Les jeux d'argent et de hasard peuvent être dangereux : pertes d'argent, conflits familiaux, addiction…, retrouvez nos conseils sur joueurs-info-service.fr (09 74 75 13 13 - appel non surtaxé).

Gouvernemen ANJ Adictel Evalujeu

2018 World Series of Poker

Event #5: $100,000 No-Limit Hold’em High Roller
Jours 4
Event Info

2018 World Series of Poker

Résultats
Gagnant
Main Gagnante
q8
Prix
$2,910,227
Event Info
Buy-in
$100,000
Prize Pool
$10,185,000
Entrants
105
Info Niveau
Niveau
23
Blinds
150,000 / 300,000
Ante
300,000

Nick Petrangelo Claims Victory in Event #5: $100,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller

Niveau 23 : 150,000/300,000, 300,000 ante
Nick Petrangelo - 2018 Event #5: $100,000 No-Limit Hold’em High Roller Winner
Nick Petrangelo - 2018 Event #5: $100,000 No-Limit Hold’em High Roller Winner

After four days of intense poker action, battling against the top pros in the world, Nick Petrangelo came out victorious in Event #5: $100,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller at the 2018 World Series of Poker. Petrangelo defeated fellow American Elio Fox in heads-up play to take home the first-place prize of $2,910,227, defeating a total of 105 entrants.

WSOP 2018 $100,000 High Roller Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Nick PetrangeloUnited States$2,910,227
2Elio FoxUnited States$1,798658
3Aymon HataUnited Kingdom$1,247,230
4Andreas EilerGermany$886,793
5Bryn KenneyUnited States$646,927
6Stephen ChidwickUnited Kingdom$484,551
7Jason KoonUnited States$372,894
8Adrian MateosSpain$295,066

This is Petrangelo's second career World Series of Poker gold bracelet, his first coming in 2015 in the $3,000 No-Limit Hold'em Shootout event. Petrangelo is well known for playing in these specific high roller events, and his track record speaks for itself. The American poker pro has accumulated more than $11.7 million in career tournament earnings but still admits these types of tournaments can take a toll on you.

"after a super intense week, it feels like a relief to be done more than anything."

“Last week I played the Super High Roller Bowl,” said Petrangelo, who finished sixth in that event. “Then the very next day I jumped right into this. So after a super intense week, it feels like a relief to be done more than anything. There’s a lot of pressure playing against really tough players for huge buy-ins, especially with the stream. This kind of event is super tough, but they’re really fun, and it’s what I love to do.”

Petrangelo bagged the chip lead on Day 2 and Day 3 and seemed in cruise control for long periods of the final table, especially today. He said that it’s stressful sleeping on the chip lead, and compared it to having the lead in a sports game with just minutes to go.

“It’s more stressful because you want everything to work out,” he said. “You have expectations to deal with [as chipleader]. I’ve tried to teach myself to just be happy that I’m here, and excited to be playing and not wanting it to be over! It’s a bad sign as chip leader to just want it to end, but there’s always an element of that, no matter how strong you are mentally.

“When you’re the chip leader, of course you want everything to go smoothly, and I think, luckily, today was the easiest anything’s ever gone. I coolered everyone and ran super hot. The last two days have been super easy for me. I think the last time I played any really tough pot was the middle stage of Day 2. Late on Day 2, I ran really good around the bubble, and the last two days I just ran really good. I’m happy with my decision-making, and ultimately I had sick cards!”

Having made numerous final tables over his poker career, Petrangelo may be used to final tables but says that there are always unique situations to try and prepare for.

"If I had it my way, every final table would be in the back corner of the room!"

“You’re trying to figure out what’s going on with the stream, trying to get hole cards [information], etc. You have to try and adjust your strategies. Every time you make a final table, there are different dynamics. I think everyone has it a bit tougher on feature tables with media stuff and hole cards and the stream. If I had it my way, every final table would be in the back corner of the room!”

Petrangelo praised heads-up opponent Elio Fox, who missed out on a second bracelet in a week.

“He’s a great player,” said Petrangelo. “He has a really strong background, especially in these formats. He plays Turbo SNGs.”

Nick Petrangelo Stats (June 2018)

Total Live Earnings:$14,619,745
Best Live Cash:$2,910,227
United States All Time Money List30th
All Time Money List:49th
Global Poker Index:21st
Nick Petrangelo - 2018 Event #5: $100,000 No-Limit Hold’em High Roller Winner
Nick Petrangelo - 2018 Event #5: $100,000 No-Limit Hold’em High Roller Winner

Tournament Summary

It was the first time in the WSOP history that a $100,000 buy-in event was run without the "One Drop" name associated with it. That didn't stop the best poker players in the world from coming out in full force for their shot at millions of dollars in prize money.

