18+ jogue de forma responsável. Sicad.pt

Srij Gordon Moody Sicad 18+

2015 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure

Main Event
Dias: 2
Event Info

2015 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure

Resultado Final
Vencedor
Mão Vencedora
k3
Prémio
$1,491,580
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Entradas
816
Informações sobre o nível
Nível
32
Blinds
80,000 / 160,000
Ante
20,000

One For Margets

Nível 12 : 800/1,600, 200 ante
Leo Margets
Leo Margets

Action folded to Niklas Hambitzer who completed his small blind. Leo Margets checked her big blind and the two took a flop of {A-Hearts}{6-Clubs}{K-Clubs}. Hambitzer fired 1,600 on the flop and Margets stuck around.

The turn was the {7-Hearts} and Hambitzer slowed with a check. Margets fired 4,000 and Hambitzer quickly called to see a river. The dealer produced the {Q-Spades} to finish the board and Hambitzer checked once more. Margets knocked the table back and showed a winning {Q-Clubs}{2-Clubs} for a pair of queens. Her stack is now up to about 108,000.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Niklas Hambitzer de
Niklas Hambitzer
125,000 -15,000
Leo Margets es
Leo Margets
PokerStars
108,000 13,000

Tags: Leo Margets

Assorted Chip Counts

Nível 12 : 800/1,600, 200 ante
Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Noah Schwartz us
Noah Schwartz
260,000 123,500
Naoya Kihara jp
Naoya Kihara
PokerStars
230,000 3,000
Bertrand Grospellier fr
Bertrand Grospellier
EPT 1X Winner
PokerStars
172,000 2,000
Pratyush Buddiga us
Pratyush Buddiga
160,000 15,000
Liv Boeree gb
Liv Boeree
EPT 1X Winner
PokerStars
150,000 12,000
Scott Seiver us
Scott Seiver
128,000 -10,000
Jorge Limon mx
Jorge Limon
PokerStars
127,000 102,900
John Hennigan us
John Hennigan
Poker Hall of Famer
127,000 32,000
Tony Gregg us
Tony Gregg
100,000 6,000
Leo Margets es
Leo Margets
PokerStars
95,000 -3,800
Dylan Linde us
Dylan Linde
88,000 -27,000
Andrey Shatilov ru
Andrey Shatilov
56,000 -80,500
Jason Mercier us
Jason Mercier
EPT 1X Winner
PokerStars
56,000 8,500
Mickey Petersen dk
Mickey Petersen
EPT 1X Winner
PokerStars
50,000 11,000
Stephen Chidwick gb
Stephen Chidwick
38,000 -38,500
Jonathan Duhamel ca
Jonathan Duhamel
PokerStars
36,000 11,500

Fast Moving

Nível 12 : 800/1,600, 200 ante
Jason Mercier
Jason Mercier

There was 9,000 in the pot and a flop of {J-Spades}{10-Spades}{5-Spades}{2-Spades}, Jason Mercier checked to Day 1 chip leader Dietrich Fast who bet 3,500. Mercier thought for a moment and made the call.

The river was the {8-Spades} putting a flush on the board and Mercier checked again. Fast sat quietly, his left hand perched on his opposite shoulder. After a moment, he put out a bet of 12,500. Mercier flicked his cards into the center, a look of frustration on his face, as he fell to 47,500 in chips with that loss.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Dietrich Fast de
Dietrich Fast
165,000 5,000
Jason Mercier us
Jason Mercier
EPT 1X Winner
PokerStars
47,500 -7,500

Tags: Dietrich FastJason Mercier

Collopy Still Climbing

Nível 12 : 800/1,600, 200 ante
Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Jim Collopy us
Jim Collopy
334,000 62,000
Gabe Patgorski us
Gabe Patgorski
245,000 -60,000
Andre Akkari br
Andre Akkari
PokerStars
191,000 26,000
Benjamin Pollak fr
Benjamin Pollak
188,000 117,000
Jason Helder us
Jason Helder
181,500 -4,500
Bertrand Grospellier fr
Bertrand Grospellier
EPT 1X Winner
PokerStars
170,000 89,000
Connor Drinan us
Connor Drinan
160,000 82,000
Robert Salaburu us
Robert Salaburu
137,000 29,000
Noah Schwartz us
Noah Schwartz
136,500 8,500
Maurice Hawkins us
Maurice Hawkins
108,000 50,000
Ole Schemion de
Ole Schemion
106,000 28,000
Jake Schindler us
Jake Schindler
104,000 14,000
Igor Kurganov ru
Igor Kurganov
89,000 28,000
Oliver Price gb
Oliver Price
88,000 -15,000
Jason Mercier us
Jason Mercier
EPT 1X Winner
PokerStars
55,000 -15,000
Nick Rampone us
Nick Rampone
41,900 -28,100
Scott Baumstein us
Scott Baumstein
37,000 -6,000
Tony Ruberto us
Tony Ruberto
18,000 6,200

Millar Ships on Rampone

Nível 12 : 800/1,600, 200 ante

We arrived at the table in time to see Alex "Kanu7" Millar move all in for his last 34,600 against Nicholas Rampone. The completed board read {4-Diamonds}{10-Hearts}{5-Spades}{8-Diamonds}{K-Hearts} and Rampone was deep in the tank.

