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2019 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure

$25,000 PokerStars NL Hold'em Players Championship
Jours 2
Event Info

2019 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure

Résultats
Gagnant
Main Gagnante
a5
Prix
$5,100,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$25,000
Prize Pool
$26,455,500
Entrants
1,039
Info Niveau
Niveau
36
Blinds
300,000 / 600,000
Ante
600,000

Kornuth Steals One on the River

Niveau 11 : 1,000/2,000, 2,000 ante

In a battle of the blinds, the dealer fanned the flop of {q-Clubs}{3-Spades}{3-Clubs} and Chance Kornuth led out for 5,000 from the small blind. His opponent raised to 16,000 from the big blind and Kornuth called.

The turn brought the {2-Hearts} and both players checked to the {q-Hearts} on the river. Kornuth splashed in a bet of 25,000 and the two players began a staring contest. The big blind eventually dispatched his cards and Kornuth pulled in the pot.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Chance Kornuth us
Chance Kornuth
78,000
-25,200
-25,200
$25K Fantasy
WSOP 3X Winner
WPT 1X Winner

Tags: Chance Kornuth

Updated Counts

Niveau 11 : 1,000/2,000, 2,000 ante
Joueur Jetons Progression
Kristen Bicknell ca
Kristen Bicknell
334,000
126,100
126,100
$25K Fantasy
WSOP 4X Winner
Nacho Barbero ar
Nacho Barbero
235,000
130,600
130,600
$25K Fantasy
WSOP 1X Winner
Vojtech Ruzicka cz
Vojtech Ruzicka
203,000
-7,000
-7,000
Chris Johnson us
Chris Johnson
180,000
85,000
85,000
Justin Young us
Justin Young
172,000
93,000
93,000
WPT 1X Winner
Duff Charette ca
Duff Charette
160,000
60,900
60,900
Dan Shak us
Dan Shak
160,000
$25K Fantasy
Mike Watson ca
Mike Watson
153,000
39,000
39,000
WPT 1X Winner
EPT 2X Winner
Frank Kassela us
Frank Kassela
141,000
-4,000
-4,000
WSOP 3X Winner
Ryan Riess us
Ryan Riess
132,000
53,800
53,800
WSOP Main Event Champion
$25K Fantasy
WSOP 1X Winner
WPT 1X Winner
Toby Lewis gb
Toby Lewis
130,000
20,000
20,000
$25K Fantasy
WSOP 1X Winner
EPT 1X Winner
Jesse Sylvia us
Jesse Sylvia
128,000
-17,000
-17,000
WPT 1X Winner
Jeremy Ausmus us
Jeremy Ausmus
126,000
38,900
38,900
$25K Fantasy
WSOP 6X Winner
Justin Bonomo us
Justin Bonomo
106,000
27,800
27,800
WSOP 3X Winner
Timothy Adams ca
Timothy Adams
84,000
-1,000
-1,000
WSOP 1X Winner

Updated Chip Counts

Niveau 11 : 1,000/2,000, 2,000 ante
Joueur Jetons Progression
Dylan Wilkerson us
Dylan Wilkerson
222,000
22,000
22,000
WPT 1X Winner
Will Berry us
Will Berry
190,000
190,000
190,000
Jose Montes us
Jose Montes
176,500
24,500
24,500
Ryan Olisar us
Ryan Olisar
160,000
Josh Reichard us
Josh Reichard
148,000
148,000
148,000
David Yan nz
David Yan
125,000
-70,000
-70,000
WSOP 2X Winner
Byron Kaverman us
Byron Kaverman
100,000
30,000
30,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Eric Baldwin us
Eric Baldwin
79,000
-82,000
-82,000
WSOP 2X Winner
Linda Johnson us
Linda Johnson
75,000
17,900
17,900
WSOP 1X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
Gianluca Speranza it
Gianluca Speranza
56,000
-43,000
-43,000
Kane Kalas us
Kane Kalas
47,500
7,000
7,000
$25K Fantasy
Javier Zarco es
Javier Zarco
36,000
-19,000
-19,000