Day 1 began with around 20 players, but that number quickly started to grow as players came and entered in waves. After a full nine levels on the opening day, there were 97 entries with just 49 players surviving. Some notables to fall by the wayside on Day 1 included Daniel Negreanu, Erik Seidel, Antonio Esfandiari, Alex Foxen, and Jonathan Duhamel.

Late registration remained open for two levels into Day 2, and the total number of entries grew to 105. That made up a whopping prize pool $10,185,000 with 16 players making the money. Among the notable Day 2 entrants was none other than Phil Ivey, who attracted the largest rail looking to catch a glimpse of the poker legend. In search of his first bracelet since 2014, Ivey fell short when he lost a flip to Stephen Chidwick.

Jake Schindler
Jake Schindler bubbled the WSOP $100,000 High Roller

A few others to fall short of the money included Seth Davies, Brian Rast, Tom Marchese, and Ryan Riess. On the money bubble, Jake Schindler put himself at risk with ace-nine but walked into the ace-jack of Paul Volpe. Schindler was unable to come from behind, and the bubble burst in fewer than five hands.

Petrangelo took a healthy chip lead into Day 3 with just ten players remaining, half of which already had the pleasure of winning a gold bracelet in the past. Chris Moore was the first to be eliminated, setting up the unofficial final table of nine. Fedor Holz, Adrian Mateos, and Jason Koon were all eliminated within a span of 40 hands, bringing the tournament down to just six players. Play was halted for the day, and the final six players would return for Day 4 to declare a winner.

Final Table Summary

The final day began with six players returning to the main stage in the Amazon Room at the Rio Convention Center.

“It’s more stressful because you want everything to work out.”

Bryn Kenney came into the day second in chips but after a couple of early bluffs picked off by Elio Fox, Kenney was soon on the short stack.

It wasn't until the second level of the day where the first elimination would occur. Stephen Chidwick was unable to get things going his way today, and after losing a good chunk of his chips to Aymon Hata, he found himself all in for ten big blinds against Hata. Chidwick was in a dominated position preflop, and although he hit his live card on the turn, Hata countered with a pair of aces on the river to eliminate Chidwick in sixth place.

Stephen Chidwick
Stephen Chidwick was the first to depart

With Kenney on the short stack, it was only a matter of time before his chips found their way to the middle. After a raise from Fox, Bryn Kenney picked up a small pair and moved all in. Fox held two over cards and found a pair on the river to send Kenney home in fifth place.

The flurry of eliminations in the second level continued when Andreas Eiler flopped trip jacks against Petrangelo's full house. All of the chips went in on the river, and Eiler headed to the payout desk in fourth place.

In the very next hand, Aymon Hata flopped top pair and wasn't able to let it go when Petrangelo rivered a straight. Hata was next on the list of casualties to fall to an overwhelming chip leader, Petrangelo.

“I’m happy with my decision-making and ultimately I had sick cards!”

When heads-up play got underway, Petrangelo held a commanding chip lead over Fox, but the two players wouldn't shy away from getting chips into the pot. The majority of hands included (blind) three and four-bets preflop as they played a lot looser than before they reached the final stage of the tournament.

Fox won multiple hands in a row and eventually took over the chip lead for a short period of time. It wouldn't last long as Petrangelo was all in with jack-three suited against Fox's pocket fives. Petrangelo flopped a pair of jacks and a flush and held on for a double up to regain the lead.

Just moments later, in another four-bet preflop hand, Fox check-raised when he flopped two pair. Petrangelo saw a turn card that gave him a larger two pair and all of the chips went into the middle on the river. Fox's hope for a second bracelet to start the 2018 WSOP came to an end, and Petrangelo's rail burst into cheers.

Nick Petrangelo - Elio Fox Heads Up
Nick Petrangelo - Elio Fox Heads Up

That wraps up the PokerNews coverage for another bracelet event at the 2018 WSOP but continue to follow along for all of the live updates throughout the series.

Tags: Adrian MateosAlex FoxenAndreas EilerAntonio EsfandiariBryn KenneyChris MooreDaniel NegreanuElio FoxErik SeidelFedor HolzJake SchindlerJason KoonPaul VolpeRyan RiessStephen ChidwickTom Marchese

Elio Fox Eliminated in 2nd Place ($1,798,658)

Niveau 23 : 150,000/300,000, 300,000 ante
Elio Fox
Elio Fox

Hand #96: Nick Petrangelo raised to 600,000 and Elio Fox three-bet to 900,000. Petrangelo four-bet to 1,800,000, receiving a call. The flop came {2-Clubs}{a-Spades}{a-Hearts} and Fox checked to Petrangelo who bet 1,200,000. Fox check-raised to 3,000,000 and Petrangelo called.

