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2017 PokerStars Championship Sochi

Main Event
Jours 6
Event Info

2017 PokerStars Championship Sochi

Résultats
Gagnant
Main Gagnante
a6
Prix
21,900,000 RUB
Event Info
Buy-in
318,000 RUB
Prize Pool
150,000,000 RUB
Entrants
387
Info Niveau
Niveau
28
Blinds
40,000 / 80,000
Ante
10,000

Pavel Shirshikov Wins PokerStars Championship Sochi Main Event for RUB 29,100,000

Niveau 28 : 40,000/80,000, 10,000 ante
PokerStars Championship Sochi Main Event Champion Pavel Shirshikov
PokerStars Championship Sochi Main Event Champion Pavel Shirshikov

Pavel Shirshikov toppled a 387-player field to win the PokerStars Championship Sochi Main Event and take home RUB 29,100,000 (approx. $514,893).

Coming into the day second in chips, but only one big blind behind the chip leader, Shirshikov played magnificently, eliminating all but one of the players at the final table on his way to beating fellow Russian Vladimir Troyanovskiy to take down the title.

Troyanovskiy will not be left unhappy with his 2nd place finish for RUB 18,450,000 ($326,453), and will be coming away with another great result to go with his 3rd place finish in the PokerStars National High Roller.

But it was Shirshikov who emerged triumphant, taking down one of the biggest tournaments on Russian soil and adding his name to the list of PokerStars Championship Main Event champions.

PlaceWinnerCountryPrize (RUB)Prize (USD)
1Pavel ShirshikovRussian Federation29,100,000$514,893
2Vladimir TroyanovskiyRussian Federation18,450,000$326,453
3Seyed GhavamIran13,335,000$235,948
4Dmitry VitkindRussian Federation10,785,000$190,829
5Lavrentiy NiKazahkstan8,535,000$151,017
6Timur BubnovRussian Federation6,570,000$116,249
7Daniyar AubakirovKazakhstan4,890,000$86,523
8Nadar KakhmazovRussian Federation3,540,000$62,636

First to go today was Timur Bubnov. The short stack coming into the final day departed after his top pair ran into the flopped two pair of Vladimir Troyanovskiy. With no help on the turn or river the last remaining Spin and Go qualifier was eliminated in 6th place for RUB 6,760,000 ($116,249).

Lavrentiy Ni had worked hard during the final table, but faced a couple of difficult river spots against multiple opponents, and eventually moved all in with pocket eights, and was called by the Ace-Queen of Shirshikov. The flop was all diamonds, and with Shirshikov holding the Ace of diamonds, the four of diamonds on the turn sealed Ni’s fate and he left in 5th place for RUB 8,535,000 ($151,016).

At this stage play was relatively deep-stacked. Both Shirshikov and Troyanovskiy seemed to be driving things, with stacks in excess of 75 big blinds, and it seemed only a cooler would come close to breaking the cycle.

And a cooler it was. Shirshikov and Dmitry Vitkind bumped heads in a five-bet pot with Shirshikov holding Kings against Vitkind’s aces. There was a king on the turn which ended Vitkind’s Main Event run. This meant that Vitkind finished in the same place as he did seven years ago at EPT Tallinn. Vitkind took home RUB 10,785,000 ($190,829) for his efforts.

Again, the stack sizes were heading ever skywards, and it took another cooler to get play to heads-up. Shirshikov picked up Queen-Nine and Seyed Ghavam King-Nine. The flop came Queen-Nine-Eight, and the money went in on the turn with Ghavam needing to hit one of his remaining three outs to stay alive. He didn’t, but he still secured his deepest run in a major tournament since last December where he finished 84th in the EPT Prague Main Event for $14,638. This was his biggest live score to date, and he took home RUB 13,335,000 ($235,948) for third place.

As a result of Shirshikov eliminating Ni, Vitkind and Ghavam, he came into the heads-up portion of play with a greater than 2:1 chip lead. A combination of good fortune and strong heads-up play saw him forge an even greater gap against his opponent Troyanovskiy.

