18+ jogue de forma responsável. Sicad.pt

Srij Gordon Moody Sicad 18+

2014 World Series of Poker

Event #15: $3,000 Six-Handed No-Limit Hold'em
Dias: 3
Event Info

2014 World Series of Poker

Resultado Final
Vencedor
Mão Vencedora
ak
Prémio
$508,640
Event Info
Buy-in
$3,000
Prize Pool
$2,211,300
Entradas
810
Informações sobre o nível
Nível
32
Blinds
60,000 / 120,000
Ante
15,000

Day 3 of Event #15 Ends Without Crowning a Champion; Vayo Holds a Narrow Lead

Nível 30 : 40,000/80,000, 10,000 ante
Gordon Vayo
Gordon Vayo

Day 3 of Event #15 began with 15 players in contention for the $508,640 first-place prize and the most sought after piece of poker jewelery in the world, a World Series of Poker gold bracelet. It ended with two players, Davidi Kitai and Gordon Vayo, almost even in chips and having to return for an unscheduled Day 4.

Alen Bilic was the first casualty of the day and he was followed to the cashier’s desk first by Ukraine’s Artem Metalidi then by Pratyush Buddiga, Gabriel Andarade, Ryan Olisar, Vladimir Geshkenbein, Bill Burford, and 13-time WSOP champion Phil Hellmuth.

Hellmuth’s exit in eighth place, at the hands of Vayo, meant the unofficial table was reached and play headed over to the “mothership” in the center of the Amazon Room.

Seven-handed play lasted around 40 minutes and ended with the elimination of Germany’s Heinz Kamutzki.

It took 32 hands before the players at the final table got some extra elbow room by virtue of a player busting out. That player was Zachary Korik. Fourteen hands later, John Andress moved all in from the small blind for 230,000 and Vayo called from the big blind. It was the {A-Hearts}{2-Diamonds} of Andress versus the {K-Spades}{J-Clubs} of Vayo. The {5-Spades}{K-Clubs}{4-Diamonds} flop put Vayo in the lead and he stayed there through the {J-Diamonds} turn and {4-Spades} river.

Next to head to the cashier’s desk was Mark Darner, who on Hand #60 of the final table three-bet all in over the top of a Kitai opening raise with the {A-Spades}{Q-Hearts}. Ruberto came over the top for 30,000 more and Kitai folded. Ruberto had made his move with the {J-Diamonds}{J-Spades} and stayed ahead on the {2-Hearts}{6-Hearts}{2-Spades} flop, the {10-Spades} turn, and the {5-Spades} river.

Three-handed play lasted 61 hands, including a number of split pots and double ups, before something finally gave and heads-up play was set.

Vayo limped on the button, Ruberto raised to 225,000 from the small blind, and Kitai raised to 455,000 from the big blind. Vayo mucked, Ruberto moved all-in for 1.52 million and Kitai called. Kitai flipped over the {A-Spades}{K-Clubs} and was dominating Ruberto’s {A-Diamonds}{6-Clubs}. The {K-Diamonds}{4-Diamonds}{2-Hearts} flop paired Kitai’s kings, but the {Q-Diamonds} on the turn gave Ruberto a lifeline in the hand because he could now hit a diamond to win the pot. A diamond failed to appear on the river ({10-Clubs}), and Ruberto headed to the cashier’s desk to collect $200,476 — a superb result considering he started the day last in the counts.

Going into the heads-up match, Kitai held a chip advantage of 5.84 million to 1.45 million over Vayo, but over the course of 40 hands, Vayo managed to claw his way back into contention and actually held a narrow lead of 3.75 million to 3.545 million when play ended for the night.

When Level 30 ended at almost 2:10 a.m. on Sunday morning, the players were given the option to play one more level or pause the tournament and return to their seats once they had managed to get some sleep. They agreed to do the latter and headed into the warm Las Vegas night knowing that they have locked up at least $314,535 for their efforts and that one of them will win $508,640 and a WSOP gold bracelet before Sunday is over.

Keep your browsers locked to PokerNews on Sunday when we will bring you continued hand-for-hand coverage of the conclusion of Event #15.