Boivin Heroes Becker

Niveau 11 : 1,000/2,000, 2,000 ante

We found big blind Thomas Boivin thinking things over on the river, with {5-Diamonds}{10-Hearts}{9-Hearts}{4-Spades}{3-Diamonds} on the felt. There was about 70,000 in the middle and Johannes Becker had set him in for about 55,000 from middle position. Boivin thought awhile and then announced a call, tabling {a-Spades}{k-Spades} for just ace-high.

It was good, as Becker could only smile and compliment the call and show {q-Diamonds}{j-Diamonds}.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Thomas Boivin be
Thomas Boivin
180,000
145,300
145,300
Johannes Becker de
Johannes Becker
20,000
-63,100
-63,100
WSOP 1X Winner

Tags: Johannes BeckerThomas Boivin

Alexander Eliminated by Kamhazi

Niveau 11 : 1,000/2,000, 2,000 ante

Down to his last 27,500, Dejuante Alexander ended up all in and at risk with the {10-Clubs}{10-Spades} and was called by table neighbor Jonathan Kamhazi with the {A-Diamonds}{K-Diamonds}.

Alexander flopped middle set on {A-Clubs}{10-Diamonds}{2-Diamonds}, but Kamhazi immediately connected with the {5-Diamonds} turn. A blank {8-Clubs} river spelled the end for Alexander and Kamhazi was all smiles.

"Thank you dealer," he joked and tossed a T-1,000 chip over.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Jonathan Kamhazi ve
Jonathan Kamhazi
85,000
-5,700
-5,700
Dejuante Alexander us
Dejuante Alexander
Eliminé
WSOP 1X Winner

Tags: Dejuante AlexanderJonathan Kamhazi

Further Counts

Niveau 11 : 1,000/2,000, 2,000 ante
Joueur Jetons Progression
Kristen Bicknell ca
Kristen Bicknell
390,000
56,000
56,000
$25K Fantasy
WSOP 4X Winner
Erik Von Buxhoeveden de
Erik Von Buxhoeveden
390,000
110,000
110,000
Blair Hinkle us
Blair Hinkle
320,000
98,100
98,100
WSOP 1X Winner
Fabio Freitas br
Fabio Freitas
310,000
127,700
127,700
Dan O'Brien us
Dan O'Brien
270,000
-31,200
-31,200
Michael Noori us
Michael Noori
265,000
88,000
88,000
$25K Fantasy
WSOP 1X Winner
Jack Salter gb
Jack Salter
210,000
36,000
36,000
Noah Boeken nl
Noah Boeken
200,000
44,100
44,100
EPT 1X Winner
Ramin Hajiyev az
Ramin Hajiyev
200,000
5,000
5,000
Jacqueline Burkhart us
Jacqueline Burkhart
200,000
145,700
145,700
PokerStars
Justin Bonomo us
Justin Bonomo
110,000
4,000
4,000
WSOP 3X Winner
Joey Ingram us
Joey Ingram
90,000
-60,200
-60,200
Mikita Badziakouski by
Mikita Badziakouski
80,000
-84,000
-84,000
WSOP 1X Winner
PokerStars
Chris Moorman gb
Chris Moorman
40,000
-49,500
-49,500
WSOP 1X Winner
WPT 1X Winner

Twitch Crusher Lex Veldhuis on the PSPC

Niveau 11 : 1,000/2,000, 2,000 ante
Lex Veldhuis
Lex Veldhuis

PokerStars has pulled of an incredible feat; organizing the biggest $25,000 buy-in event in the history of the game with 1,039 players signing up. The atmosphere in the tournament room was, as a result, more than good with smiles all around. One of the bigger smiles belonged to Lex Veldhuis when we talked to him on Day 1 of the event. And while he has since been eliminated, Veldhuis stands by his words on this event being incredible.

