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2016 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure

$5,300 Main Event
Dias: 1b
Event Info

2016 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure

Resultado Final
Vencedor
Mão Vencedora
74
Prémio
$728,325
Event Info
Buy-in
$5,300
Prize Pool
$4,500,800
Entradas
928
Informações sobre o nível
Nível
35
Blinds
150,000 / 300,000
Ante
50,000

Komarov Edges Jaffe and Kritzer for Day 1b Lead

Nível 8 : 300/600, 75 ante
Alexandr Komarov
Alexandr Komarov

Day 1b of the 2016 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure $5,300 Main Event came to a close following eight levels of play on Saturday. Nearly 700 entries were tallied on the day, and under 500 of them advanced to Day 2. With registration open until the start of Day 2, the numbers of entries should climb and the final total will be available on Sunday, along with the prize pool.

Russia's Alexandr Komarov led the way after Day 1b, bagging up 168,100 in chips. He was trailed closely by the USA's Jonathan Jaffe with 164,000 in chips and Randy Kritzer with 161,500, but no one was able to top Toby Lewis' 188,000 from Day 1a.

Plenty of players were in action on Day 1b, and the likes of Harrison Gimbel, Ankush Mandavia, Aaron Massey, Mike Leah, Maurice Hawkins, and Joe Kuether were all eliminated. On the flip side, Team PokerStars Pro members Daniel Negreanu and Jason Mercier bagged up chips, but they both finished on the shorter end.

Day 2 will commence at 12 p.m. local time on Sunday, and you can find continued coverage right here on PokerNews.com.

Tags: Aaron MasseyAnkush MandaviaDaniel NegreanuHarrison GimbelJason MercierJoe KuetherJonathan JaffeMaurice HawkinsMike LeahToby Lewis

Main Event Champion Takes His Seat

Nível 5 : 150/300, 25 ante
Joe McKeehen
Joe McKeehen

The reigning WSOP Main Event Champion, Joe Mckeehen has taken his seat in the PCA Main Event. He is fresh off a second place finish in the $100,000 High Roller earlier this week at the PCA which earned him $1,220,480.

On this hand, the action checked to Mckeehen on the turn and he bet 1,300. His opponent called. The river was the {6-Spades} and the action checked again to Mckeehen who bet 6,500. His opponent folded and Mckeehen took down the pot and got back over the starting stack.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Joe McKeehen us
Joe McKeehen
31,000

Tags: Joe Mckeehen

WSOP Runner-Up Josh Beckley Content with Main Event Play, Excited for Future Travel

Nível 5 : 150/300, 25 ante
Josh Beckley
Josh Beckley

If you ain't first, you're last, a popular movie character once said.

That may not quite be true in the World Series of Poker Main Event, considering last place walks away with nothing but a story, while second place banks a massive, possibly life-changing pay day.

However, some would also say that second place in the Main Event is the biggest bubble in poker. It's not just the huge difference between first and second place money that's such a big deal, but the added value of becoming Main Event champion is hard to quantify. Lucrative sponsorship opportunities, become a poker immortal in one of the most select clubs in the game's history, and the chance to become a star in the industry are just some of the side benefits that come with winning the Main Event.

Josh Beckley, who finished second to Joe McKeehen in the 2015 Main Event, is in attendance and grinding on Day 1b of the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure. As he tells it, thoughts of missed opportunity don't cross his mind, and he's plenty happy with how things went down.

"I'm content with what happened," he said, adding that the book on his poker story is far from written since he could still win big tournaments down the road. "I'm very confident that I played the best I possibly could."

Indeed, results-wise, it's hard to find fault with what Beckley accomplished. Even before factoring in that he navigated through a minefield of 6,420 players to reach the biggest final table in poker, what Beckley did once he got there was commendable. He went into the November Nine in seventh place with under 30 big blinds and managed to ladder his way to a $4,470,896 payout as accomplished players who started with more chips like Max Steinberg and Pierre Neuville fell before him.

As far as what went down on the felt, though, plenty of critics emerged in the wake of Beckley's run. The poker Twitterverse was abuzz with debate about some of Beckley's play. In particular, Beckley's decision to preserve his second-place stack and fold jacks four-handed in a blind-versus-button battle against eventual champ Joe McKeehen raised some eyebrows. The fold proved correct in the sense that McKeehen did indeed hold queens, with many lauding the laydown. However, just as many asserted that it was results-oriented praise and the fold was a long-term mistake.

Beckley let such criticisms roll of his shoulders though, as he pointed out that those players weren't in his shoes and he has a unique perspective.

"I'm the person at the table," he said. "I can sense how everything's going. So, I'm making decisions based off that and not just math."

Those decisions proved lucrative for Beckley, and he's now adjusting to a new reality with a new bankroll. However, like his heads-up conqueror, with whom Beckley said he keeps in touch via Twitter and text, life hasn't changed much at all for the New Jersey native. He said the only major difference is he bought a new place in West Palm Beach, and his tournament grind will be a little more prestigious.

"I'm definitely going to dial it back," Beckley said of his volume. "I've been playing almost every day for like 10 years. I won't be playing $300 tournaments and stuff like that."

He added that he's interested in dipping his toe in some deeper tournament waters, trying out things like $25,000 high rollers for the experience, if nothing else. Travel is also on the agenda, and Beckley has a goal in mind.

"I like to experience new places," he said. "I would definitely like to go to Asia, that would be cool. I'd like to visit every continent."

He laughed as he corrected himself.

"Except Antarctica."

Tags: Joe McKeehenJoseph McKeehenJosh BeckleyMax SteinbergPierre Neuville

Get Ready for Day 1b of the 2016 PCA Main Event

PCA Logo
PCA Logo

At 12 p.m. local time today, Day 1b of the 2016 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure $5,300 Main Event will commence. Friday's Day 1a field attracted 210 players to the felt, and it was England's Toby Lewis who topped the surviving players with 188,000 in chips.

Lewis' lead proved a large one, with Boyuan Qu's second-place stack coming in at 149,800. Behind him was Kathy Lehne (130,100), Andrey Zaichenko (119,500), and Ryan Blank (114,400). All told, 131 competitors advanced from Day 1a.

Last Year's field tallied up 816 entries, and the event was won by American Kevin Sculz for $1,491,580. As is accustomed to poker tournaments everywhere, the last starting flight is always much, much larger, so expect to see a huge boost of competitors on Day 1b.

Two players we do expect to see in action on Day 1b are Bryn Kenney and Joe McKeehen. That duo battled deep into the night in the finale of the $100,000 Super High Roller that was wrapping up during Day 1a. Kenney came out on top for $1,687,800, and McKeehen, who won the World Series of Poker Main Event in 2015 for $7,683,346, took second for $1,220,840. Both will likely jump into today's $50,000 Single-Day High Roller before entering the Main Event, but registration here will remain open until the start of Day 2, so they have plenty of time to get involved.

Others we expect in the field are Daniel Negreanu, Jason Somerville, Liv Boeree, Vanessa Selbst, Ryan Riess, Igor Kurganov, and Ole Schemion.

Each player today will begin with 30,000 in tournament chips, and the plan will be to grind through eight one-hour levels of action. A 15-minute break has been scheduled following the completion of every two levels, with no dinner break.