Tony Ruberto Eliminated in 3rd Place ($200,476)

Nível 29 : 30,000/60,000, 10,000 ante
Tony Ruberto - 3rd Place
Tony Ruberto - 3rd Place

Hand #120: Tony Ruberto received a walk in the big blind.

Hand #121: Gordon Vayo called from the button, Tony Ruberto raised to 225,000 from the small blind, and Davidi Kitai three-bet to 455,000 from the big. Vayo folded, Ruberto moved all in for 1.52 million, and Kitai called.

Ruberto: {a-Diamonds}{6-Clubs}
Kitai: {a-Spades}{k-Clubs}

It was a bad spot for Ruberto, and it got even worse when the {k-Diamonds}{4-Diamonds}{2-Hearts} flop paired Kitai. The {q-Diamonds} turn gave Ruberto some hope with a flush draw, but the {10-Clubs} ended up blanking on the river. Ruberto exited in third place and will take home $200,476 for his performance.

He's no doubt disappointed, but considering he began the day dead last in chips, it's an impressive performance.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Tony Ruberto us
Tony Ruberto
Eliminado

Tags: Davidi KitaiGordon VayoTony Ruberto

Mark Darner Eliminated in 4th Place ($132,169)

Nível 27 : 20,000/40,000, 5,000 ante
Mark Darner - 4th Place
Mark Darner - 4th Place

Hand #56: Davidi Kitai opened for 85,000 under the gun and took down the blinds and antes.

Hand #57: Gordon Vayo moved all in under the gun for 615,000 and the rest of the players folded.

Hand #58: Tony Ruberto moved all in from the button and won the pot.

Hand #59: Davidi Kitai raised to 85,000 from the button and won the pot.

Hand #60: Davidi Kitai raised to 85,000 under the gun and Mark Darner moved all in from the small blind for 620,000. Tony Ruberto then moved all in over the top for just 30,000 more and Kitai got out of the way.

Ruberto: {j-Diamonds}{j-Spades}
Darner: {a-Spades}{q-Hearts}

It was a flip, but Darner needed to improve to stay alive. It didn't happen on the {2-Hearts}{6-Hearts}{2-Spades} flop, nor on the {10-Spades} turn. That meant Darner needed either an ace or queen on the river, but it was not meant to be as the {5-Spades} blanked.

Darner exited to a nice round of applause spearheaded by his rail which included Ryan Tepen, Ronnie Barah, and Chris Conrad.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Tony Ruberto us
Tony Ruberto
1,300,000 650,000
Mark Darner us
Mark Darner
Eliminado

Tags: Mark DarnerTony Ruberto

John Andress Eliminated in 5th Place ($89,734)

Nível 27 : 20,000/40,000, 5,000 ante
John Andress - 5th Place
John Andress - 5th Place

Hand #42: Mark Darner received a walk in the big blind.

Hand #43: Tony Ruberto received a walk in the big blind.

Hand #44: John Andress moved all in under the gun for 260,000 and Davidi Kitai called. Andress turned over the {a-Spades}{6-Spades}, and Kitai held the same hand with the {a-Diamonds}{6-Clubs}. The board ran out {a-Spades}{3-Spades}{a-Hearts}{q-Clubs}{9-Clubs} and the two chopped the pot.

Hand #45: Tony Ruberto opened for 90,000 and won the pot.

Hand #46: Action folded to a short-stacked John Andress in the small blind and he moved all in for 230,000. Gordon Vayo was in the big and made the call.

Andress: {a-Hearts}{2-Diamonds}
Vayo: {k-Spades}{j-Clubs}

Andress got it in good, but Vayo took the lead when the {5-Spades}{k-Clubs}{4-Diamonds} flop paired his king. The {J-Diamonds} turn gave him two pair, which meant Andress needed to catch a three for a wheel to survive. The dealer burned one last time and put out the {4-Spades}. Andress missed and exited the tournament in fifth place for $89,734.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Gordon Vayo us
Gordon Vayo
850,000 250,000
John Andress us
John Andress
Eliminado

Tags: John AndressGordon Vayo

Pre-Dinner Interview With Chip Leader Davidi Kitai

Nível 26 : 15,000/30,000, 5,000 ante
Davidi Kitai
Davidi Kitai

We caught up with Davidi Kitai as he prepared for the dinner break to see how the two-time World Series of Poker bracelet winner, and owner of poker's coveted Triple Crown, has managed to accumulate such massive stacks on each day of the tournament. And of course, we couldn't resist asking the proud Belgian how it felt to be called a "crazy Frenchman" by none other than the "Poker Brat" himself Phil Hellmuth.