Roughly four minutes passed while Rampone pondered his action. In the end, he opted to kick his cards into the muck. Millar dragged in the pot and brought his stack up to about 52,000. Rampone dropped to 43,000.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Alex Millar gb
Alex Millar
PokerStars
52,000 22,000
Nicholas Rampone us
Nicholas Rampone
43,000 -27,000

Tags: Alex MillarNick Rampone

Kihara Wins Blind Battle With Muhlocker

Nível 12 : 800/1,600, 200 ante

Naoya Kihara checked a {6-Diamonds}{q-Clubs}{2-Spades}{9-Clubs}{a-Diamonds} board in a blind battle and saw Thomas Muhlocker bet 15,500. Kihara called after only about 30 seconds, and Muhlocked flipped {8-}{7-} for a busted straight draw. Kihara showed {q-Diamonds}{10-Clubs}, and the PokerStars Team Online pro has one of the heftier stacks in the room at more than 225,000.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Naoya Kihara jp
Naoya Kihara
PokerStars
227,000 37,000
Thomas Muhlocker at
Thomas Muhlocker
42,600 -27,300

Tags: Naoya KiharaThomas Muhlocker

Big Stacks Battling

Nível 12 : 800/1,600, 200 ante
Walter Fisher
Walter Fisher

Two of the bigger stacks in the room are seated at the same table and Walter Fisher decided to look up Antonio Matias from the big blind after Matias opened for 6,300 from middle position.

The flop came {J-Hearts}{5-Diamonds}{3-Spades} and both players checked. The turn was the {A-Diamonds} and Fisher check-called an 8,000 bet from Matias. The two would check on the {8-Clubs} river and Matias turned over {A-Clubs}{Q-Hearts}. Fisher flashed the {J-Clubs} and said "nice check on the flop, I was gonna raise you." Both players are near the top of the chip counts with Fisher holding 395,000 and Matias 285,000 after that pot.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Walter Fisher us
Walter Fisher
395,000 13,000
Antonio Matias pt
Antonio Matias
EPT 1X Winner
285,000 214,300

Tags: Antonio MatiasWalter Fisher

Interview: Day 1a Chip Leader Alex Millar

Nível 12 : 800/1,600, 200 ante
Alex Millar
Alex Millar

For Alex "Kanu7" Millar, the PCA Main Event might be the only live tournament on his schedule in 2015.

He's doing everything he can to make it count.

Millar, a high-stakes cash game player and member of Team PokerStars Online, finished Day 1a of this event as the chip leader. The 29-year-old pro from the U.K. is typically found playing the nosebleed games on PokerStars and rarely travels to play live tournaments, but he made the trip to PokerStars' flagship festival to play the Main Event and meet up with some of his Team Online cohorts.

Millar isn't having quite the same success here on Day 2, seeing his stack dwindle down to around 60,000, but he hasn't slowed his aggression whatsoever. We recently saw him shove all in on the final hand before the break to induce a fold against an amateur and increase his stack back to 95,000.

We spoke with Millar about his rare appearance in a live tournament and the transition he's forced to make from his usual seat behind a computer screen.

PokerNews: We just saw you play a pretty intense hand to the river against a qualifier who got into this tournament for virtually pennies. Normally you're playing the highest stakes online against the best players in the world. Talk about coming here and playing in a live tournament setting against amateur players.

Millar: It's a pretty different experience, I'll say that. When I'm playing online obviously I have reads against everyone I'm playing against because I play against the same players, whereas here coming into the day I didn't know anything about anybody. It's a pretty different style required to do well.

You mentioned reads online; do you try to pick up live tells here even though you don't play live poker a lot?

Yeah, sure. I'm probably not very good at it (laughs). Obviously if someone plays live all the time they'll be much better at it. Now and again I'll pick up something but it's not my strong point.

As a cash game player, how do approach coming into a tournament like this?

I just sort of show up and play my game. I generally know what I'm doing playing poker so I just turn up and take every hand as it comes, make the best decisions I can — same as I would online.

What would it mean for you to ship this tournament?

It would be nice. The prize pool's pretty big. But in terms of the credit that goes with it, that's not a huge motivation for me. The achievements in my career are beating $25/50 online and beating certain players heads-up. So to get lucky in a five-day tournament would not be ranking against my greatest achievements but it would rank amongst my biggest money won. It would be really nice but it's not something I go out and try to achieve.