Sunday, January 31, 2016

Aussie Millions 2016: LK Boutique $250,000 Challenge Live Updates
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5:00pm: Big pot pushed to Quoss
Level 8: Blinds 4,000/8,000 (1,000)

Fabian Quoss won the $100,000 Challenge this week and is priming himself to potentially win this $250,000 Challenge too after raking a sizable pot.

The action began with Igor Kurganov raising to 18,000 with [kd][jd] under the gun before Byron Kaverman called from the cutoff with [ts][tc], David Peters called on the button with [2s][2c] and Fabian Quoss came along from the big blind holding [9s][7c].

The flop landed [9d][7d][9h] and the action checked to Kaverman who led for 27,000. Quoss gave it considerable thought before raising it up to 100,000 and it was on Kurganov to act. Holding the king high flush draw but unknowingly drawing dead to everything except a running straight flush, Kurganov cold-called. Kaverman threw away his pocket tens and the [ah] appeared on the turn.

Quoss continued on the turn for a small bet relative to the pot for 100,000 but Kurganov made the right fold.
4:55pm: Play under way
Level 8: Blinds 4,000/8,000 (1,000)

We're about to pick up our coverage from the final table with around twenty minutes left to play in this level. Steve O'Dwyer will take the chip lead intot he final table with 650,000 chips.

Final Table redraw

Seat 1: Igor Kurganov - 450,000
Seat 2: Sam Greenwood - 175,000
Seat 3: Ben Tollerene - 426,000
Seat 4: Paul Newey - 288,000
Seat 5: Connor Drinan - 547,000
Seat 6: Byron Kaverman - 585,000
Seat 7: David Peters - 454,000
Seat 8: Steve O'Dwyer - 650,000
Seat 9: Fabian Quoss - 425,000

Prize pool information

Only the top three players will finish in the money in this tournament with the payouts as follows:

1st $1,960,000
2nd $1,176,000
3rd $784,000

4:15pm: Break to feature table

With the elimination of Brian Rast, the players are now breaking the two tables to redraw for seats on the feature table which will be nine handed.

With the action shifting solely to the feature table, we'll now be continuing on a 30-minute delay in order to sync with the live stream on RunItUp.TV. #nospoilers

4:10pm: Rast removed by Kurganov
Level 8: Blinds 4,000/8,000 (1,000)

Brian Rast was all in and at risk preflop against Igor Kurganov.

Rast: [as][9d]
Kurganov: [jh][th]

Rast had the best of it until the [2d][3c][tc] flop left him chasing an ace.

The [8h] turn and [7h] couldn't help him and he exited the tournament in 10th place.

2016 aussie millions 250k brian rast.jpg

3:50pm: Lucky ducks for Greenwood
Level 8: Blinds 4,000/8,000 (1,000)

Sam Greenwood has been battling with his short stack for most of the day so far, but he's just found a double up to get a little bit of breathing room.

Ben Tollerene opened with a raise from the cutoff position to 18,000 before Greenwood moved all in for 84,000 in total in the small blind. Action folded back to Tollerene who instantly called and tabled [qh][jh] to be racing with Greenwood's [2s][2d].

The flop hit both players when it landed [2h][qs][7c] but Greenwood's set gave him a stranglehold on the pot. The [4c] turn sealed the deal before the meaningless [ts] hit the river.

Greenwood is now up to around 190,000 with Tollerene back to 650,000.

3:35pm: Level up
Level 8: Blinds 4,000/8,000 (1,000)

3:30pm: Timex tank-calls himself to the rail
Level 7: Blinds 3,000/6,000 (1,000)

We arrived on the river to see Mike McDonald had made a bet and Igor Kurganov had raised for enough to cover the Canadian's stack.

The board read [9h][3d][js][4d][ks] and McDonald had a decision for his tournament life. He was in the tank with [kh][qh] for a rivered top pair, and after a few moments he called it off.

"I've got a set" announced Kurganov tabling [9s][9c] and McDonald was out of his seat and leaving the tournament area.

2016 aussie millions 250k mike mcdonald.jpg

3:25pm: Tollerene building
Level 7: Blinds 3,000/6,000 (1,000)

David Peters was chip leader a few minutes ago but such are the swings in this tournament, he's now well back in the pack after losing a big pot against Ben Tollerene.

Tollerene opened with a raise from the cutoff to 15,000 before Peters three-bet the button to 42,000. Action folded back to Tollerene who made the call and they saw a flop of [2c][7h][td].

Tollerene checked and then called the bet of 37,000 from Peters before both players checked the [5s] turn. The river was a repeat [5h] and Tollerene splashed out a healthy bet of 125,000. Peters was quick to make the call but mucked when Tollerene showed [ts][th] for a full house!

Tollerene is now into the chip lead with 740,000 with Peters back down to 355,000.

3:20pm: Greenwood doubles
Level 7: Blinds 3,000/6,000 (1,000)

After making a big river laydown against Ben Tollerene, Sam Greenwood has recovered those chips and then a few more with a big double up on the very next hand.

It started with Connor Drinan raising to 15,000 from under the gun. David Peters called on the button before Greenwood moved all in from the small blind for 119,000 in total. Drinan folded but Peters gave it some thought and then made a gambling call with [5c][5h]. He was hoping to be racing but Greenwood tabled a strong [qc][qd].

The board ran out [3d][ac][ks][ad][2s] to see Greenwood double up to around 275,000 with Peters still in good shape with around 600,000.

3:10pm: Ivey gone
Level 7: Blinds 3,000/6,000 (1,000)

The comeback of Phil Ivey was short-lived.

After defending from the big blind with [8s][6s], Ivey check-raised all in on a flop of [2h][2s][5s] with his flush draw. His opponent was Ben Tollerene, runner-up in the $100,000 Challenge. Tollerene had bet the flop for 15,000 and then made the call for a total of 89,000 with his [as][5d] top pair, top kicker.

Ivey was looking for spades, a six or and eight to stay alive but the [3h] turn and [qh] river completed the board. Ivey is out as Tollerene continues his good form in Melbourne as he climbs to over 400,000 chips.

3:00pm: Fedor Holz exits
Level 7: Blinds 3,000/6,000 (1,000)

Fedor Holz has been on a massive heater of late but he couldn't make much of his time in this $250,000 Challenge. He was the first eliminated yesterday and after a re-entry, the German has busted first again here today.

It was back to back hands that would see Holz's demise.

The first saw Phil Ivey rise to 13,000 from the hijack seat, Holz call on the button and David Peters defend from the big blind. The flop landed [7h][tc][jc] and it checked to Holz who made it 16,000 to go. Peters was the only caller and the [qs] arrived on the turn.

Peters checked again before Holz continued for 28,000, only to face a check-raise from Peters to 80,000 in chips. Holz took his time but did commit to a call before players went to the [2d] river. It was then that Peters moved all in for 240,000, only just covered by Holz, sending the latter into the tank.

A couple of minutes passed but Holz threw the chips in for a call only to see he had been coolered for most of his stack. Peters showed [9d][8s] for a flopped straight ahead of the [qh][jd] top two pair of Holz.

The hand left Holz with only 17,000 which he got all in from the cutoff in the very next hand. Sam Greenwood called to put him at risk from the big blind and the cards went on their backs.

Holz: [kh][9d]
Greenwood: [qd][7s]

Holz got it in good but the [qs][6c][7d][5s][td] runout saw Greenwood hit two pair to send Holz packing.

2016 aussie millions 250k fedor holz.jpg

2:55pm: Ivey triples
Level 7: Blinds 3,000/6,000 (1,000)

If there's anyone who can recover from six big blinds in the LK Boutique $250,000 Challenge, it's Phil Ivey. The man that everyone fears most, and the winner of this event three of the last four years, Ivey is now a force again after tripling up his short stack.