PokerNews: Davidi, you seem to be on a tear in this tournament, finishing Day 1 in the top five on the leaderboard, bagging the second-largest stack after Day 2, and entering the final table with more than a million chips separating you from your closest competitor. Now, as you head off to dinner, you've built a castle of 4,695,000, while none of your four remaining opponents even has a million. How have you been able to consistently build such an impressive stack?

David Kitai: I started the day like second in chips, so I started with a good stack, and everything went well. I had Phil Hellmuth on my right and we play many pots together, and I don’t know, I didn’t lose many pots today. So I ran good, I played good, and that’s really it.

PokerNews: Speaking of Phil, he had an interesting quote earlier in the day after you three-bet him out of yet another pot. He said “crazy Frenchman is going to cost me my 14th bracelet … You have no chance to win sir.” Obviously, you’re not from France, you’re a proud Belgian. What would you like to say to Phil now that he’s not here, perhaps a geography lesson or a primer on the great nation of Belgium?

I mean, the confusion happens often because of my sponsorship with Winamax, so it’s not that big of a deal. The good part is that I realized he didn’t know me from the beginning, so I started to three-bet more, and to play more aggressive against him.

PokerNews: You’d think the man with more bracelets than anybody else would know that you won your second bracelet just last year.

No he didn’t know, he didn’t know anything. He called me a “random French guy,” so that was obviously a good point for my image.

PokerNews: You’re back on the WSOP final table stage competing for a third bracelet, but both of those came in Pot-Limit Hold’em events. How does this experience compare — are you more comfortable now that you’ve been here before, or does the spotlight shine just as brightly every time you make it to the peak?

It’s completely different actually because it’s six-max. Most of the time I prefer six-max; the game has more aggression and is more fun as well.

Tags: Davidi KitaiPhil HellmuthWSOP 2014

Zachary Korik Eliminated in 6th Place ($62,690)

Nível 26 : 15,000/30,000, 5,000 ante
Zachary Korik - 6th place finisher
Zachary Korik - 6th place finisher

Hand #31: Zachary Korik open-shoved from the small with what turned out to be {10-Diamonds}{7-Diamonds} and Gordon Vayo called from the big blind with {K-Diamonds}{J-Diamonds}.

The {A-Diamonds}{8-Hearts}{6-Clubs} flop did not improve either player and Korik looked in trouble. The {Q-Spades} turn kept Vayo in front and left Korik needing a seven, nine or ten to win the hand and stay in the tournament. The {3-Diamonds} fell on the river, which was not one of Korik’s outs and he busted in sixth place, a finish good for $62,690.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Gordon Vayo us
Gordon Vayo
1,500,000 400,000
Zachary Korik us
Zachary Korik
Eliminado

Tags: Gordon VayoZachary Korik

Phil Hellmuth Eliminated in 8th Place ($45,022)

Nível 25 : 12,000/24,000, 4,000 ante
Phil Hellmuth
Phil Hellmuth

Phil Hellmuth's quest to win his 14th WSOP bracelet continues as he has busted from Event #15.

Hellmuth opened to 80,000 from under the gun, leaving himself with less than 50,000 behind. Gordon Vayo was in the big blind and when it folded to him, he moved all-in. Hellmuth called and the cards flipped onto their backs.

Hellmuth: {A-Clubs}{2-Spades}
Vayo: {A-Diamonds}{7-Hearts}

The spectators on the rail leaned in to try get a better view of the board which run out {K-Clubs}{3-Clubs}{10-Diamonds}{j-Diamonds}{7-Diamonds} to improve Vayo to a pair of sevens and to bust Hellmuth in eighth place.