The turn was the {8-Diamonds} and Fox checked to Petrangelo who bet 4,000,000. Fox called.

The river was the {3-Clubs}. Fox checked, Petrangelo moved all in, and Fox called.

Fox showed {2-Diamonds}{5-Clubs} for two pair, aces and deuces, but Petrangelo had him beat with {q-Clubs}{8-Spades} for aces and queens and Fox was eliminated in second place.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Nick Petrangelo us
Nick Petrangelo
WSOP 2X Winner
52,500,000 20,400,000
Elio Fox us
Elio Fox
WSOP 2X Winner
Eliminé

Tags: Elio FoxNick Petrangelo

Hand #95: Petrangelo Doubles Back into Chip Lead

Niveau 23 : 150,000/300,000, 300,000 ante
Nick Petrangelo
Nick Petrangelo

Hand #95: Elio Fox raised to 600,000 and Nick Petrangelo three-bet to 900,000. Fox four-bet to 1,800,000 and Petrangelo five-bet all in for 15,900,000. Fox called.

Elio Fox: {5-Diamonds}{5-Hearts}
Nick Petrangelo: {j-Diamonds}{3-Diamonds}

The board ran out {6-Diamonds}{q-Hearts}{j-Hearts}{3-Hearts}{8-Spades} with Petrangelo's flopped pair good enough to take down the pot and a double-up.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Nick Petrangelo us
Nick Petrangelo
WSOP 2X Winner
32,100,000 12,200,000
Elio Fox us
Elio Fox
WSOP 2X Winner
20,500,000 -12,100,000

Tags: Elio FoxNick Petrangelo

Aymon Hata Eliminated in 3rd Place ($1,247,230)

Niveau 22 : 120,000/240,000, 240,000 ante
Aymon Hata
Aymon Hata

Hand #79: Aymon Hata raised to 550,000 on the button and Nick Petrangelo called from the big blind. The flop came {k-Clubs}{8-Clubs}{5-Diamonds} and both players checked to the {6-Spades} on the turn.

Petrangelo announced a bet of 1,900,000 and Hata called to see the {9-Spades} on the river. Petrangelo slid in a bet of 15 million, more than enough to cover Hata's remaining 5,350,000 chips. Hata thought for a minute and then made the call with his tournament life on the line. Petrangelo turned over {k-Diamonds}{7-Diamonds} for a straight while Hata could only muster {k-Hearts}{3-Hearts} for top pair.

The two remaining players will now take a short break while tournament staff prepares for heads-up action.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Nick Petrangelo us
Nick Petrangelo
WSOP 2X Winner
39,700,000 7,800,000
Elio Fox us
Elio Fox
WSOP 2X Winner
12,800,000
Aymon Hata gb
Aymon Hata
Eliminé

Tags: Aymon HataNick Petrangelo

Andreas Eiler Eliminated in 4th Place ($886,793)

Niveau 22 : 120,000/240,000, 240,000 ante
Andreas Eiler
Andreas Eiler

Hand #78: Nick Petrangelo raised to 500,000 and Andreas Eiler defended his big blind. Eilier checked to Petrangelo who bet 400,000 on a {j-Spades}{j-Clubs}{6-Spades} flop. Eiler check-raised to 1,300,00. Petrangelo called and the pair went heads-up to a turn, which was the {4-Clubs}.

Eiler bet 2,200,000 and Petrangelo called. The river was the {7-Hearts}. Eiler checked and Petrangelo moved all in and Eiler called.

Nick Petrangelo: {6-Diamonds}{6-Clubs} — full house; sixes full of jacks
Andreas Eiler: {k-Spades}{j-Hearts} — trip jacks

The German had run into the full house of Petrangelo and was eliminated in fifth place for $886,793. The remaining three players have all locked up at least seven figures, with the next payout worth $1,247,230.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Nick Petrangelo us
Nick Petrangelo
WSOP 2X Winner
31,900,000 12,500,000
Andreas Eiler de
Andreas Eiler
Eliminé

Tags: Andreas EilerNick Petrangelo

Bryn Kenney Eliminated in 5th Place ($646,927)

Niveau 22 : 120,000/240,000, 240,000 ante
Bryn Kenney
Bryn Kenney

Hand #71: Elio Fox raised to 500,000 from the cutoff and Bryn Kenney moved all in from the big blind for 2,160,000. Fox called.