Ivey was blinded down to just 36,000 when he moved all in from the cutoff. Connor Drinan flat-called on the button before Fedor Holz raised from the small blind to isolate the all-in player. It worked as Drinan got out of the way.

Ivey tabled [qc][jc] but would need to improve against Holz's [ac][ks].

The flop was [4h][7c][6c] and Ivey picked up a flush draw which then connected on the [4c] turn. Ivey wouldn't want to see any more clubs with Holz holding the ace, but the river bricked the [3d].

Ivey is now back up to around 120,000 and has a pulse once again in this tournament.

phil-ivey-aussie-millions-250k.jpg

2:50pm: Turn jam from O'Dwyer
Level 7: Blinds 3,000/6,000 (1,000)

Mike McDonald opened to 15,000 on the button and Steve O'Dwyer defended his big blind.

On the [9s][4c][7s] flop O'Dwyer check-called 18,000 before the dealer turned the [td].

O'Dwyer checked again and McDonald continued for 40,000. After eyeing McDonald's stack and contemplating his decision, O'Dwyer moved all in.

McDonald waited a few moments but opted to throw his hand away.

2:35pm: Cards in the air
Level 7: Blinds 3,000/6,000 (1,000)

The cards are now in the air on Day 2 of the LK Boutique $250,000 Challenge.

The LK Boutique $250,000 Challenge set to crown a champion!

The final day of the 2016 Aussie Millions will bring the conclusion of the largest buy-in tournament of the series - the LK Boutique $250,000 Challenge.

Yesterday saw 15 entrants in this event and a short day of just six levels would reduce that to just 12 players. GPI Player of the Year Bryon Kaverman leads the way with Fedor Holz close behind, although Holz did have to fire a second bullet into the prize pool to make it this far. Steve O'Dwyer, Brian Rast, $100k Challenge champion Fabian Quoss and the immortal Phil Ivey are also still in the field, although Ivey has some work to do to win his pet event as he enters today as the short stack.

We have word that there has been one late entry today with Mike "Timex" McDonald jumping in with a fresh stack of 250,000. Blinds will kick off at 3,000/6,000 with a 1,000-chip ante.

We'll be providing live updates throughout the day, with live streaming hosted by Jason Somerville over on RunItUp.TV. Stay tuned!

handbags-aussie-millions.jpg


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Take a look at the Aussie Millions official website for tournament schedules, structures, news and information from the Crown Poker Room in Melbourne.

Live updates brought to you courtesy of Brad Kain and Heath Chick. Photos by Jonno Pittock and Christian Zetzsche.




























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TCOOP 2016: Team Pro Aditya Agarwal wins Event #50, Martin Jacobson 7th ($215 NLHE Wrap-Up [Hyper-Turbo, Deep, 1R1A])
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After eleven days of intense, turbo-charged competition, the 2016 TCOOP came to a close with a $1 million guaranteed hyper-turbo wrap party. And really, what's a wrap party without a few celebrity appearances?

This final table housed a SCOOP champion, a Sunday Warm-Up champion, last week's runner-up in the Super Tuesday, one Team Pro, and even an honest-to-God, bona fide WSOP Main Event Champion-- Sweden's Martin Jacobson who took down the Main Event for $10 million in 2014. Jacobson went down in seventh place when he ran his pocket eights into pocket kings and pocket queens, but Team Pro Aditya Agarwal flourished, eliminating the fifth, fourth, and third-place finishers to get heads-up with RamsGold. Although Agarwal lost the 2 to 1 chip lead he brought into heads-up play, he quickly righted the ship and claimed his first 'COOP title, along with $160,000.

adi_agarwal_TCOOP.png

Team PokerStars Pro and 2016 TCOOP Event #50 champ Aditya Agarwal

Event #50, a $215 buy-in deep-stacked Hyper-Turbo with one rebuy and one add-on, drew 2,247 entries. Despite 1,041 rebuys and 1,295 add-ons, there was a $34,000 overlay in the $1 million guaranteed prizepool. 288 players earned a share of it, with $160,000 set aside for first place.

A little over an hour and a half after the close of late registration, the field was down to its last ten players. With the blinds up to 200,000/400,000, Martin "M.nosbocaJ" Jacobson open-shoved for 3.27 million from UTG and the action folded to Canibus555, who already had 400,000 of his 446,000 chips committed in the big blind. Canibus555 called, his [3s][7s] up against [Ac][8c]. Jacobson's ace-high held up on the [Qs][Td][2s][Qd][Kd] board and Canibus555 went out one spot short of the final table.

2016_TCOOP_Ev50_FT.jpg


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Final table chip counts

Seat 1: Adi Agarwal (5,865,669 in chips)
Seat 2: BlackCat-IL (3,053,689 in chips)
Seat 3: C. Darwin2 (4,944,808 in chips)
Seat 4: M.nosbocaJ (4,319,623 in chips)
Seat 5: Pro1612 (1,294,108 in chips)
Seat 6: Lundisgsund (3,992,386 in chips)
Seat 7: RamsGold (7,852,578 in chips)
Seat 8: Propheus7 (8,673,975 in chips)
Seat 9: AnyGameSir (5,833,164 in chips)

Pro1612 arrived at the final table with less than three big blinds and on Hand #3 he moved in from the cutoff with [As][2s]. Propheus7 called from the big blind with [5s][8h] and made bottom pair with the flop came down [Js][9h][8d]. Pro1612 didn't get any help from the kings that fell on the turn and river, and departed in ninth place. Only moments later, C. Darwin2 opened for 1.32 million and M.nosbocaJ reshoved right behind him for 3.9 million. Lundisgsund called all-in for 2.72 million from middle position and C. Darwin2 called as well, having both players covered.

C. Darwin2 [Ks][Kh]
M.nosbocaJ [8d][8c]
Lundisgsund [Qs][Qh]

Lundisgsund and Jacobson both ran their pairs into kings, and neither found a miracle on the [9d][4s][3d][6s][4h] board. C. Darwin2 scooped the 12.4 million pot, ending Lundisgsund's run in eighth place and Jacobson's in seventh.

martin_jacobson_TCOOP.jpg

Martin "M.nosbocaJ" Jacobson, seventh place

On the next deal, second-in-chips Propheus7 moved in for 11.3 million from the cutoff and AnyGameSir called all-in on the button with pocket sevens. Propheus7 turned up [Qc][9c] and hit one of the best flops possible-- [Kd][Jc][Tc], giving him a king-high straight and a straight flush draw. The [Js] turn and the [Ks] river were no matter and AnyGameSir went out in sixth place.

Adi Agarwal started picking up momentum when he doubled through C. Darwin2. All the money went in preflop, Agarwal's [Ac][4d] an underdog to C. Darwin2's pocket sevens. However, Agarwal pulled an ace on the [Ad][Ts][8c][Qs][Kd] board and doubled to 12.9 million, leaving C. Darwin2 on 5.67 million. A few hands later, the blinds were up to 400,000/800,000 and the action folded to Agarwal in the small blind. He shoved for 11.4 million with [Ks][4h] and BlackCat-IL called off his remaining 2.62 million with [Qc][Jh]. Agarwal flopped a pair of fours and rivered two pair on the [Ad][8c][4d][Ah][8d] board as BlackCat-IL hit the rail in fifth. Three hands later, C. Darwin2 open-shoved for 3.67 million and Agarwal called from the big blind, his [Js][5s] trailing [Ad][Qs]. However, Agarwal again found good fortune on the flop, which brought him a pair of jacks. C. Darwin2 did not improve on the [Jd][6h][2s][4h][3s] board and was eliminated in fourth place.

As three-handed play commenced, Agarwal was in control with 22.4 million in chips, Propheus7 held 16.9 million and RamsGold was the short stack with 6.52 million.