In the end, and with the dinner break looming, Shirshikov finally found a breakthrough and Troyanovskiy's stack was down around the 20 big blind mark. After getting even shorter, Troyanovskiy chopped a pot when five diamonds ran out on the board. He then doubled in a pot after rivering a miracle three-outer, before finally succumbing at the hands of his compatriot after a short but entertaining heads-up match.

Tags: Dmitry VitkindLavrentiy NiPavel ShirshikovSeyed GhavamTimur BubnovVladimir Troyanovskiy

Vladimir Troyanovskiy Eliminated in 2nd Place (RUB18,450,000)

Niveau 28 : 40,000/80,000, 10,000 ante
Vladimir Troyanovsky
Vladimir Troyanovsky

Hand #163: Vladimir Troyanovskiy limped in and Pavel Shirshikov moved all in, Troyanovskiy called all in for 1,100,000.

Shirshikov: {A-Hearts}{6-Hearts}
Troyanovskiy: {K-Clubs}{7-Clubs}

The {6-Diamonds}{5-Hearts}{4-Hearts} flop gave Shirshikov top pair and the nut flush draw, while Troyanovskiy had two live cards and an open-ended straight draw. The {5-Spades} turn changed nothing much, and the {J-Clubs} river was a blank to crown a champion.

Troyanovskiy has to settle for second place and a payday of RUB 18,450,000 (~$326,453), while Shirshikov takes home the trophy, title and a payday of RUB 29,100,000 (~514,893).

A recap of today's action will be available shortly.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Pavel Shirshikov ru
Pavel Shirshikov
11,630,000 1,070,000
Vladimir Troyanovskiy ru
Vladimir Troyanovskiy
Eliminé

Tags: Pavel ShirshikovVladimir Troyanovskiy

Seyed Ghavam Eliminated in 3rd Place (RUB 13,335,000)

Niveau 27 : 30,000/60,000, 10,000 ante
Seyed Ghavam
Seyed Ghavam

Hand #128: Pavel Shirshikov limped with {q-Diamonds}{9-Clubs} in the small blind and Seyed Ghavam raised with {k-Diamonds}{9-Diamonds} in the big blind to 185,000. Shirshikov called.

The flop came {q-Spades}{9-Spades}{8-Hearts} and Shirshikov checked. Ghavam bet 155,000. Shirshikov check-raised to 400,000 and Ghavam called.

The turn was the {4-Clubs} and Shirshikov bet 900,000. Ghavam moved all in and Shirshikov called.

Ghavam was at risk, and needed help on the river, but didn't get it as it came {6-Diamonds}

Ghavam's deepest run in a major tournament came last December in Prague where he finished 84th in the EPT Prague Main Event for $14,638 but this is his biggest score to date, taking home $235,948 for third place.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Pavel Shirshikov ru
Pavel Shirshikov
8,100,000 2,090,000
Seyed Ghavam ir
Seyed Ghavam
Eliminé

Tags: Pavel ShirshikovSeyed Ghavam

Dmitry Vitkind Eliminated in 4th place (RUB 10,785,000)

Niveau 27 : 30,000/60,000, 10,000 ante
Dmitry Vitkind
Dmitry Vitkind

Hand #116: Pavel Shirshikov opened 120,000 from the button with {k-Hearts}{k-Clubs} and Dmitry Vitkind bumped it up to 340,000 in the small blind holding {q-Diamonds}{q-Clubs}. Shirshikov four-bet to 700,000 and Vitkind five-bet jammed all-in for 2,120,000. Shirshikov snap-called.