You're wearing a PokerStars patch so being excited about this event is mandatory, but I imagine you'd feel the same had PokerStars not been your sponsor.
Yeah, I think the response has been very positive, enthusiastic overall. We had a party for the Platinum Pass winners the night before the event started and I heard all these stories about how the people came here. I met the guy who qualified through my twitch stream promotion. I mean, it's incredible. The stories you hear; this is such a big thing for them.

"People from pure fandom level get to play an event like this, it's incredible."

People from pure fandom level get to play an event like this, it's incredible. You really sense that the people love it. There's a lot of chatter at the tables about it.

And, of course, there are the nerves. I had a guy at my table wearing sunglasses and a hat. I had no idea whether he was a qualifier playing an event like this for the first time, or an online pro. Then, when he raised for the first time, the chips almost fell out of his hand he was shaking so much. Yeah, that is kind of a tell for sure.

There are, of course, also Platinum Pass winners who'll play extremely solid, but just the whole event is sick. I said from the get-go I expected the event to get over 1,000 players, but it was more speaking about what I was hoping. It's just cool to start the year with an event like this.

There's a mix of players; from unexperienced qualifiers to top pros and from people that are taking a shot to people coming back from retirement not to miss out. What do you think about the field?
It's an excellent field. It's better than some $10,000 events. If you crushed poker four years ago but since haven't played as much anymore but coming back to play this one, that also adds to this event being so good. You see quite a lot of those players. But even though they haven't forgotten about everything, the fact remains that they haven't kept up to date on poker. A lot of stuff happened in the last four years; new little tricks have been discovered, certain spots are now better figured out. I like to think I'm better up to speed on such developments. I'm pretty confident playing in a field like this.

Where do you rank yourself in a field like this?
That's a tough question. When I walk through the tournament room, I don't recognize most of the online crushers. If you play the Daily $500s and are a regular in the $1,000 Sunday Warmup, you'll be better than me, and it's likely I won't recognize you. I'm not sure how many of these players are here, so it kind of depends. I think I'll do well against the rest of the field. If you have two or three of these guys at your table, it makes things tough. But in any other $25,000, there'll be at least five or six of them at the table.

So Top 5 percent of the field?
I don't think I'm in the group of best 50 players in this tournament, but Top 100 isn't a stretch I think.

Your hands don't tremble while playing a $25,000 buy-in event, even though you're not a regular in these things?
I fired two $25,000 bullets in the last WCOOP, but that was such a strong field I wasn't really even expecting to be winning in the long run. Even though the pots themselves were sometimes stressful, the overall feeling wasn't stressful.

I've played quite a few $2,000s and $5,000s last year, so I feel pretty confident about my tournament game. I know what my strong and weaker points are, I know from what kind of spots to stay away. I've also played a lot live in recent months and enough $25,000s in my life, so the experience is there. I've been here before so that releases some of the tension of playing in such an event.

"I don't think I'm in the group of best 50 players in this tournament, but Top 100 isn't a stretch I think."

Last year at the PCA, I interviewed you about your Twitch stream and how you kept reinventing yourself. Now, with 2018 behind you, how do you look back at your stream since?
It really couldn't be better. If I had only half of it, I would've taken it. I'm just thinking how great it's all been. I can't believe where I'm at right now with my Twitch stream.

The last five or six months I've been very consistent with my viewership numbers, it's been quite steady. It's hard to really grow fast.

Have you reached a ceiling when it comes to concurrent viewers?
No, not a hard ceiling. It's really up to me now to grow the poker directory on Twitch. With the numbers I'm now getting, I get pretty high up in Twitch's overall directory. When I stream on a Sunday and get 9- or 10,000 viewers, I make the Top 15 of Twitch's overall directory. That means that a lot of people who browse Twitch see my stream. Hopefully, they think 'oh cool, poker' and start watching. And those are the exact people I want to attract and the people I need to grow my channel. But that's a tougher demographic to reach and to get to tune in again, compared to those who are already poker fans.