With the blinds up to 500,000/1,000,000, Agarwal made a small blind shove with [Qh][3c] and RamsGold made a double fist-pump snap-call with [Ad][As] in the big blind. Although Agarwal gave him a bit of a scare when he flopped a queen, RamsGold's aces held up on the [Qs][Ts][4h][5d][8s] board and he doubled to 13.2 million. However, when Propheus7 made the same move a few hands later, shoving 13.2 million from the small blind with [Kd][Th], Agarwal was the one lying in wait with [Ad][Kc]. Propheus7 had an open-ended straight draw on the turn, but Agarwal's dominating hand held up on the [Jd][9h][6h][8c][Kh] board, ending Propheus7's run in third place.

Heads-up chip counts

Seat 1: Adi Agarwal (31,384,844 in chips)
Seat 7: RamsGold (14,445,156 in chips)

RamsGold won a few small pots to start heads-up play before wresting the chip lead away from Agarwal. After Agarwal opened for a 2.4 million min-raise on the button, RamsGold checked a [Jh][9c][6c] flop and Agarwal bet 2.5 million. RamsGold shoved for 17.4 million more and Agarwal conceded the 10.3 million pot to RamsGold. RamsGold moved up to 25.2 million while Agarwal fell to 20.6 million.

However, on the next hand, RamsGold open-shoved on the button and Agarwal snap-called with [Kh][Qc]. RamsGold's dominated [Kd][2h] stayed that way on the ace-high board and Agarwal doubled to 41.2 million.

Although RamsGold doubled back up when his [Jh][6s] turned a pair of sixes against Agarwal's [Kd][2d], he wasn't able to recover. Five hands later, RamsGold open-shoved for 6.7 million and Agarwal called from the big blind.

RamsGold [7s][9c]
Adi Agarwal [As][4s]

Agarwal's ace-high held up on the [Kh][Jc][8s] flop and he made bottom pair when the [4d] turned. RamsGold needed a seven, nine, or ten to survive, but the [Jd] rivered instead, locking up Agarwal's first 'COOP title.

Congratulations to our very own Team Pro, Aditya Agarwal, on his first TCOOP title! He banked $160,000 for the win, while runner-up RamsGold earned $120,000.

TCOOP-50 ($215 NLHE Wrap-Up [Hyper-Turbo, Deep, 1R1A]) results
Entrants: 2,247 (1,041 rebuys, 1,295 add-ons)
Total prize pool: $1,000,000.00
Places paid: 288

1. Team PokerStars Pro Aditya "Adi Agarwal" Agarwal (India) $160,000.00
2. RamsGold (Costa Rica) $120,000.00
3. Propheus7 (Switzerland) $90,000.00
4. C. Darwin2 (Sweden) $62,000.00
5. BlackCat-IL (Israel) $45,000.00
6. AnyGameSir (Poland) $35,000.00
7. Martin "M.nosbocaJ" Jacobson (United Kingdom) $25,000.00
8. Lundisgsund (Austria) $17,000.00
9. Pro1612 (Germany) $9,500.00




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TCOOP 2016: Dinesh "NastyMinder" Alt wins Main Event, $396K (Event #49, $700 NLHE)
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It's quite something to watch the final table of a turbo-fueled tournament with five-minute levels at which more than $1.4 million of prize money is still up for grabs and no final deal is being made. Such was the case for most of the 2016 Turbo Championship of Online Poker Main Event final table, a $700 buy-in tournament that saw no chop considered until they reached heads-up.

That's when Switzerland's Dinesh "NastyMinder" Alt and KungKroon of Norway finally did strike a deal, and shortly thereafter Alt would be the one to claim the last hand and the title. Alt -- who has chopped a Sunday Million and won the ANZPT Sydney Main Event in 2013 -- took away a huge prize of $396,691.43 for the win.


2016-TCOOP-49-alt.jpg

Dinesh "NastyMinder" Alt

Alt came close once before this series, taking runner-up in Event #11 ($215 NLHE Heads-Up), and with seven total cashes managed to finish sixth in the TCOOP Player of the Series race. Incidentally, it was the U.K.'s ouchbadbeat who with 16 total cashes was able to finish the last day atop the TCOOP series leaderboard.

Alt's first prize just barely exceeds -- by less than two hundred bucks -- what 2015 TCOOP Main Event champion Nikki_Hefner took away last year, thus setting a new record for biggest TCOOP Main Event cash in the four-year history of the series. Here's the story of how Alt managed to outlast this year's huge field to turn $700 into nearly $400K in just over five-and-a-half hours.


tcoop-card-capper.jpg

There were already more than 2,000 players in their seats by the time the first hands were dealt Sunday afternoon, and after two hours of late registration more than twice that many had joined the fun for a total of 4,077 entries. That meant a $2,711,205 prize pool (easily besting the $2M guarantee for the tournament) with the top 540 places paid.

At that point the field had already been cut in half, and after another dozen five-minute levels whizzed past the money bubble burst as Akash "funwheel" Majumdar of Thailand grabbed the chip lead as the first player to 1 million chips.

Majumdar continued to lead as the field was carved down further, then others rushed ahead as many other big stacks quickly got bigger. Meanwhile among those hitting the rail during that stretch was Team PokerStars Pro Online's Jorge "Baalim" Limon (346th, $1,355.60), with Team PokerStars Pros George Danzer (205th, $2,033.40) and Aditya "Adi Agarwal" Agarwal (163rd, $2,440.08) also taking away small parts of the prize pool.

With 100 left rookie1609x of Canada had taken over first position in the counts, but by the four-hour mark both rookie1609x (88th, $4,066.80) and Akash "funwheel" Majumdar (73rd, $4,337.92) had been sent to the rail.




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As the tournament's fifth hour proceeded and they wound down to the last few tables, the U.K.'s RSRMCA began to pull away from the field, and with 30 left had moved up close to 10 million when no one else has as much as half that. A little while later they were down to 18, with IMFICKLE having briefly grabbed the top spot before marcasa edged into the chip lead with two tables left.

Event #24 ($82 PLO H/L, 6-Max) winner Raabinator93 (18th), liran2788 (17th), and funchstar7 (16th) were the next three knockouts, with each player earning $8,133.61.

eijseijs (15th), manyadecano (14th), and Oscar "MendaLerenda" Serradell (13th) were then eliminated, earning $12,200.42 apiece. For Serradell, the finish capped off an especially successful TCOOP that included a win in Event #36 ($82 NL Draw, Optional Re-Entry) and a runner-up finish in Event #19 ($215 NLHE).

malekfatte (12th), garompon (11th), and rasta25 (10th) then became the last three players eliminated before the final table, with those three each taking away $16,267.23 apiece. With KungKroon having moved up into the lead, the final table was underway.


2016-TCOOP-49-finaltable.jpg

Seat 1: anthonyff (United Kingdom) -- 9,047,944
Seat 2: Petr "Hurloon" Jaros (Czech Republic) -- 8,631,717
Seat 3: Dinesh "NastyMinder" Alt (Switzerland) -- 7,646,928
Seat 4: RSRMCA (United Kingdom) -- 8,072,527
Seat 5: IMFICKLE (Finland) -- 4,400,715
Seat 6: KungKroon (Sweden) -- 16,592,440
Seat 7: gringenkov (Brazil) -- 6,147,653
Seat 8: marcasa (Netherlands) -- 10,470,302
Seat 9: Makuherra (Finland) -- 10,529,774

Hurloon hits rail in ninth

With the blinds a whopping 500K/1M with a 125K ante, the idea of a chop was brought up immediately in the chat box as the final table began. But as noted above, not everyone was interested, and so the all-ins continued soon thereafter.

