| Jogador | Fichas | Oscilação |
|---|---|---|
|
|
1,735,000
860,000
|
860,000 |
|
|
1,300,000
800,000
|
800,000 |
|
|
799,000
121,000
|
121,000 |
|
|
650,000
210,000
|
210,000 |
|
|
500,000
200,000
|
200,000 |
|
|
411,000
23,000
|
23,000 |
|
|
314,000
26,000
|
26,000 |
2013 World Series of Poker
Josh Pollock and John Scaife got all in on a flop of ![]()
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Pollock: ![]()
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Scaife: ![]()
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Pollock's overpair was in the lead, but he had plenty of outs to fade: any king, heart or queen would improve Scaife's hand. The turn brought a
, closing out Scaife's straight outs. The river was the
, improving Pollock to a full house and leaving Scaife with about 10 big blinds.
| Jogador | Fichas | Oscilação |
|---|---|---|
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1,060,000
555,000
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555,000 |
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130,000
384,000
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384,000 |
These players earned $37,019 for their Main Event finish. Keep an eye on the payouts tab for exact-place finishes.
Among the recent eliminations was 2008 Main Event runner-up Ivan Demidov.
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The reigning World Series of Poker Main Event champion Greg Merson has some advice for the remaining players: just don't play pots with him.
After three-betting preflop, and check-calling a bet on the flop, Rachid "SkaiWalkurrr" Ben Cherif checked again on the turn of a ![]()
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board. Jamil Ogunmakinwa fired out 100,000 into a pot of well over 200,000, and Ben Cherif moved all in for 472,000.
Ogunmakinwa tanked for well over five minutes, then finally called, showing ![]()
. Ben Cherif tabled ![]()
.
Only a spade could save Ben Cherif, and the
fell on the river, doubling the Dutchman to 1.2 million chips. Ogunmakinwa was crippled down to just 96,000.
| Jogador | Fichas | Oscilação |
|---|---|---|
|
|
1,200,000
185,000
|
185,000 |
|
|
96,000
224,000
|
224,000 |
Jean-Yves Malherbe opened with a raise to 20,000 from the cutoff. Timoshenko was his only taker from the big blind.
The flop came down ![]()
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and Timoshenko check called a bet of 20,000 from Malherbe. The turn was the
and both players slowed down with a check. The river was the
and Timoshenko opted to lead with a bet of 28,000. After a taking moment to think, Malherbe dropped in the call. Timoshenko showed ![]()
for a pair of nines and that was good to take down the hand as Malherbe mucked.
| Jogador | Fichas | Oscilação |
|---|---|---|
|
|
1,091,000
76,000
|
76,000 |
|
|
515,000
343,000
|
343,000 |
Anthony Forsyth-Forrest opened to 25,000 in middle position. Nick Schwarmann called from the hijack, Grayson Ramage called from the big blind, and the flop came down ![]()
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.
Action checked to Schwarmann who bet 34,000. Only Ramage tagged along to see the
turn, which both players checked. The
river completed the board and Ramage bet 78,000. Schwarmann gave it some thought and ultimately called.
Ramage tabled ![]()
for a pair of queens, Schwarmann mucked, and Ramage collected the pot.
| Jogador | Fichas | Oscilação |
|---|---|---|
|
|
2,349,000
63,000
|
63,000 |
|
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829,000
61,000
|
61,000 |
|
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485,000
160,000
|
160,000 |
Catching the action with Yann Dion making it 45,000 from the button, Jason Mann bumped it up to 213,000. Dion went into the tank for two minutes before making the call as the dealer dropped a ![]()
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flop.
Mann took his time before placing out a bet of 317,000 to put the action on Dion. Dion spent nearly ten minutes deliberating about his decision before announcing he was all in for 1,051,00 as it was now Mann's turn to enter the think-tank.
Roughly a further four minutes would pass before Mann slid his cards to the muck while slipping to 1,900,000 as Dion climbs to 1,830,000 in chips.
| Jogador | Fichas | Oscilação |
|---|---|---|
|
|
1,900,000
590,000
|
590,000 |
|
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1,830,000
530,000
|
530,000 |
Ami Alibay has been among the leaders for much of Day 4 in the World Series of Poker Main Event. The nightclub and restaurant owner from Montreal is currently sitting in the top 10 in chips with 1.7 million.
