Books"
- ↑ "International Federation of Poker: Rules"