It was less than orbit before gringenkov open-shoved from early position and Petr "Hurloon" Jaros called all in from the cutoff for 1,934,064 (less than two big blinds). gringenkov had [Ac][Kd] and Jaros [8h][7h], and after the board came [Tc][6c][Jh][3d][3c], Jaros was out ninth.

RSRMCA run out in eighth

The blinds moved up to 600K/1.2M with a 150K ante, then RSRMCA shoved for 5,122,527 from the button and got called by KungKroon in the big blind.

RSRMCA was hoping [4s][4h] would hold against KungKroon's [As][Kc], and the [5h][Ac][4c] flop was promising for RSRMCA, making a set of fours versus KungKroon's top pair of aces. But the turn was the [Jc] and the river the [7c], completing a club flush for KungKroon and knocking RSRMCA out in eighth.

IMFICKLE finished in seventh

Just three hands after that, the blinds were already 700K/1.4M (with a 175K ante) when IMFICKLE shoved for 6,425,715 from middle position and Makuherra called from the big blind.

IMFICKLE turned over [Ac][4s] and needed to improve versus Makuherra's [9h][9s]. But the [Ks][9d][6c] flop gave Makuherra a set, the [Kd] turn a full house, and the pair-making [4h] river meant nothing for IMFICKLE who was out in seventh.

anthonyff sunk in sixth

The final six marched onward, with deal talk continuing to be suggested by some. But gringenkov -- a former Sunday Million winner who had chipped up over 27 million and into the chip lead -- typed "sry i dont deal" and so they continued to play it out.

Just like that the blinds were 800K/1.6M (with a 200K ante), and it was marcasa open-shoving from UTG for 2,393,496, anthonyff reraise-pushing for 5,497,944 from the cutoff, and gringenkov caling both from the big blind.

gringenkov: [Jc][9h]
anthonyff: [As][Qd]
marcasa: [Qh][3h]

The community cards came [2h][8c][8h], then [9c], then [Kh], missing anthonyff, giving gringenkov nines and eights, and making a heart flush for marcasa. gringenkov collected the side pot while marcasa survived, and anthonyff departed in sixth.

Makuherra makes it to fifth

The torrid pace continued with Makuherra soon open-pushing all in from the small blind for 8,980,489 (about 4.5 BBs) and Dinesh "NastyMinder" Alt calling from the big blind.

Makuherra had [Ad][5d] while Alt turned over [Jd][Js], and five cards later -- [4h][Ts][9h][Qh][7c] -- Makuherra's run ended in fifth.

marcasa moves on after finishing fourth

With four left, Alt brought up the deal topic again.

NastyMinder: still no deal guys?
marcasa: I checked
gringenkov: no, sry
NastyMinder: ok
NastyMinder: gl :)
gringenkov: glgl

It would only take three more hands for the field to be reduced by one more.

With the blinds an even 1M/2M (with a 250K ante), the table folded to marcasa who pushed in 6,930,488 over the small blind and Dinesh "NastyMinder" Alt called from the big blind. Alt had but [8d][3d] but was ahead of marcasa's [7c][3c], and after a [Qh][2h][6s][3s][Td] runout both had a small pair but the kickers played, and marcasa had been eliminated in fourth.

That matched marcasa's fourth-place finish in Event #34, another $700 buy-in NLHE event.

gringenkov grounded in third

Before long Alt was the one pushing out ahead with more than 45 million while both KungKroon and gringenkov hovered around 17-18 million. That's when gringenkov open-shoved a stack of 16,949,570 (not quite seven big blinds) from the button and got called by KungKroon from the big blind who had that barely covered.

gringenkov had [Ac][Qd] and the edge over Kungroon's [Ad][9s]. But the flop came [9c][Js][2h] to pair KungKroon's nine. The turn was the [2d] and river the [7d], and gringenkov was out in third for a cash of more than $223K.

A deal, then a short duel as NastyMinder KOs KungKroon

Dinesh "NastyMinder" Alt had a slight lead over KungKroon to start heads-up play, and after one hand they managed to pause the tournament at last for some deal talk with Alt sitting on 47,029,833 versus KungKroon's 34,510,167.

Numbers were produced -- $356,691.43 for Alt, $346,181.46 for KungKroon, and $40,000 set aside for which to play. The discussion that followed was a short one:

KungKroon: agreedio!
KungKroon: no use trying to get more, nasty ;)
KungKroon: this or we play for the lot
NastyMinder: I agree
KungKroon: I agree

Once play resumed, the heads-up match was short as well, lasting just eight hands total.

The last hand began with Alt up to just over 50 million and watching KungKroon shoving all in for 31,072,667 from the button. Alt called, and the players' hands were turned over:

NastyMinder: [Ah][Jh]
KungKroon: [Qs][5s]

The board came [Kd][2d][4c][8d][6h], hitting neither player's hand. KungKroon had come one spot shy of the win, while Alt had collected all of the chips to earn the extra $40K, the special TCOOP card capper, and a coveted Main Event title.


2016-TCOOP-49-nastyminder.jpg

NastyMinder collects the last of the chips

Congratulations to Dinesh "NastyMinder" Alt for outlasting more than 4,000 opponents to win this year's TCOOP Main Event and over $396K!


2016-TCOOP-49-alt2.jpg

Dinesh "NastyMinder" Alt

Kudos to KungKroon as well for surviving to make that heads-up deal and take away a nice $346K-plus prize.

TCOOP-49 ($700 NL Hold'em Main Event) results
Entrants: 4,077
Total prize pool: $2,711,205 

Places paid: 540

1. Dinesh "NastyMinder" Alt (Switzerland) $396,691.43*
2. KungKroon (Norway) $346,181.46*
3. gringenkov (Brazil) $223,674.41
4. marcasa (Netherlands) $155,894.28
5. Makuherra (Finland) $115,226.21
6. anthonyff (United Kingdom) $88,114.16
7. IMFICKLE (Finland) $61,002.11
8. RSRMCA (United Kingdom) $33,890.06
9. Petr "Hurloon" Jaros (Czech Republic) $21,689.64
*Reflects the results of a two-way deal that left $40,000 in play for the winner

Thanks for following our start-to-finish coverage of all 50 events of the 2016 Turbo Championship of Online Poker here on the PokerStars Blog. You can check results and other stats from the series on the TCOOP page as well.


Want to compete for your own online championship? Click here to get a PokerStars account.
Martin Harris is Freelance Contributor to the PokerStars Blog.













































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Phil Ivey Calls Aussie Millions His "Favorite Stop On the Poker Tour"
Phil Ivey Calls Aussie Millions His "Favorite Stop On the Poker Tour" | PokerNews

Sarah talks to Phil Ivey about what he calls his "favorite stop on the poker tour," the Aussie Millions.

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UKIPT5 Series 3 Day 2: Level 13-28 updates (40,000 - 80,000, 10,000 ante)
^

Final table time! Six players remain and you can see the current chip counts right here.

Check out who's finished where so far here

9:25pm: William Funnell doubles through Elliot Panyi
Level 28, Blinds 40,000 - 80,000 (10,000 ante)

William Funnell hasn't had more than 15 big blinds all day. "I've been grinding hard," he told us a few moments ago.

Well he has now, as he just doubled through Elliot Panyi. The chip leader shoved from the small blind with [Jd][Tc] and Funnell called all in for 720,000 with [Ac][9h].

The [Ad][5c][3c][Kd] flop and turn meant Panyi could eliminate Funnell if he caught a queen on the river, but fifth street was the [9s].

Funnell is up to the dizzy heights of 1,500,000 whilst Panyi slips to 2,800,000. He's still the chip leader though.