Alibay might be an amateur, but he already has made two cashes this summer, including an eighth-place result in Event #4: $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em Six-Handed. He also has high-roller experience after playing $111,111 buy-in tournament for the One Drop Foundation. He contributed 1% to the foundation and got to play against some of the world’s toughest competitors, but ultimately fell short of the money. Now, he has a chance to make waves in poker's most prestigious event.
We spoke with Alibay about playing poker as a hobby and facing some of the best players in the world in the Main Event.
PokerNews: You played in the $111,111 buy-in One Drop event. How does that event compare to the Main Event?
Alibay: The $100K had the best players in the world. It was the toughest tournament that I have ever played. I also played the $25K buy-in tournament at the Bellagio and I think that had the same range of players. But in the $100K I really got outplayed so many times. In the Main Event everyone has a dream so you can have maybe three to five amateur players on the table. In the first couple of days my table draws were so good because I didn’t have anyone to push me around. Actually, I had Vanessa Selbst on my table in the first day. I was trying to avoid her but knew I had to play hands against her because if you hit a hand you can maximize your value.
How did the first two days compare to Day 3 and now Day 4?
People are getting tighter. Especially when the money bubble was near, the play was really tight on my table. You didn’t see any major hands at all. It’s now getting really serious. It’s the Super Bowl of poker so rightfully so.
You have only 10 cashes listed on Hendon Mob Database. What is your poker story?
I started to play poker at René Angélil’s charity poker tournament a few years ago. He inspired me to play poker. I came to Las Vegas once to play in the World Poker Tournament with him and I really liked the competition. I’m not 20 years old anymore so I can’t play football or hockey like before, but in poker age doesn’t matter. I like to compete so poker was good. Through the years I have improved. I was really bad when I first started playing but I think I am in a good position now to have a good run.
Is poker just a hobby then, or would you like to turn it into a profession?
No, poker will never be a profession for me. I own two nightclubs and one fine-dining restaurant in Montreal. I will keep poker as a hobby. I don’t wait for the money to come in to pay my bills and eat so poker is just fun for me. Even if I bust in the Main Event, it has been a lot of fun.
Can you talk about your experience with the Main Event over the last two years and this year?
The last two years was so terrible. I was chasing draws like crazy and playing the Main Event like a cash game. I learned a lot since then. I watched poker on ESPN and learned a lot from what the commentators had to say. Tony Dunst helped with his comments. There were a lot of hands played on the WPT that were aired on television and that helped me a lot. There were a lot of situations that I could have played differently and I learned through listening to Dunst. He made me think of how to play hands differently.
You are on the feature table with Greg Mueller and Carlos Mortensen. Are you familiar with some of the big names in the poker industry?
I met Greg just yesterday and I just met Carlos today. Before this, I didn’t know who either player was but now I am aware and respect them as players. Actually, Carlos had 35,000 in chips. I played a hand against him and he doubled up because he cracked me on the river. I think that helped a lot because now he has about one million now. I guess you have to be lucky to still be playing this late into the tournament.
Has there been any kind of intimidation playing against some of the pros?
I’ve played with Antonio Esfandiari and Vanessa Rousso. People might be surprised but Selbst was one of the toughest players I’ve ever played. I was really impressed by the way she played on Day 1. She is dangerous. A truly great player and I hope people know that.
What were your expectations before the Main Event, and have they changed?
To win a bracelet; isn’t that everyone’s expectations? Let me tell you a story. I came to Las Vegas early in the summer and played Event #4 ($1,500 No-Limit Hold’em Six-Handed). We were 10-handed and maybe two people away from the final table. I was second in chips and Joe Cada was the chip leader. My friend, Charles Sylvestre won the bracelet in Event #3 ($1,000 N-Limit Hold’em Re-Entry) so I was called to go take a picture. I left the table for just four hands, took the picture and went back to my table. When I sat down, I doubled up the short-stack on the very first hand. Then doubled him again soon after before he knocked me out. I bubbled the final table in 8th place. After that I said there was no way I will lose the Main Event. Of course I can’t control the cards but I am doing my best to make it to the final table.
| Jogador | Fichas | Oscilação |
|---|---|---|
|
|
1,420,000
100,000
|
100,000 |
|
|
1,355,000
85,000
|
85,000 |
|
|
1,296,000
196,000
|
196,000 |
|
|
973,000
167,000
|
167,000 |
|
|
850,000
351,000
|
351,000 |
|
|
710,000
375,000
|
375,000 |
|
|
424,000
140,000
|
140,000 |
|
|
275,000
201,500
|
201,500 |
|
|
250,000
47,000
|
47,000 |