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2017 PokerStars Championship Barcelona

Main Event
Dias: 6
Event Info

2017 PokerStars Championship Barcelona

Resultado Final
Vencedor
Mão Vencedora
ak
Prémio
€987,043
Event Info
Buy-in
€5,300
Prize Pool
€8,157,700
Entradas
1,682
Informações sobre o nível
Nível
41
Blinds
800,000 / 1,600,000
Ante
200,000

Sebastian Sorensson Wins PokerStars Championship Barcelona Main Event (€987,043)

Nível 41 : 800,000/1,600,000, 200,000 ante
Sebastian Sorensson
Sebastian Sorensson

In the PokerStars Championship Barcelona €5,300 Main Event, Sebastian Sorensson found himself a little out of his element.

An online qualifier who got a seat on PokerStars for $200, Sorensson was used to leisurely poker at micro stakes. Grinding through the grueling 13-hour days that populate the schedule throughout a major poker tournament proved to be a cold splash of reality on Sorensson's excitement.

The Swede found himself too tired to think, much less focussed on what was happening on the felt. He folded hands without even looking. He forgot his big blind.

"The days are so, so long," he said. "It's really exhausting."

Somehow, though, Sorensson pulled off every small stakes player's dream: satellite into a big tournament and win the damn thing. He conquered the customary massive Barcelona field, which turned out to be 1,682 players strong.

PositionPlayerCountryPrize
1Sebastian SorenssonSweden€987,043
2Lachezar Plamenov PetkovBulgaria€917,347
3Raffaele SorrentinoItaly€850,110
4Brian Kaufman EspositoUruguay€402,000
5Andre AkkariBrazil€317,960
6Usman SiddiqueUnited Kingdom€252,000
    
7Aeragan ArunanUnited Kingdom€193,000
8Albert DaherLebanon€136,000

For his win, Sorensson, who spends most of his days working in a warehouse, claimed €987,043, the biggest prize in a three-way chop with heads-up opponent Lachezar Petkov and PokerStars Championship Monte Carlo winner Raffaele Sorrentino. Petkov, chip leader at the time, got €917,347 and Sorrentino got €850,110 with the extra €100,000 left on the table won by Sorensson.

The tale Sorensson told of his journey just to get to Casino Barcelona sounds like something out of gambling folklore. A huge mixed martial arts fan, he said he put in a bet on Nate Diaz as a sizable underdog in a late 2015 bout with Michael Johnson. Diaz won by decision, so Sorensson banked $1,000.

He said he then turned around and fired that $1,000 on Donald Trump to win the Republican presidential nomination, again at about 3-1 odds. Of course, that proved to be a winner, as did his subsequent rollover on Trump winning the election.

Suddenly in the possession of about $12,000, Sorensson decided he'd like to start playing poker and hopped into the micro stakes pool with the occasional shot, such as his satellite win.

Improbably finding himself in the money despite his status as a live poker novice, he said his strategy was simply to play tight and try to hit pay jumps. He certainly did that at the final table early on, starting out as the second-shortest stack with everyone looking up at Sorrentino.

However, stacks were shallow and things proved quite chaotic throughout the course of play. After short stack Usman Siddique fell early on, the five-handed war played out over 70-plus hands and about five hours, with players leapfrogging each other on the leaderboard and nobody able to truly take control.

Such was the movement that PokerStars Team Pro Andre Akkari had one of the strongest leads of the whole final table with about 40 percent of the chips, and still went out fifth. He may have taken a hammerlock on things if his queens held against Sorrentino, but the Italian found an ace on the river with ace-queen. The affable Brazilian never recovered, busting in a flip with Petkov shortly after. Never one to dwell on the negative, Akkari took the fall in stride.

"I'm always happy," he told PokerStars' Joe Stapleton. "I'm in Barcelona playing poker and I got good money."

Uruguay's Brian Kaufman put on a creative display of poker throughout the final table with plenty of non-standard plays, but he dropped in fourth the very next hand after Akkari busted when he jammed king-queen and ran into Sorensson's ace-queen.

After about an hour of very shallow three-handed play — average stacks were in the neighborhood of 25 big blinds — the remaining plays talked deal. Negotiations went back and forth for a bit, with Sorrentino asserting that he needed more than ICM. Ultimately, he convinced Sorensson to give up €15,000.