9:15pm: Gerald Candy eliminated in fifth place (£5,040)
Level 27, Blinds 30,000 - 60,000 (10,000 ante)

Elliot Panyi went to fold his hand thinking he was under-the-gun but he was in fact the big blind. Not everyone saw this, which would perhaps prove crucial later to the outcome of the hand. It passed to Gerald Candy on the button and he shoved for 440,000.

He was one of the players who hadn't seen Panyi's action and after Levy folded Panyi got a count and then said: "I've got a hand that if it was a pip or two higher I'd have already called but with this I'm not sure." He then cut out the calling chips and put them over the line.

Candy: [Kd][2c]
Panyi: [Qs][Td]

"What a dream. I can't ask for more than that," said Candy. But it turned into a nightmare for him on the [Kh][3d][4h][Jh][9s] board.

9:05pm: Michael Matar eliminated in sixth place (£3,850)
Level 27, Blinds 30,000 - 60,000 (10,000 ante)

PokerStars Qualifier Michael Matar has quite the ROI% from this event as he got in on the cheap and then cashed for £3,850.

His elimination was a two-parter. In part one of two he shoved from under-the-gun for around 400,000 with [9s][7s] and walked into William Funnell's [As][Kh]. The [Kc][6h][6d][3h][5d] board gave the pot to Funnell, who had started the hand with just 300,000.

So Matar was down to dust, yet he still got a walk from Azarya Levy on the next hand but it was just a temporary reprieve. On the next hand he shoved from the small blind with [Qd][2d] and Elliot Panyi called with [Ac][Qh]. He didn't even get a sweat on the [4d][Kh][9s][5s][9d] board.

Funnell is up to about 700,000, whilst Panyi continues to hold the chip lead.

8:55pm: Nicholas Case eliminated in seventh place (£2,830)
Level 27, Blinds 30,000 - 60,000 (10,000 ante)

Azarya Levy has been quietly building a stack but he's not going to fly under the radar any more as he's up to 1,600,000 after eliminating Nicholas Case.

The Israeli opened to 200,000 with [Ah][Kh] and called when Case moved all-in for around 700,000 with [Ad][Qs]. A [Tc][7s][6h][4c][7c] board kept Levy in front.

Six left.

UKIPT5_Series3_day2_nicholas_case.jpg

Nicholas Case

8:45pm: Double up for Funnell
Level 27, Blinds 30,000 - 60,000 (10,000 ante)

Down to just 165,000 William Funnell moved all in from under-the-gun with [Qh][Qd]. It folded all the way to Nicholas Case in the big blind and with 60,000 in there he felt priced in to call with [4h][2d].

A [Qs][4s][Js][Th][8c] board kept Funnell in front and he doubled his micro stack to a short stack.

8:35pm: Dean Perry eliminated in eighth place (£2,088)
Level 26, Blinds 25,000 - 50,000 (5,000 ante)

Having raise folded on the previous hand, Dean Perry moved all in for 210,000 and got a call from Nicholas Case.

Perry: [Ah][Qh]
Case: [Ad][Kc]

Perry threw his head back when he saw that he was dominated and it didn't get any better for him on the [8h][3c][9s][6c][Kh] board and he was eliminated in eighth place.

UKIPT5_Series3_day2_dean_perry.jpg

Dean Perry - out in eighth

8:25pm: Final table chip counts
Level 26, Blinds 25,000 - 50,000 (5,000 ante)

The final eight are in their seats and action has restarted

SeatNameCountryChips
1William FunnellUnited Kingdom224,000
2Kwokwah ManUnited Kingdom1,470,000
3Gerald CandyUnited Kingdom440,000
4Dean PerryUnited Kingdom435,000
5Azarya LevyIsrael905,000
6Michael MatarUnited Kingdom745,000
7Elliott PanyiUnited Kingdom2,140,000
8Nicholas CaseUnited Kingdom485,000

UKIPT5_Series3_day2_the_final_eight.jpg

The elite eight



8:15pm: Marco Erasmo eliminated in ninth place (£1,700)
Level 26, Blinds 25,000 - 50,000 (5,000 ante)

The final table is set!

Down to just 175,000 Marco Erasmo moved in from middle position holding [Ad][Th] and Kwokwah Man smooth called with [Ac][Jc]. The [8h][Jh][4c][2s][8d] board favoured the bigger stack and the Spaniard is out in ninth.

There's now a short break for final table photos, during which we hope to get official final table chip counts.

8:05pm: Still nine
Level 26, Blinds 25,000 - 50,000 (5,000 ante)

There have been no major pots at the unofficial final table as of yet. Any all in has gone uncalled and there's only been one showdown, which was a small pot between Elliot Panyi and Kwokwah Man

7:55pm: Unofficial final table line-up
Level 25, Blinds 20,000 - 40,000 (5,000 ante)

It's the 'photo bubble' the nine remaining players have made the unofficial final table, when one more player is knocked out the action will be paused and the official final table photos will take place.

SeatNameCountryChips
1Marco Erasmo Spain425,000
2William FunnellUnited Kingdom470,000
3Kwokwah ManUnited Kingdom830,000
4Gerald CandyUnited Kingdom320,000
5Dean PerryUnited Kingdom550,000
6Azarya LevyIsrael1,000,000
7Michael MatarUnited Kingdom455,000
8Elliott PanyiUnited Kingdom2,300,000
9Nicholas CaseUnited Kingdom555,000

7:45pm: Jen-Yue Chiang eliminated in 10th place (£1,430)
Level 25, Blinds 20,000 - 40,000 (5,000 ante)

Dean Perry shoved all in from early position with [Js][Ts] and Jen-Yue Chiang called all in for right on 225,000 with [7s][7h].

A [6h][8h][Qs][Jh][Ad] board gave the pot to Perry. He had just over 300,000 to start the hand and so Chiang is out in tenth place and the unofficial final table is now set.

Whilst he was losing that hand, William Funnell doubled through Elliot Panyi with [Ac][Qd] against [Ks][Qs]. Funnell had 235,000 to start the hand.

UKIPT5_Series3_day2_Jen-Yue Chiang.jpg

Dragomir dominated the last event

Jen-Yue Chiang

7:35pm: Timothy Timotheou eliminated in 11th place (£1,430)
Level 25, Blinds 20,000 - 40,000 (5,000 ante)

Down to around eight big blinds Timothy Timotheou shoved all in from the small blind with [6c][5d] and Azarya Levy woke up with pocket queens in the big blind. The [7h][4s][Ks] flop gave Timotheou a straight draw, but he missed it on the [9d] turn and [Ac] river.

We're now on the unofficial final table bubble.

7:30pm: Samuel Hunt eliminated in 12th place (£1,260)
Level 25, Blinds 20,000 - 40,000 (5,000 ante)

Azarya Levy limped from mid position, Sam Hunt then shoved all in for about 350,000 and Levy made the call.

Hunt: [9s][7s]
Levy: [As][5s]

The [Ac][4d][8s][Kc][3s] board meant Levy's hand held and he just had Hunt covered.

7:30pm: Back at it
Level 25, Blinds 20,000 - 40,000 (5,000 ante)

Cards are back in the air.

7:25pm: Chip counts of the final 12
Level 25, Blinds 20,000 - 40,000 (5,000 ante)

As you can see below Elliot Panyi still has a big chip lead with more than three times his closest challenger. Everyone bar him and Kwokwah Man have under 20 big blinds. The final table may not be far off.

NameCountryChips
Elliott PanyiUnited Kingdom2,500,000
Kwokwah ManUnited Kingdom830,000
Nicholas CaseUnited Kingdom590,000
Michael MatarUnited Kingdom455,000
Marco Erasmo Spain425,000
Timothy TimotheouUnited Kingdom400,000
Samuel HuntUnited Kingdom390,000
Dean PerryUnited Kingdom380,000
Azarya LevyIsrael365,000
Gerald CandyUnited Kingdom320,000
William FunnellUnited Kingdom285,000
Jen-Yue ChiangUSA105,000

6:45pm: Dinner break
Level 24, Blinds 15,000 - 30,000 (4,000 ante)

The players are now on a 40 minute dinner break. Play will resume at 7.25pm.

