Joueur | Jetons | Progression |
---|---|---|
Sylvain Loosli | Eliminé | |
|
||
Kevin Schulz | Eliminé | |
|
||
Scott Seiver | Eliminé | |
|
||
John Racener | Eliminé | |
|
||
Ivan Deyra | Eliminé | |
|
||
Georgios Vrakas | Eliminé | |
Daniel Strelitz | Eliminé | |
|
||
Nick Schulman | Eliminé | |
|
||
Justin Liberto | Eliminé | |
|
||
Justin Zaki | Eliminé | |
Christopher Andler | Eliminé | |
Jack Sinclair | Eliminé | |
|
||
Lander Lijo | Eliminé | |
Felix Bleiker | Eliminé | |
Norm McDonald
|
Eliminé | |
Ian Hunter | Eliminé | |
Dan Ott | Eliminé | |
Antoine Saout | Eliminé | |
Nipun Java | Eliminé | |
|
||
Koray Aldemir | Eliminé | |
|
||
Arlie Shaban | Eliminé | |
|
||
Erwann Pecheux | Eliminé | |
Bas de Laat | Eliminé | |
Adrian Mateos | Eliminé | |
|
||
Tony Hawk
|
Eliminé |
2019 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure
Joueur | Jetons | Progression |
---|---|---|
Kristen Bicknell |
171,000
21,000
|
21,000 |
|
||
Gus Hansen |
150,000
5,000
|
5,000 |
|
||
Eric Baldwin |
121,300
61,300
|
61,300 |
|
||
James Rann | 116,000 | |
Isaac Haxton |
103,000
15,000
|
15,000 |
|
||
Ole Schemion |
97,200
44,400
|
44,400 |
|
||
Brian Rast |
95,200
16,200
|
16,200 |
|
||
Toby Lewis |
92,000
26,000
|
26,000 |
|
||
Chris Johnson |
81,600
21,600
|
21,600 |
Mohsin Charania |
79,000
24,000
|
24,000 |
|
||
Jeremy Ausmus |
79,000
79,000
|
79,000 |
|
||
Jason Somerville |
74,200
6,200
|
6,200 |
|
||
Joao Simao |
56,100
9,100
|
9,100 |
|
||
Sam Greenwood |
38,300
-17,200
|
-17,200 |
|
||
Ryan Laplante | Eliminé | |
|
Phil Hellmuth has just joined the field and has been seated at Table #16. Also seated at that table are familiar faces like Ivaylo Sivinov, Javier Zarco, and Matthew Wantman.
The table also has three Platinum Pass winners; John McCarthy, Christian Delacombaz, and Lionel Foulquier. And completing the seat draw are Alexander Venovski and Henry Strasser.
Joueur | Jetons | Progression |
---|---|---|
Ivaylo Sivinov | 140,000 | |
Matthew Wantman | 63,000 | |
|
||
Phil Hellmuth | 60,000 | |
|
||
Javier Zarco |
55,000
-25,000
|
-25,000 |
Joao Simao bet 7,000 from the big blind into about 11,000 on a completed board of . Sam Greenwood thought awhile and then put in what looked like 37,000, leaving 700 behind. Simao snap-folded.
Joueur | Jetons | Progression |
---|---|---|
Sam Greenwood |
55,500
-4,500
|
-4,500 |
|
||
Joao Simao |
47,000
9,000
|
9,000 |
|
The cards of Harry Lodge were already in the muck and Gus Hansen, the first-ever PCA Main Event champion, had his still tabled. The Dane had hit top pair on a board of and doubled for more than the starting stack, while Lodge dropped to just under that.
Joueur | Jetons | Progression |
---|---|---|
Gus Hansen |
145,000
75,000
|
75,000 |
|
||
Harry Lodge |
55,000
-82,000
|
-82,000 |
|
Kevin Andriamahefa raised in the cutoff and Upeshka Desilva three-bet the button to 5,300, which Andriamahefa called. The flop came and Andriamahefa check-called a bet of 4,200 before both players opted to check the turn. Andriamahefa then bet the river for 7,000 and Desilva folded after some consideration.
Joueur | Jetons | Progression |
---|---|---|
Kevin Andriamahefa | 108,000 | |
Upeshka De Silva | 35,000 | |
|
Farid Jattin bet 7,900 after neighbor Scott Stewart checked to him from early position on . Stewart called and the river was the . Both players checked and Jattin couldn't beat .