I think there's a lot more potential in Twitch and poker. It's my goal for the year to get more mainstream attention for poker and introduce more new people to poker through my channel.

Do you think poker is important for Twitch just as much as Twitch is important for poker?
I think poker is unique to Twitch because people who are playing buy in themselves. They pay money to play and win money. When you watch a Hearthstone streamer, he or she is invited to a tournament because they're good at the game, but they don't have their own money on the line. That's unique to poker; the players are uniquely invested, and as a viewer, you can feel that. Sweating with someone who has money on the line is a different experience, I think.

Professional poker players need to try to not give away too much. On top of that, with 15 years of experience as a professional poker player, you must have seen it all by now. Do you need to act when on stream - screaming it out when you get a bad beat - or is that your true nature?
I think, when you're playing a competitive game, it's triggered automatically. The emotions come naturally. At least for me. When I lose a pot live, I won't be jumping out of my chair. But when you're at home, it's a lot different.

There are stories of Patrik Antonius throwing his computer mouse through the window after losing a pot playing online. The stoic Fin supposedly is as engaged as anyone when playing online poker.

Twitch gives people a view into the real life of an online poker pro. There's so much happening and with Twitch you get to see it all; the raw emotion. On top of that, the community fuels that emotion. When you win a hand and the whole chat explodes, you just feel the hype. You just go with it; you get fired up when something big happens and the community responds. I really see through their eyes how cool it is to be a poker pro. It's a poker party where everyone is hyped up when you go deep, and everyone is invited.

Talking about showing emotions in poker, a debate arose yesterday about players covering their faces in events like this. Christoph Vogelsang had his head buried in his hoodie, and Kenny Hallaert argued on his twitter that wasn't the way to go. Jake Cody, on the other hand, argued he would not object to his attire at all. Where do you stand in all of this?
Let me put it like this; I agree with Jake that I would never tell someone what to wear or force someone to be engaging at the poker table. But, if you bury your face in a hoodie, you're the last person I want to hear anything from in terms of what is and what isn't good for the game because you're not doing anything yourself to improve the situation.

"He has every right to play his game the way he does, but I have the right to have an opinion on that."

To be fair, I don't hear Vogelsang complain about 'what's good for poker' usually.
True, so I'm talking more broadly. There are people enough who are critical, who don't help their own cause by any means either. Someone like Vogelsang does nothing for the game but win, and he has every right to do so. But I don't enjoy watching it, especially not during an event like this. I would say we should all try to make things fun at the table, but that's no obligation. He has every right to play his game the way he does, but I have the right to have an opinion on that.

Do you take some extra effort in events like this to show Platinum Pass winners a good time?
Yeah, I might show a hand that I usually wouldn't, for example. And I might engage with some people at the table a bit more than I usually would. I think that's important in a tournament like this. That doesn't mean I don't take this tournament serious or that I don't play as hard as I can, but I do want to create a fun environment.

Tags: Jake CodyKenny HallaertLex VeldhuisPatrik AntoniusPCAPSPC

Couden Takes Three-Bet Pot from Lin

Niveau 11 : 1,000/2,000, 2,000 ante

Celina Lin opened under the gun for 5,000 and Joey Couden three-bet to 14,000 a couple of seats over. Lin came along for the {3-Clubs}{7-Hearts}{10-Spades} flop and check-called 10,000. The {10-Clubs} and {5-Diamonds} checked through and Lin revealed {a-Hearts}{k-Diamonds} but Couden got lucky with {a-Diamonds}{3-Diamonds}.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Joey Couden us
Joey Couden
150,000
-24,400
-24,400
$25K Fantasy
WSOP 1X Winner
Celina Lin cn
Celina Lin
95,000
-21,900
-21,900

Tags: Celina LinJoey Couden