6:40pm: Case can't rest yet
Level 24, Blinds 15,000 - 30,000 (4,000 ante)

Another double up to tell you about now, this time it was Nicholas Case who got a boost.

It folded to Gerald Candy on the button and he shoved for an effective 319,000 with [Qc][Ts], the small blind folded but Case called all in with [As][Jh]. The board came [3d][2h][Kc][4h][Ad] and Case doubled to around 650,000 whilst Candy dropped to about 350,000.

6:35pm: Panyi powers on
Level 24, Blinds 15,000 - 30,000 (4,000 ante)

Elliot Panyi has a ridiculously big chip lead at the moment. He's got almost two million more than his nearest competitor as he won a big pot against Samuel Hunt, who was the second biggest stack in the room. This is how the final 12 stack up, all counts are approximate. We'll be getting 100% accurate counts on the next break in 10 minutes.

NameCountryChips
Elliott PanyiUnited Kingdom2,600,000
Gerald CandyUnited Kingdom660,000
Kwokwah ManUnited Kingdom525,000
Dean PerryUnited Kingdom520,000
Timothy TimotheouUnited Kingdom420,000
Samuel HuntUnited Kingdom330,000
Azarya LevyIsrael325,000
Michael MatarUnited Kingdom280,000
William FunnellUnited Kingdom270,000
Nicholas CaseUnited Kingdom232,000
Jen-Yue ChiangUSA230,000
Erasmo Marco CrespoSpain200,000
UKIPT5_Series3_day2_timothy_timotheou.jpg
Timothy Timotheou

6:25pm: Double up for Candy
Level 24, Blinds 15,000 - 30,000 (4,000 ante)

Whilst Elliot Panyi is dominating proceedings on table 1, Dean Perry is doing likewise on table two. He bluffed Jen-Yue Chiang off a pot to climb to 850,000 but then lost some back to Gerald Candy. Perry opened to 75,000 with pocket nines, Candy shoved for 319,000 with [Kd][Qh] and Perry called it off.

The [6h][3c][Qd][Ad][Qs] board doubled Candy to 660,000 and amazingly that's good for second spot right now.

6:15pm: Payouts page
Level 23, Blinds 12,000 - 24,000 (3,000 ante)

We've just updated the prize pool and payouts page. Check it out here.

5:55pm: Elliot Panyi scores double knockout; now massive chip leader
Level 23, Blinds 12,000 - 24,000 (3,000 ante)

Oh boy. How'd you like to hear about a 1,500,000 chip pot? Thought so.

From under-the-gun Huy Nguyen opened to 55,000, Elliot Panyi then three-bet to 123,000 from under-the-gun+2 only for Krishna Nagaraju to four-bet all in for just over 500,000. Action passed pack to Nguyen, who had about 485,000 in total. He tanked for about five minutes before calling all in. Panyi, who had both players covered with about 850,000, took a look back at his cards and called.

Panyi: [Ah][As]
Nagaraju: [Kc][Kd]
Nguyen: [Jc][Jh]

"I don't even want these spots," said Panyi. "This is an ICM disaster, I'm not even favourite to win the hand."

What Panyi meant was that between the other two players they had as much equity as he did. He was wrong about that though as he still had 66% equity in the hand and held up on the [6c][7c][Ts][2c][2h] board to send two players out and climb to around 1,800,000. By virtue of having more chips Nagaruju finished 16th and Nguyen 17th.

Whilst that hand was playing out Andrew King (18th) was eliminated on the other table and Vincent Moses (19th) is also out.

UKIPT5_Series3_day2_elliot_panyi2.jpg

Panyi has over 25% of the chips in play

5:45pm: Gordon's run ends in 20th place
Level 22, Blinds 10,000 - 20,000 (3,000 ante)

It's been a good first outing as a member of Team PokerStars LIVE at The Hippodrome Casino but it could've been even better had he managed to get there in a hand against Kwokwah Man. The latter opened to 45,000 from late position, Gordon three-bet shoved for 353,000 from the big blind with [As][Td] and Man called off with pocket kings.

The [4s][5s][Jh][5d][2s] board kept Man in front and left Gordon will less than a big blind. Despite getting a triple up on the very next hand, he couldn't repeat the trick and was eliminated a hand later in 20th place.

5:40pm: Sweeting's tournament soured
Level 22, Blinds 10,000 - 20,000 (3,000 ante)

Down to just 83,000 Alexander Sweeting moved all in with [Ks][4c] and Elliot Panyi gave him a spin from the big blind with [Ah][2c]. The [Qh][Ac][3c][8h][Kh] board kept Panyi in front and sent Sweeting to the rail in 21st place.

5:35pm: Samani out, Hunt over one million
Level 22, Blinds 10,000 - 20,000 (3,000 ante)

Jay Samani was the chip leader. I say was because he lost a huge pot to Samuel Hunt to all but bust and propel Samuel Hunt into the chip lead.

Hunt opened to 45,000 with [Qd][Qs], Samani shoved for 515,000 with [Ad][Tc] and Hunt called all in for 484,000 total.

The [3d][Ah][Qc][5c][Js] board gave Hunt a huge pot, left Samani short and he was out the next hand in 22nd place.

UKIPT5_Series3_day2_samuel_hunt.jpg

Samuel Hunt - chip leader

5:25pm: Cagey stuff
Level 22, Blinds 10,000 - 20,000 (3,000 ante)

Despite the average stack being about 16 big blinds the action is still pretty cagey here. Any shoves aren't getting called and with the stacks quite bunched most pre-flop raises are getting the job done.

5:20pm: Expensive
Level 22, Blinds 10,000 - 20,000 (3,000 ante)

The price of poker has just gone up and the big blind is now the equivalent of what the starting stack was in this tournament.

5:15pm: Chip Funnell
Level 21, Blinds 8,000-16,000(2,000 ante)

William Funnell has been playing a short stack for most of the day and although he just got a much needed double up he's still in short stack territory.

Action folded to Jay Samani in the small blind and the chip leader moved all in for an effective 77,000 with [6d][2s]. Funnell had less than five big blinds so [Ad][6h] was more than enough to call with and his hand held on the [Kh][4h][Qc][As][Qh] board.

5:05pm: Orledge out in 23rd
Level 21, Blinds 8,000-16,000(2,000 ante)

We've lost the Day 1A chip leader as Sam Orledge just went out in 23rd. We missed the action but Chris Gordon told us that Orledge moved all in from early position for around 15-20 big blinds with [A][J] and Krishna Nagaraju called from the small blind with [K][Q].

The flop came king high, but all spades giving Orledge a flush draw. He missed it on the turn and river though. That left him with around three big blinds and he was out shortly after.

4:55pm: Chip counts
Level 21, Blinds 8,000-16,000(2,000 ante)

Below are the chip counts of the 23 remaining players. It's still Jay Samani who leads, he, Elliot Panyi and Samuel Hunt at this point are the other players who've cracked the 500,000 chip barrier. At the other end of the scale there are four players who've got sub 10 big blind stacks.