Deal
The players make a deal.

Just a few hands later, Sorrentino shoved over a Sorensson open in a battle of the blinds while holding ace-queen, but this time the hand would fail him as Sorensson found the call button with pocket threes and won unimproved. So ended the dream of Sorrentino to become a two-time PokerStars Championship winner just a few months after he conquered Monte Carlo for €466,714.

After his elimination, he didn't mince words about how disappointed he was to come so close to a second major title.

"I was really close to an incredible result," he said. "I'm not happy, I would have been happy if I won.

"I made the deal because the structure collapsed, we were playing with 20 BB average and it was impossible for me to play my main game."

That left Sorensson and Petkov playing heads up with the former holding a sizable lead of more than 4-1.

There were only around 50 big blinds in play after Petkov found an early double and the level went up. A situation likely to produce a quick and clean outcome instead led to an extended dogfight that lasted about 60 hands.

Petkov did his best to keep the pots as small as possible, religiously limping nearly every button. Sorensson did the complete opposite, coming in for large raises in both positions with a variety of holdings in an effort to put pressure on an opponent highly experienced with short stacks heads up — Petkov plays lots of Spin & Gos on PokerStars.

Neither player would give an inch and the match descended into levels never seen before in a major PokerStars event as they hit the record mark of Level 41 (800,000/1,600,000/200,000). The breaking point had finally been reached though, and just two hands in, Petkov jammed with king-nine and Sorensson snap-called with ace-king and flopped an ace for the win.

A clearly emotional Sorensson said after the win it's finally time to splurge.

"I will probably buy a whole bunch of nice shit," he said.

He also isn't long for working in the warehouse, as he may finally try his hand at what he said is his dream: being a professional poker player. Certainly, he now has the bankroll to give it a shot.

Tags: Sebastian Sorensson

Lachezar Plamenov Petkov Eliminated in 2nd Place (€917,347)

Nível 41 : 800,000/1,600,000, 200,000 ante
Lachezar Petkov
Lachezar Petkov

Hand 186: Lachezar Plamenov Petkov woke up with {K-Clubs}{9-Hearts} and shoved for 18.2 million. Sebastian Sorensson snap called with {A-Clubs}{K-Hearts} and soon found out he was a 77% favorite.

"I can't beat you in flips," Sorensson said to Petkov.

"Do I cover him?" Sorensson asked his rail.

He did, and he did.

The flop came {A-Spades}{2-Diamonds}{3-Clubs}, making Sorensson the 97% favorite. The {J-Diamonds} on the turn did it, it was all over as there was no card in the deck that Petkov could hit to still win it. The {10-Spades} on the river was there just to make things official and Petkov exited in 2nd place, good for €917,347.

Tags: Lachezar Plamenov PetkovSebastian Sorensson

Raffaele Sorrentino Eliminated in 3rd Place (€850,110)

Nível 38 : 400,000/800,000, 100,000 ante
Raffaele Sorrentino
Raffaele Sorrentino

Hand #118: Sebastian Sorensson raised to 3,900,000 from the small blind. Raffaele Sorrentino shoved 14,200,000 from the big blind. Sorensson thought around a minute before calling.

Raffaele Sorrentino: {A-Hearts}{Q-Diamonds}
Sebastian Sorensson: {3-Diamonds}{3-Spades}

The Monte-Carlo champion was at risk and slightly behind. He needed to hit and improve to keep his dream of winning two PokerStars Championship Main Events alive.

Sorrentino didn't get any help on the {6-Clubs}{6-Diamonds}{2-Hearts} flop, nor the {7-Diamonds} turn. The river was the {J-Hearts} and Sorrentino's hand remained second best.

An amazing second deep run saw Sorrentino banking €850,110 for his 3rd place finish. With the cash, the 37-year old Italian nearly doubled his score from Monte-Carlo.

Sebastian Sorensson
Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Sebastian Sorensson se
Sebastian Sorensson
40,900,000 14,400,000
Lachezar Plamenov Petkov bg
Lachezar Plamenov Petkov
9,500,000 -100,000
Raffaele Sorrentino it
Raffaele Sorrentino
Day 5 Chip Leader
Eliminado

Tags: Raffaele SorrentinoSebastian Sorensson

Brian Kaufman Eliminated in 4th Place (€402,000)

Nível 37 : 300,000/600,000, 100,000 ante
Brian Kaufman
Brian Kaufman

Hand #96: Brian Kaufman moved all in first to act for 4.7 million with {k-Hearts}{q-Hearts} and got called by Sebastian Sorensson, who had {a-Hearts}{q-Spades} and a covering stack in the big blind.