Holding Vitkind’s fate, the dealer fanned out a [jsjq8skdad] board and a sick cooler ended the Russian’s run for a home soil major title. Vitkind received a career-best RUB 10,785,000 or USD $190,829 topping a fourth place Main Event finish at EPT Tallin in 2010 for USD $160,000.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Pavel Shirshikov ru
Pavel Shirshikov
6,010,000 2,210,000
Dmitry Vitkind ru
Dmitry Vitkind
Eliminé

Tags: Dmitry VitkindPavel Shirshikov

Lavrentiy Ni Eliminated in 5th Place (RUB 8,535,000)

Niveau 25 : 20,000/40,000, 5,000 ante
Lavrentiy Ni
Lavrentiy Ni

Hand #66: Lavrentiy Ni open-jammed from the cutoff with {8-Spades}{8-Clubs} for 385,000, getting a call from Troyanovskiy in the small blind with {a-Hearts}{2-Hearts}. Pavel Shirshikov grabbed a handful of chips and three-bet to 875,000 holding {a-Diamonds}{q-Hearts}. Troyanovskiy folded.

A classic race for Ni’s tournament life was underway. The dealer fanned out a {6-Diamonds}{7-Diamonds}{j-Diamonds}{4-Diamonds}{k-Clubs} board, giving Shirshikov a flush on the turn and Ni’s Main Event run came to an end in fifth place. For his efforts, Ni received RUB 8,535,000 or approximately USD $151,017.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Pavel Shirshikov ru
Pavel Shirshikov
3,930,000 780,000
Lavrentiy Ni kz
Lavrentiy Ni
Eliminé

Tags: Lavrentiy NiPavel ShirshikovVladimir Troyanovskiy

Timur Bubnov Eliminated in 6th Place (RUB 6.750,000)

Niveau 25 : 20,000/40,000, 5,000 ante
Timur Bubnov
Timur Bubnov

Hand #53: Troyanovskiy open to 85,000 with {j-Hearts}{9-Hearts} from early position and Bubnov called in the big blind holding {k-Spades}{q-Diamonds}. The flop came {j-Spades}{9-Diamonds}{k-Diamonds} and Troy continued with a bet of 80,000. Bubnov thought for a moment before moving all-in and Troyanovskiy snap-called, putting Bubnov at risk.

The {7-Spades} fell on the turn giving Bubnov a few more outs but the river {a-Spades} bricked and Bubnov became the first casualty of Day 6. The Spin & Go qualifier picked up RUB 6,570,000 or USD $116,249, monstrously his largest cash ever.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Vladimir Troyanovskiy ru
Vladimir Troyanovskiy
2,470,000 920,000
Timur Bubnov ru
Timur Bubnov
Eliminé

Tags: Timur BubnovVladimir Troyanovskiy

Dmitry Vitkind Doubles Through Seyed Ghavam

Niveau 23 : 12,000/24,000, 4,000 ante
Dmitry Vitkind
Dmitry Vitkind

Hand #2: Dmitry Vitkind opened to 52,000 from under the gun with {a-Spades}{j-Spades}. Seyed Ghavam three-bet from the button with {k-Spades}{k-Diamonds} to 131,000. The blinds both folded and action was back on Vitkind. He had around 40 big blinds behind, around one million in chips, and he called the bet from Ghavam.

The flop came {j-Clubs}{6-Spades}{3-Clubs} and Vitkind checked to Ghavam who continued for 131,000 again. The pot at this point was 453,000 and Vitkind called.

The turn brought the {7-Hearts} and Vitkind checked again. Ghavam bet 295,000 and Vitkind moved all in for his last 783,000. Ghavam called.

Vitkind was at risk, and had only a 10% chance of winning the hand. However, the river was one of the four outs he needed, coming the {a-Hearts}.

Vitkind doubled to just over two million chips, good enough for third in chips, while Ghavam falls to 911,000.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Dmitry Vitkind ru
Dmitry Vitkind
2,150,000 1,100,000
Seyed Ghavam ir
Seyed Ghavam
911,000 -1,213,000

Tags: Dmitry VitkindSeyed Ghavam

A New Champion Lingers on Day 6 of the PokerStars Championship Main Event in Sochi

Vladimir Troyanovsky
Vladimir Troyanovsky

A new PokerStars Championship Main Event Champion will be crowned in Sochi, Russia later today. Just six players return to battle for all the glory, the trophy, bragging rights, and maybe a nice sum of RUB 29,100,000 or just over USD 500,000.