NameCountryChips
Jay SamaniUnited Kingdom618,000
Elliott PanyiUnited Kingdom530,000
Samuel HuntUnited Kingdom508,000
Andrew KingIreland475,000
Azarya LevyIsrael455,000
Timothy TimotheouUnited Kingdom448,000
Dean PerryUnited Kingdom375,000
Erasmo Marco CrespoSpain350,000
Huy NguyenUnited Kingdom339,000
Kwokwah ManUnited Kingdom316,000
Michael MatarUnited Kingdom305,000
Samuel OrledgeUnited Kingdom296,000
Christopher GordonUnited Kingdom263,000
Krishna NagarajuIndia255,000
Gerhard LillieUnited Kingdom234,000
Jen-Yue ChiangUSA230,000
Michael Cowper-JohnUnited Kingdom223,000
Vincent MosesUnited Kingdom208,000
Gerald CandyUnited Kingdom200,000
Daniel CarielloUnited Kingdom156,000
Alexander SweetingUnited Kingdom142,000
Nicholas CaseUnited Kingdom140,000
William FunnellUnited Kingdom78,000

UKIPT5_Series3_day2_jay_samani.jpg.

Jay Samani

UKIPT5_Series3_day2_chris_gordon2.jpg

Chris Gordon



4:47pm: We're off again
Level 21, Blinds 8,000-16,000(2,000 ante)

Players are back in their seat and action is back under way. The average stack is currently around 20 big blinds.

4:25pm: Break it up
Level 20, Blinds 6,000-12,000(2,000 ante)

Level 20 has just ended and the players are now on a 20 minute break.

4:15pm: Big blind special for Perry
Level 20, Blinds 6,000-12,000(2,000 ante)

On a [6c][Kh][3d] flop Vincent Moses bet 30,000, Jay Samani smooth called on the button only for Dean Perry to check-raise all in from the big blind for around 230,000. Moses tanked before folding and Samani released his hand straight away.

Perry showed [6s][3d] as he took the pot.

4:05pm: Panyi eliminates Crossan in 27th
Level 20, Blinds 6,000-12,000(2,000 ante)

It's always the river.

Elliot Panyi opened to 28,000 from early position, John Crossan then moved all-in and it folded back to Panyi. He asked for a count - the shove was for 88,000 - Panyi didn't seem to like the situation but knew well enough that he was likely priced in as he was getting around 2.5 to 1 on the call.

Call he did, "you're in front," he said as he showed [Jh][Th], Crossan did indeed have the best hand, [Ad][9h] to be precise. The [Qd][4c][7h][4s][Td] board meant Panyi spiked the river to eliminate Crossan and he's up to 540,000 as a result.

Cloudio DeVito is also out, he finished in 26th place and Phil Baker has gone in 25th place.

UKIPT5_Series3_day2_elliot_panyi.jpg

Panyi is picking up plenty of pots

3:55pm: Down to 27
Level 19, Blinds 5,000-10,000(1,000 ante)

Just 27 players remain now in this UKIPT Series tournament. The latest players to exit are: Colin Couldrey (28th), Fotis Stoupis (29th), Tom Waterman (30th), Jamie Sanders (31st), Christian Juksch (32nd), James Millman (32nd), David Percik (34th) and Simon Brooks (35th).

The next player out will win £710.

3:45pm: Three (almost four) way all in!
Level 19, Blinds 5,000-10,000(1,000 ante)

Andrew King waved me over to his table and said: "I think this is going to be a good one." It was a solid read by the Irishman.

By this point a lot had already happened. Colin Couldrey had raised to 25,000 from under-the-gun, Christian Jucksch had re-raised all in for 126,000 from under-the-gun+1, King had shoved over the top of that for 140,000 and then Phil Baker had put both of them at risk by re-raising all in for about 250,000.

Action was now back on Couldrey who'd raised from a stack of about 18 big blinds and been shoved on in three spots! He tanked for ages, even flipping a coin, before folding what he said was pocket queens.

Jucksch: [Ah][Ks]
King: [Ac][Ad]
Baker: [Kd][Kh]

Three big hands had collided with King having the best of it. It only got better for him on the [Th][8d][As][Ts][Tc] board as he made a full house. He tripled up to about 480,000, Baker dropped to aroun d 100,000, Jucksch was eliminated in 32nd place and Couldrey lived to fight another day with a stack of 140,000.

3:30pm: Orledge and King still in
Level 19, Blinds 5,000-10,000(1,000 ante)

It's rarer than you'd think for both the Day 1A and Day 1B chip leaders to make the money, but that's what's happened here at The Hippodrome. Sam Orledge - who was the Day 1A chip leader - is still right at the top of the chip counts as he's got 560,000. However his Day 1B counterpart isn't doing as well. Andrew King has roughly 140,000.

3:20pm: New chip in town
Level 18, Blinds 4,000-8,000(1,000 ante)

A 25K chip was introduced at the break, it's a lovely yellow colour making it stand out from the red and blue chips that are also in play.

3:05pm: Out, but in the money
Level 18, Blinds 4,000-8,000(1,000 ante)

We're down to just 35 players now with the average stack at 200,500. The latest in the money finishers are: Seb Parsons (41st), Carlos Del Vigo Gonzalez (40th), Leslie Rycroft (39th), Pradyumna Chand (38th), John O'Donnell (37th) and Daiva Barauskaite (36th).

Parsons and Gonzalez min-cashed for £480, whilst the others picked up £540.

UKIPT5_Series3_day2_Daiva_Barauskaite.jpg

Daiva Barauskaite

2:50pm: A few chip counts
Level 17, Blinds 3,000-6,000(1,000 ante)

Here are a few chip counts from around the room:

Chris Gordon - 120,000
Daiva Barauskaite - 58,000
Vincent Moses - 240,000
Timothy Timotheou - 275,000
Dean Perry - 93,000
William Funnell - 52,000

2:40pm: First in the money finishers
Level 17, Blinds 3,000-6,000(1,000 ante)

We've already had six in the money finishers in the opening 15 minutes of this level: Francis Hazelwood (47th), Tingjun Ye (46th), Robbie O'Brien (45th), David Buckley (44th), George Evans (43rd) and Mike Lee (42nd) have all cashed for £480.

2:30pm: Chips
Level 17, Blinds 3,000-6,000(1,000 ante)

We've just updated the chip counts page. It's Jay Samani - who burst the bubble - who leads with 570,000.

2:06pm: Break time
Level 16, Blinds 2,500-5,000(500 ante)

Right. Time to get our breath back. The players are on a 20 minute break.

2:05pm: Shane D'Moirah bubbles the UKIPT Series; O'Brien survives all in on same hand
Level 16, Blinds 2,500-5,000(500 ante)

Almost a double bubble here but Shane D'Moirah is the last player to leave empty handed but there were two all ins on different tables at the same time.

The first involved Robbie O'Brien, who with just 3,500 was forced all in from the big blind. Andrew King raised to 12,000 from early position and everyone else folded to leave them to it. They then had to wait an age for showdown as a big pot involving D'Moirah was brewing on another table.

UKIPT5_Series3_day2_robbie_o'brien.jpg

Robbie O'Brien waits for his showdown

In that hand Elliot Panyi opened to 12,500, D'Moirah smooth called and Jay Samani then three-bet to 35,700 from the button. Panyi folded but D'Moirah called. On the [9s][Ad][7d] flop Samani c-bet 41,100 and D'Moirah check-called. The [8h] fell on the turn and D'Moirah moved all in for around 110,000 and Samani snap called.

Back to O'Brien's table as his showdown was first. He was all-in with [Jc][2c] and King held [Kc][8c] the [Jh][2s][Ad][7c][Js] board meant O'Brien made a full house to survive. The pressure was now on D'Moirah.

Samani was first to show, he had [Ac][Th] but was behind to D'Moirah's [9c][8c], which had turned two pair. "I've never wanted to bust someone so much," said Samani. The dealer then revealed the river card which was the [Td].

D'Moirah took the beat incredibly well and shook Samani's hand before leaving the table.

UKIPT5_Series3_day2_shane_d'moriah.jpg

Shane D'Moirah (standing - left) watches on as his fate is dealt

1:58pm: Parsons, Timotheou and Crossan survive, Rees exit takes us to the bubble
Level 16, Blinds 2,500-5,000(500 ante)

So much action!