The {4-Spades}{2-Hearts}{j-Spades} flop was a whiff for Kaufman. A {5-Hearts} turn brought a pile of outs in the form of hearts for Kaufman. A {10-Spades} river was a brick, though.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Sebastian Sorensson se
Sebastian Sorensson
11,400,000 6,325,000
Brian Kaufman Esposito uy
Brian Kaufman Esposito
Eliminado

Tags: Brian KaufmanSebastian Sorensson

Andre Akkari Eliminated in 5th Place (€319,760)

Nível 37 : 300,000/600,000, 100,000 ante
Lachezar Petkov and Andre Akkari
Lachezar Petkov and Andre Akkari

Hand #95: In the first hand after the blinds went up, Lachezar Petkov open-shoved from the small blind. Andre Akkari called all in for his last 7,775,000 from the big blind.

Lachezar Petkov: {A-Hearts}{9-Spades}
Andre Akkari: {4-Hearts}{4-Clubs}

The Bulgarian and Brazilian rail got on their feet to cheer for their respective champions. The {6-Clubs}{5-Spades}{6-Hearts} flop kept Akkari in the lead but Petkov picked up some counterfeit outs. The {Q-Spades} turn was safe for Akkari as well. Petkov needed an ace, queen, nine or five on the river to win.

The river was the {5-Clubs} and the Bulgarian rail exploded. Akkari's deep run finally came to an end in fifth place. The popular Team PokerStars Pro said his goodbyes as he walked off the stage.

After receiving support from his countrymen, Akkari headed for the payout desk to collect €319,760 in winnings. With the cash, Akkari surpassed fellow Team PokerStars Pro Felipe Ramos on the Brazilian all-time money list.

Lachezar_Petkov
Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Lachezar Plamenov Petkov bg
Lachezar Plamenov Petkov
2,285,000 -12,315,000
Andre Akkari br
Andre Akkari
Day 4 Chip Leader
WSOP 1X Winner
PokerStars
Eliminado

Tags: Andre AkkariLachezar Plamenov Petkov

Hands #79-83: Sorrentino Doubles on the River

Nível 36 : 250,000/500,000, 50,000 ante
Raffaele_Sorrentino
Raffaele_Sorrentino

Hand #79: Andre Akkari opened to 1.1 million under the gun with {q-Diamonds}{8-Diamonds} and got flatted by big blind Lachezar Petkov with {k-Diamonds}{k-Clubs}. Petkov checked after flopping top set on {5-Hearts}{k-Spades}{j-Hearts}. Akkari fired in 900,000 and Petkov continued to keep the pot on the small side with a call. Both checked when a {7-Spades} hit, bringing an {a-Hearts}.

Petkov checked and Akkari waved the white flag.

Hand #80: Brian Kaufman opened for 1,050,000 with {k-Clubs}{j-Spades} in the cutoff. Akkari put in the requisite calling chips with {a-Spades}{6-Hearts} in the big blind. Akkari paired when {6-Clubs}{8-Diamonds}{9-Spades} hit, keeping his lead. Check-check and a {7-Spades} hit. Akkari checked again and Kaufman wanted to see another free one: {3-Spades}. Akkari checked a third time and Kaufman put in 1.3 million, winning the pot when Akkari folded.

Hand #81: Petkov raised all in on the button with {a-Diamonds}{j-Diamonds} and swept up the blinds and antes.

Hand #82: Petkov came in raising with 1.1 million in the cutoff with {9-Spades}{9-Diamonds}. Akkari was dealt {9-Spades}{9-Diamonds} on the button and three-bet to 2,775,000. Petkov considered things and mucked.

Hand #83: Akkari opened to 1.1 million in the cutoff with {q-Spades}{q-Clubs}. Raffaele Sorrentino shoved all in with {a-Diamonds}{q-Diamonds} for 7.1 million in the big blind.