Joueur | Jetons | Progression |
---|---|---|
Scott Stewart |
145,000
45,000
|
45,000 |
Farid Jattin | 106,000 | |
|
Andrew Neeme has quickly become a household name in poker, recently crossing the momentous 100,000 subscribers milestone on his YouTube channel after vlogging for just over two years. Now, the mid-stakes grinder vlogger extraordinaire and member of Team Run It Up finds himself in unfamiliar territory — playing in a $25,000 buy-in tournament.
Before the event, Neeme was getting dialed in.
“Feeling a big mix of excitement and nervousness," he told PokerNews. "I’m trying to not get too carried away because it’s Day 1 here and I expect today to go fairly slowly. It’s hard to not look too far ahead and just get too far ahead of yourself.”
While he's not a total stranger to bigger buy-in no-limit hold'em tournaments, having played the $10K WSOP Main Event, it's still a bit of a jump from his regular mid-stakes cash games.
“This is 2.5 times the biggest tournament I’ve ever played; normally I don’t play $25K events. Normally I play cash games and the occasional $1,500 and the [WSOP] Main Event is usually the biggest of the year for me.”
Vlogger Freeroll
Unlike many other mid-stakes players who had to dry fire the PSPC, Neeme was gifted one of the coveted $30K Platinum Passes from PokerStars after co-hosting the YouTube Vlogger in Paradise challenge with PokerStars Pro Jeff Gross. They gave out two passes to the winning vloggers, Oliver Biles and Matt Kiefer, and Stars rewarded the pros with an entry of their own.
“We got a bunch of people involved in the YouTube vlogging world, and we had an awesome turnout of people that made submissions all over the world. As a result for spreading the vlogger love, [PokerStars] gave me a pass as well, so here we are.”
In terms of preparing for the biggest tournament he's played, Neeme is mostly relying on his extensive live poker experience.
"I have so much live poker experience and I’m going to definitely bank on that to carry me through some of the way at least.”
“I got into the lab a little bit here and there but I’m trying not to cram my brain too full of new things," said Neeme. "I think it’s tough to expect to just unleash all these new tricks that you learned recently. I have so much live poker experience and I’m going to definitely bank on that to carry me through some of the way at least.”
When it comes to playing in events above your comfort level, most pros make a habit of selling pieces, and the PSPC is no exception, even if it's a freeroll.
Selling Action, Expectations
“I sold 20% on Stake Kings, I’m giving away 1% to each of the five finalists from the Vlogger in Paradise competition, and swapped an additional five percent; one percent pieces here and there.”
Neeme is prepared for the long tournament grind and expects an unprecedented mix of players.
“This is my first $25K so I expect there to be a really interesting mix of people in this event. We’re going to have a lot of people that have literally zero dollars on their Hendon Mob sitting next to people that have tens of millions of dollars on their Hendon Mob and I expect to just try to navigate my way through a table that looks like that, and hope for the best.”
So far it seems Neeme is following his game plan of taking it slow, hovering just under starting stack at the third break of the day. And his fans will surely be on the lookout a vlog or more on the experience.
Joueur | Jetons | Progression |
---|---|---|
Markus Durnegger |
184,000
40,000
|
40,000 |
Blair Hinkle |
178,000
85,500
|
85,500 |
|
||
Harry Lodge |
137,000
22,000
|
22,000 |
|
||
Josh Kay | 120,000 | |
Justin Bonomo |
98,000
33,500
|
33,500 |
|
||
Kelly Minkin |
45,000
-5,000
|
-5,000 |
Will Givens |
41,000
-31,000
|
-31,000 |
|
||
Maria Konnikova |
40,000
-33,200
|
-33,200 |
|
||
Matt Affleck |
27,100
-14,900
|
-14,900 |
Joe Serock |
24,500
18,600
|
18,600 |
|
||
Chris Frank
|
14,300
-45,700
|
-45,700 |
Julian Parm Ann raised to 1,800 from mid-position and was called by Talal Shakerchi in the cutoff. Eric Sfez was sitting in the big blind and decided to three-bet to 9,200 which both Parm Ann and Shakerchi called.
The flop came , Sfez bet 17,000 and Parm Ann quickly folded. Shakerchi made the call without much hesitation.
The turn brought them the , Sfez shoved for around 50,000 and Shakerchi snap-called.
Eric Sfez:
Talal Shakerchi:
Sfez held the overpair but Shakerchi had flopped a set. Only another jack could save Sfez but the on the river completed the board and meant the end of Sfez's tournament life.
Joueur | Jetons | Progression |
---|---|---|
Talal Shakerchi |
260,000
60,000
|
60,000 |
|
||
Eric Sfez | Eliminé |