Kazakhstani hopeful Lavrentiy Ni will wield the big stack when play resumes at 12:30 p.m. local time inside the gorgeous Sochi Casino and Resort. Though his chip lead of 2,949,000 is only one big blind ahead of Russian player Pavel Shirshikov.

Most notably and likely the odds-on favorite is Russian poker legend Vladimir Troyanovskiy. Troyanovskiy begins play sitting in the fourth position but still has a very playable stack. Fellow countryman Dmitry Vitkind also has an impressive resume and will be looking to climb the counts pretty early.

Seat Assignments for the Final Table

SeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Seyed GhavamIran2,124,00088
2Vladimir TroyanovskiyRussian Federation1,791,00074
3Pavel ShirshikovRussian Federation2,914,000121
4Dmitry VitkindRussian Federation1,050,00043
5Lavrentiy NiKazakhstan2,949,000122
6Timur BubnovRussian Federation783,00032

Play will resume in Level 23 with about 26 minutes left on the clock. Blinds are currently 12,000/24,000 with a 4,000 chip ante. Action can be caught live, on a 30-minute delay kicking off at 1:00 p.m. and will continue until one player has all of the 11,610,000 chips in play. Good luck to all players.

Remaining Payouts PokerStars Championship Sochi Main Event

PlacePrize (RUB)Prize (USD)
129,100,000$514,893
218,450,000$326,453
313,335,000$235,948
410,785,000$190,829
58,535,000$151,017
66,570,000$116,249

Tags: Dmitry VitkindLavrentiy NiPavel ShirshikovPokerStars Championship SochiSeyed GhavamTimur BubnovVladimir Troyanovskiy

Seat 6: Timur Bubnov, 38, Vladivostok/Russia, PokerStars Spin & Go qualifier - 783,000

Timur Bubnov
Timur Bubnov

Russian recreational poker player Timur Bubnov was one of the dozens of players who secured their PokerStars Championship Sochi Main Event seats through a $10 Spin & Goes online at PokerStars. While Bubnov didn't need to leave his country to arrive in Sochi, the tournament doesn't exactly take place in his backyard. The 38-year-old hails from Vladivostok, a city located in the far east of Russia, more than 7,000 kilometres away from Sochi. Bubnov is married with two children and his significant one arrived in Sochi with him.

Bubnov made sure their long trip would be worth those hours on a plane by becoming the last Spin & Go qualifier standing. Making the final table already secures Bubnov a giant return on his tiny investment as he's set to receive at least RUB 3,540,000 ($62,637).

Bubnov started playing poker nearly a decade ago, but the game is rather a hobby for him as he plays only occasionally. Bubnov has played at WSOP several times, trying to test his skills against the American players. He also competed in Macau in the Red Dragon series but his performance in the PokerStars Championship Main Event is by far his biggest achievement. Bubnov said he was having a great time here in Sochi, enjoying his game and playing for his own pleasure. After reaching the money, all pressure got away from him. Being relaxed might be his advantage on the final table.

Tags: Timur Bubnov

Seat 5: Lavrentiy Ni, 28, Almaty/Kazakhstan - 2,949,000

Lavrentiy Ni
Lavrentiy Ni

Only Jason Wheeler had a more impressive start to the PokerStars Championship Sochi Main Event than Lavrentiy Ni, a 28-year-old player from Almaty, Kazakhstan. Ni put his foot firmly on the pedal right from Day 1, bagging up the second biggest stack among all contenders. He has capitalized on his strong opening performance so far. Ni has made it from the base camp close to the summit, but the most difficult step still awaits him. He faced his fellow countryman Daniyar Aubakirov on the final table (out in seventh), among other rivals.

Ni's previous live tournament cashes for just over $50,000 with the better half earned thanks to a second place in the 2016 Merit Poker Retro Cup $730 NLH Warm-Up Event in Kyrenia, Cyprus. He banked $29,255 for his efforts back then.

Ni is guaranteed to more than double his lifetime earnings with his PokerStars Championship Main Event reward. Now sitting in 21st place, Ni will ladder to the Kazakhstan's top ten and would catapult himself into the pole position with a win here in Sochi

Tags: Lavrentiy Ni