"Eight flips in a row I've lost," said Hellmuth as he exited the tournament area.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Gordon Vayo us
Gordon Vayo
1,200,000 210,000
Phil Hellmuth us
Phil Hellmuth
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 17X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
Eliminado

Tags: Gordon VayoPhil Hellmuth

Thirteen and Counting: Hellmuth Plans on Winning 11 More WSOP Bracelets

Nível 24 : 10,000/20,000, 3,000 ante
Phil Hellmuth
Phil Hellmuth

Phil Hellmuth is without a doubt the most decorated player in World Series of Poker history. With 13 gold bracelets, two WSOP Main Event titles (one in Europe), 100 cashes, and a membership in the Poker Hall of Fame, one cannot argue against his record.

This year marks the 25th anniversary of Hellmuth's 1989 WSOP Main Event victory. It’s also the summer of his 50th birthday. In a recent feature interview, PokerNews' Rich Ryan sat down with the man often referred to as the "Poker Brat" to discuss his win in 1989, the past 25 years of poker and his life, and much more.

Click here to read the full interview with the man himself, the one and only Phil Hellmuth.

Tags: Phil HellmuthWSOPWorld Series of Poker

Vladimir Geshkenbein Eliminated in 10th Place ($33,213)

Nível 24 : 10,000/20,000, 3,000 ante
Vladimir Geshkenbein
Vladimir Geshkenbein

Vladimir Geshkenbein has been eliminated in 10th place at the hands of John Andress.

Davidi Kitai raised to 40,000 on the button, Geshkenbein three-bet all-in for 275,000 from the small blind and Andress flat-called from the big blind. Kitai flashed the {K-Diamonds}{Q-Hearts} as he folded.

"Do you have a pair?" asked Geshkenbein.

"No," came the answer.

Andress: {A-Diamonds}{Q-Spades}

Geshkenbein: {2-Spades}{2-Hearts}

"Great, and he [Kitai] folded a queen," said Geshkenbein.

Andress took the lead on the {A-Hearts}{3-Clubs}{5-Clubs} flop and his hand remained best as the {10-Diamonds} and {10-Clubs} completed the board and ended Geshkenbein's participation in Event #15.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
John Andress us
John Andress
1,040,000 80,000
Vladimir Geshkenbein ru
Vladimir Geshkenbein
Eliminado

Tags: Davidi KitaiJohn AndressVladimir Geshkenbein

"I'm Not Classy"

Nível 22 : 6,000/12,000, 2,000 ante
Vladimir Geshkenbein
Vladimir Geshkenbein

In the last hand of the level a heated hand went down between Vladimir Geshkenbein and Phil Hellmuth.

It began when Hellmuth opened for 37,000 from the cutoff and Davidi Kitai called from the small blind.

"Well, time again," Geshkenbein said as he reached for a toy space gun he brought with him. "All In."

Geshkenbein then fired the gun, which makes various noises. He and Hellmuth had sparred before, and Hellmuth asked for a count. It was 252,000, and Hellmuth said, "Call." Kitai folded.

"What do you have?" Geshkenbein asked.

"Ace-three," Hellmuth said and tabled the {a-Clubs}{3-Diamonds}.

"You're good," Geshkenbein said sheepishly. He waited a few seconds and then slowrolled Hellmuth with the {a-Hearts}{k-Clubs}. Geshkenbein continued to rib Hellmuth as the flop came down {j-Spades}{6-Hearts}{4-Diamonds}. The {5-Spades} turn gave the Russian pause as Hellmuth picked up an open-ended straight draw, but it didn't come in as the {4-Hearts} blanked on the river.

"Oh no, Phil," Geshkenbein continued.

"You gotta show some class when you win one, kid," a clearly annoyed Hellmuth said.

"I'm not classy," Geshkenbein said as he continued to taunt Hellmuth.

"I'm going to bust you. I promise you that. Look me in the eyes, I'm going to bust you," Hellmuth said. There is certainly no love lost between these two players.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Phil Hellmuth us
Phil Hellmuth
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 17X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
650,000
Vladimir Geshkenbein ru
Vladimir Geshkenbein
555,000

Tags: Phil HellmuthVladimir Geshkenbein