The {k-Clubs}{9-Hearts}{4-Hearts} kept things clean for Akkari. A {2-Hearts} turn did nothing for the Italian. However, the {a-Hearts} popped off the deck to give Sorrentino the double and keep him live for a second PokerStars Championship title.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Raffaele Sorrentino it
Raffaele Sorrentino
Day 5 Chip Leader
14,700,000 7,400,000
Brian Kaufman Esposito uy
Brian Kaufman Esposito
9,600,000 600,000
Andre Akkari br
Andre Akkari
Day 4 Chip Leader
WSOP 1X Winner
PokerStars
9,525,000 -6,505,000
Lachezar Plamenov Petkov bg
Lachezar Plamenov Petkov
8,400,000 -550,000
Sebastian Sorensson se
Sebastian Sorensson
8,175,000 -955,000

Tags: Andre AkkariBrian KaufmanLachezar Plamenov PetkovRaffaele Sorrentino

Hands #50-57: Sorrentino Doubles Through Kaufman

Nível 35 : 200,000/400,000, 50,000 ante
Raffaele_Sorrentino
Raffaele_Sorrentino

Hand #50: Raffaele Sorrentino raised to 800,000 and won the pot preflop.

Hand #51: Lachezar Petkov raised in the cutoff to 825,000 with {q-Spades}{q-Clubs}. Brian Kaufman seemed to think hard about defending big blind but mucked.

Hand #52: Action folded to the blinds, where Kaufman completed with {7-Clubs}{6-Clubs}. Sorrentino jammed it in for 6.3 million with {a-Diamonds}{4-Hearts} and won the pot.

Hand #53: Kaufman opened on the button for 850,000 and won with {k-Diamonds}{8-Clubs}.

Hand #54: Petkov had the {a-Clubs} and an unknown card and completed, and Andre Akkari checked with {6-Clubs}{2-Hearts}. The {j-Spades}{5-Spades}{q-Spades} flop prompted a bet from Petkov, and Akkari folded right away.

Hand #55: Sorrentino picked up {8-Spades}{8-Diamonds} and crammed for 7,025,000 in the cutoff. Everyone behind him mucked.

Hand #56: Action folded to the blinds, where Sebastian Sorensson bumped it up with {7-Clubs}{5-Diamonds}. Big blind Kaufman mucked {7-}{3-}.

Hand #57: Kaufman got {a-Hearts}{6-Diamonds} and shipped all in from the small blind for just under 8 million effective. Sorrentino woke up with {a-Diamonds}{q-Clubs}. The {k-Diamonds}{7-Clubs}{10-Spades} flop and {7-Hearts} turn meant the pot could be chopped. The {9-Clubs} wasn't a card that would do it though.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Raffaele Sorrentino it
Raffaele Sorrentino
Day 5 Chip Leader
15,800,000 9,020,000
Brian Kaufman Esposito uy
Brian Kaufman Esposito
4,700,000 -8,100,000

Tags: Andre AkkariBrian KaufmanLachezar Plamenov PetkovRaffaele SorrentinoSebastian Sorensson

Usman Siddique Eliminated in 6th Place (€252,000)

Nível 33 : 125,000/250,000, 25,000 ante
Usman_Siddique_Brian_Kaufman
Usman_Siddique_Brian_Kaufman

Hand #21: Andre Akkari raised to 550,000 with {J-Spades}{8-Spades} in middle position. Usman Siddique shoved all in for 5,125,000 with {6-Hearts}{6-Diamonds} from the cutoff. Kaufman reshoved 5,550,000 with {A-Clubs}{K-Clubs} from the small blind and Akkari got out of the way.

Siddique was the one at risk, but if Kaufman would lose, he would've been left with less than two big blinds. The {10-Clubs}{4-Hearts}{4-Diamonds} flop kept Siddique in the lead.

The dealer burned and turned the {K-Diamonds} and Kaufman hit one of the cards he was looking for. Siddique was drawing to the remaining sixes to survive but didn't catch one on the {Q-Diamonds} river.