Elio Fox: {k-Hearts}{j-Clubs}
Bryn Kenney: {4-Clubs}{4-Hearts}

Kenney would have to win the flip to stay alive in the $100,000 High Roller, and the flop came {8-Hearts}{q-Hearts}{8-Clubs}. The turn was the {9-Diamonds}, but the river was the {k-Clubs}, meaning Kenney was eliminated in fifth place.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Elio Fox us
Elio Fox
WSOP 2X Winner
13,600,000 2,500,000
Bryn Kenney us
Bryn Kenney
WSOP 1X Winner
Eliminé

Tags: Bryn KenneyElio Fox

Stephen Chidwick Eliminated in 6th Place ($484,551)

Niveau 22 : 120,000/240,000, 240,000 ante

Hand #65: Stephen Chidwick raised to 2,000,000 on the button, leaving himself just 400,000 behind. Aymon Hata three-bet all in for 7,550,000 from the small blind and Chidwick called off his last 400,000 chips.

Stephen Chidwick: {q-Spades}{6-Spades}
Aymon Hata: {a-Spades}{q-Clubs}

Chidwick was the all in player and there was no help for him on the {j-Hearts}{3-Diamonds}{7-Clubs} flop. The turn was the {6-Diamonds} giving Chidwick a pair. The river was the {a-Diamonds}, meaning Hata got there on the river to eliminate Chidwick in sixth place.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Aymon Hata gb
Aymon Hata
10,300,000 2,400,000
Stephen Chidwick gb
Stephen Chidwick
WSOP 1X Winner
Eliminé

Tags: Aymon HataStephen Chidwick

Who Will Take Home the $100,000 High Roller Bracelet?

A gold WSOP bracelet just like this one is up for grabs
A gold WSOP bracelet just like this one is up for grabs

If you take a look at the chip counts heading into the final day of Event #5: $100,000 High Roller, you can't help but notice that the top three players hold bracelets, while the other three are yet to win one of poker's most coveted wristpieces. However, it was American novelist Tom Robbins who once said, "Don't confuse symmetry with balance."

Balanced, this table is not. It is full of some of the top poker players in the world and as chip leader Nick Petrangelo said yesterday, they are each familiar with one another from long hours playing in some of the poker world's toughest fields. Any one of them could walk away with the top prize of $2,910,227 at the end of today's play, so stay tuned to PokerNews to find out who it will be!

Cards will be in the air at 2 p.m., and the action will be streamed on an hour delay on PokerGO.

SeatNameCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Andreas EilerGermany8,490,00042
2Bryn KenneyUnited States10,200,00051
3Nick PetrangeloUnited States12,200,00061
4Elio FoxUnited States8,620,00043
5Stephen ChidwickUnited Kingdom5,740,00029
6Aymon HataUnited Kingdom7,280,00036

Seat 1 - Andreas Eiler, Germany (8,490,000)

Andreas Eiler
Andreas Eiler

Andreas Eiler is one of only two Germans left at the $100,000 High Roller final table (alongside Aymon Hata), the odds of which might have been pretty long at the start of the tournament considering his nation's poker pedigree. However, that's not to disparage Eiler's poker resume, not least considering his last recorded cash was a €700,000 ($857,980) score after takign down the €25,000 Super High Roller at partypoker Barcelona.

Eiler has come within a whisker of taking home a WSOP gold bracelet, finishing runner-up to Dominik Nitsche in last year's WSOPE €111,111 High Roller for One Drop for €2,155,418 ($2,511,762). This may be only Eiler's third WSOP cash (his first came in the 2013 WSOP) but after missing out by the narrowest of margins in Rozvadov, he'll be out for revenge should he get to heads-up in this one.

Bracelets0
WSOP cashes3
WSOP earnings$2,521,520
Total live earnings$4,240,165
Joueur Jetons Progression
Andreas Eiler de
Andreas Eiler
8,490,000

Tags: Andreas Eiler

Seat 2 - Bryn Kenney, United States (10,200,000)

Bryn Kenney
Bryn Kenney

Should Bryn Kenney take down the $100,000 High Roller, he'll move into sixth place on the All Time Money List, surpassing Phil Ivey and Fedor Holz. Whatever list it is, you know you're doing well when it's the likes of those guys you're overtaking!

With over $24m in lifetime cashes, Kenney could become the eighth player to reach $25m in life time earnings, and the omens look good. He has a wealth of experience in $/€100,000 buy-in tournaments, winning two of them for a combined score of over $3.5m. A win here would be his biggest score to date.

Bracelets1
WSOP cashes39
WSOP earnings$2,078,123
Total live earnings$24,263,833
Joueur Jetons Progression
Bryn Kenney us
Bryn Kenney
WSOP 1X Winner
10,200,000

Tags: Bryn Kenney