First Seb Parsons moved all in for 28,500 with pocket kings. A fine hand but Vincent Moses had the only one that could beat him - pocket aces. The [Kh][8d][9h][8c][6s] board meant Parsons stayed alive.

So there were still 49 players left when Timothy Timotheou three-bet all-in for 113,200. The action had been opened by Robbie O'Brien, who'd been called in two spots before Timotheou shoved. O'Brien re-raised all in and everyone else folded.

O'Brien: [Jc][Jh]
Timotheou: [Kh][Kd]

The kings held on the [4d][Qc][2h][3d][9d] board and O'Brien was left with just 4,000 and he had just one hand until he'd be forced all-in from the big blind.

Meanwhile though John Crossan had three-bet shoved for 73,800 with [8s][8h] and got a call from Tingjun Ye, who held pocket fours. A [6d][2h][Kh][7d][6s] board meant Crossan also survived.

However, George Rees would not be so lucky his [Q][J] flopped best against Nicholas Case's [K][Q] but a king on the river sent him to the rail.

We're on the bubble.

1:50pm: Phil Baker is in!
Level 16, Blinds 2,500-5,000(500 ante)

Apologies to Phil Baker's mum. Earlier we reported that he was out when he is in fact very much in. Sorry Mrs Baker.

1:45pm: Almost bubble time
Level 16, Blinds 2,500-5,000(500 ante)

We're oh so close the bubble here. 50 players remain and 47 get paid. There's 16 minutes until the first break, will it burst before then?

1:40pm: Getting closer to the money
Level 16, Blinds 2,500-5,000(500 ante)

The bubble gets ever closer as: James Price, Pierre Khoury, Vimal Patel, Mark Hitchens, Daniel Bland, Bujar Rajta, Thomas Willoughby, Mia Liu, Stefanos Moysidis, John-Paul Santos, Dominic Wells. William Lewis, David Tompkins, Julian Daley and Maxim Syn have all been knocked out.

1:25pm: Vinnicombe vanquished by Tom Waterman
Level 15, Blinds 2,000-4,000(500 ante)

Tom Waterman is up to 160,000 after winning a race to eliminate James Vinnicombe. The short stack got it in good with pocket sixes against the [A][Q] of Waterman but an ace on the board sent him to the rail.

1:10pm: Lots of exits; 65 players left
Level 15, Blinds 2,000-4,000(500 ante)

Many exits to tell you about now. For fans of: Mirko Mostaccio, Leslie Lamnea, Tom Dickenson, Mark Jefferies, Onur Guven, Thomas Bloomfield, Rahim Tadj-Saadat, Rob Munro, Fernando Berlanga, Anthony Wickert, Karol Podsiadio, Chris Gilbert, Philip Marcu, Noel Broadbent, Stuart Bayford, Steven Mayne, Steve Goose, Justin Kyrakidas and Barry Warden it's bad news as they're all out.

65 players remain.

1pm: Huge double for Stoupis
Level 14, Blinds 1,500-3,000(300 ante)

Day 1A chip leader Samuel Orledge just took a big hit that in the process doubled Fotis Stoupis to almost 200,000.

Orledge opened to 6,600, Stoupis re-raised to 24,000, Orledge tanked and then moved all in and Stoupis snap called.

Orledge: [Ad][Jc]
Stoupis: [Ac][Ah]

The Greek player was all in for 95,800 and the aces held on the [7h][2h][7d][Jd][9d] board. Orledge had gained some chips today but drops back to around 105,000 as a result of that hand.

12:50pm: Funnell felts Taylor
Level 14, Blinds 1,500-3,000(300 ante)

Down to just 21,700 Simon Taylor moved all in from middle position for 21,700 and William Funnell - who was to his immediate left - re-raised all-in for about 50,000 and everyone else folded.

Funnell: [Qd][Qh]
Taylor: [8s][7s]

Both players stood as the [Kh][9d][7c][3c][Td] board came down and they shook hands as Taylor departed.

12:40pm: More fallers
Level 14, Blinds 1,500-3,000(300 ante)

There was no way back for Luke Cameron after he doubled up William Funnell (see 12:10pm post). He's one of the early fallers here on Day 2 and joins: Mark Williamson, David Barnes, Ricky Davies, John Lucarotti, Jamie Pugh, Andrea Scappazzoni, Chaminda Tennakoon, Rob Crawford and Joshua Varghese on the rail.

12:30pm: Ace double for Rees
Level 13, Blinds 1,200-2,400(300 ante)

In level one of this tournament George Rees caught lightning in a bottle when he made a royal flush. In level 13 he found aces to double up.

Shane D'Moriah opened from the hijack, Rees shoved for 38,500 from the cut-off and when it folded back to D'Moriah he called with pocket eights. The [3c][9h][Js][6d][Kc] board kept the aces in front and kept Rees in the tournament.

UKIPT5_Series3_day2_george_rees.jpg

Aces kept Rees in it

12:20pm: Exits
Level 13, Blinds 1,200-2,400(300 ante)

The start of Day 2 is usually carnage and in the opening 20 minutes 10 players have been eliminated. They include: Jeff Barron, Line Olsen, Carl Davies, Philip Baker and Adriano Soares.

12:10pm: Funnell gets chips
Level 13, Blinds 1,200-2,400(300 ante)

From early position John O'Donnell opened to 5,500, Luke Cameron then three-bet to 12,500 and action passed to William Funnell. He asked Cameron how much he was playing and then moved all-in for 28,800, That got rid of O'Donnell but Cameron thought for a bit before making the call.

Funnell: [As][Ac]
Cameron: [9h][9c]

The board came [Kd][2d][Ks][7h][7c] and Funnell more than doubled up to around 65,000 whilst Cameron is down to about 17,000.

"Were you thinking about folding?" asked Funnell.
"I was, but I was priced in," replied Cameron.

12:02pm: Action is go
Level 13, Blinds 1,200-2,400(300 ante)

Almost bang on time the action has started.

11:50am: The Series is about to get serious
The prelims are over, this is the real thing. Sure the 106 players who've made it to Day 2 can give themselves a pat on the back for outlasting the 245 players who've been eliminated but that's about it. 59 of those who're back today will suffer the same fate, that is they'll leave empty handed.

For the other 47 they'll have some financial reward for their efforts, a minimum of £480, rising all the way to £16,590 should they be the last man or woman sitting. You can see the You can see the entire payout structure here.

The man who's sitting in pole position right now is Andrew King. He won a 160,000 chip pot on the final hand of Day 1B to finish on 201,600. He was the only player to break the 200,000 chip mark, but others who'll be back today include: Sam Orledge (170,900), Chris Gordon (148,000) Elliot Panyi (139,300) and Daiva Barauskaite (78,700).

UKIPT5_Series3_day2_chris_gordon.jpg

Chris Gordon

Cards are in the air at noon.

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PokerStars Blog Reporting Team at UKIPT Series: Nick Wright. Photos by Mickey May


















































































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Chris Christie Plots Takeover of Atlantic City

Zemanta Related Posts ThumbnailNew Jersey Governor Chris Christie has openly voiced his support for a revised plan to rescue the US state’s gambling resort of Atlantic City.

Introduced by Christie alongside Senate President Steve Sweeney and Atlantic City Mayor Don Guardian, the plan combines elements of previous strategies to help save the struggling gambling hub.

Christie, who is keen for the plan to be cleared by the end of February, said the strategy would allow the state to restructure city debt and terminate municipal contracts, including those with labour unions.

New Jersey already controls the city’s budget, hiring and other finances, but previous legislation put forward by Christie this month would allow for a more complete takeover of operations in Atlantic City.

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