The London resident received €252,000 for finishing in 6th place, by far the biggest score of his career. With the near double-up, Kaufman is the new chipleader.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Brian Kaufman Esposito uy
Brian Kaufman Esposito
1,162,500 -5,012,500
Usman Siddique gb
Usman Siddique
Eliminado

Tags: Brian KaufmanUsman Siddique

Hands #16-18: Aces for Siddique

Nível 33 : 125,000/250,000, 25,000 ante
Usman Siddique
Usman Siddique

Hand #16: Raffaele Sorrentino completed the blind with {9-Diamonds}{7-Hearts}. Lachezar Petkov checked his option with {j-Spades}{9-Clubs}. Sorrentino came out betting with 275,000 on {5-Diamonds}{a-Clubs}{6-Hearts} and took it down.

Hand #17: Brian Kaufman opened for 525,000 with {k-Diamonds}{9-Hearts}. Petkov called in the small blind with {q-Clubs}{j-Clubs} and they saw a {4-Spades}{j-Diamonds}{7-Spades} flop heads up. Both checked and Petkov bet out 650,000, and Kaufman called when the {2-Hearts} hit. The river was an {a-Clubs} and Petkov checked. Kaufman bet 900,000.

After some tanking, Petkov called and won the pot.

Hand #18: Sorrentino opened in the cutoff with a hand that contained the {2-Diamonds}. Usman Siddique was dealt {a-Spades}{a-Hearts} in the big blind and called. The flop came {k-Spades}{j-Diamonds}{5-Clubs} and Siddique checked. Sorrentino bet 425,000 and Siddique called. Both checked the {a-Diamonds} and the river was a {3-Diamonds}. Siddique bet 550,000 and Sorrentino called, revealing the {a-Clubs} at showdown.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Lachezar Plamenov Petkov bg
Lachezar Plamenov Petkov
10,325,000 1,625,000
Raffaele Sorrentino it
Raffaele Sorrentino
Day 5 Chip Leader
10,100,000 -1,175,000
Brian Kaufman Esposito uy
Brian Kaufman Esposito
6,175,000 -2,675,000
Usman Siddique gb
Usman Siddique
4,500,000 1,700,000

Tags: Brian KaufmanLachezar Plamenov PetkovRaffaele SorrentinoUsman Siddique

Who Will Win The 2017 PokerStars Championship Barcelona Main Event?

Can Team PokerStars Pro Andre Akkari Win The Main Event?
Can Team PokerStars Pro Andre Akkari Win The Main Event?

It took five long days for 1,682 players to get down to the final six of the 2017 PokerStars Championship Barcelona Main Event. The tournament has been a gigantic success for each of them, having already secured a share of at least €252,000 each of the incredible €8,175,000 prize pool. At the end of the night, the trophy and a life-altering cash of €1,410,000 is awaiting the victor.

Perhaps the biggest story of them all is being written by current chipleader Raffaello Sorrentino (15,500,000). It took nearly100 EPT's for a two-time winner to emerge, yet Sorrentino could become a PokerStars champion for the second time in six editions. Sorrentino cashed €466,714 for winning the PokerStars Championship Presented by Monte-Carlo Casino and needs to finish third or better to surpass that cash. Making the final table again is an improbable feat on its own, winning his second PokerStars Championship title would cement an incredible legacy.

Second in chips is Lachezar Plamenov Petkov from Bulgaria (10,325,000). The heads-up Spin & Go player on PokerStars has already racked up his biggest lifetime cash and is in prime position to call himself a millionaire after the night is over.

The biggest name at the final table sits in third: Team PokerStars Pro Andre Akkari. Cheered on by a boisterous Brazilian rail, Akkari clung to the short stack for most of Day 5 before surging late last night. With over $3,4 million in lifetime cashes and experience playing in the limelight, all eyes will be on the red spade pro as the final table unfolds.

Brian Kaufman Esposito, Sebastian Sorensson and Usman Siddique round out the final six players that will take their seats at noon local time to start the sixth and final day. All their respective profiles, as well as those of the other three, can be found underneath this introduction.

The broadcast will start at 1 p.m. with holecards showing, and will be on a security delay of an hour. The live reporting blog will be following along with the stream as to not spoil any of the action. The action will resume at 12 p.m. local time with 23 minutes left at blinds of 100,000/200,000 with a running ante of 25,000 and continue until the last man is standing. The PokerNews live reporting team will be providing start-to-finish hand-for-hand coverage until the winner is crowned, so don't miss any of the action on this exciting last day of the 2017 PokerStars Championship Barcelona!