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

2017 World Series of Poker

Event #73: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em MAIN EVENT - World Championship
Jours 1c
Event Info

2017 World Series of Poker

Résultats
Gagnant
Main Gagnante
a2
Prix
$8,150,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$67,877,400
Entrants
7,221
Info Niveau
Niveau
43
Blinds
1,500,000 / 3,000,000
Ante
500,000

Un Jour 1C massif ! Jérôme Brion au sommet

Niveau 5 : 250/500, 75 ante
Jerome Brion
Jerome Brion

Le Main Event des World Series Of Poker 2017 est le troisième plus important de l'histoire du festival derrière celui de 2006 remporté par Jamie Gold (8773 entrants) et celui de 2010 gagné par Jonathan Duhamel (7319) !

Le Jour 1a et le Jour 1B, plus fréquentés que ceux des dernières années, avaient indiqué la tendance et ce sont finalement 4262 joueurs qui ont déboursé 10 000$, dans la nuit de lundi à mardi, pour porter l'affluence 2017 à 7221 joueurs ! Les joueurs ont généré un prizepool monstrueux de 67,8 millions et le prochain champion du monde repartira avec 8 150 000 dollars.

1084 joueurs repartiront avec au moins 15 000$ et les 9 derniers survivants du plateau encaisseront au moins 1 million !

Le coverage complet du Main Event 2017

Le détail des affluences des 10 dernières années

 Day 1aDay 1bDay 1cDay 1dTotalPrizepool
20081,2971,1581,9282,4616,844$64,333,600
20091,1168731,6962,8096,494$61,043,600
20101,1251,4892,3142,3917,319$68,798,600
20118979852,1812,8026,865$64,531,000
20121,0662,1143,418-6,598$62,021,200
20139431,9423,467-6,352$59,708,800
20147712,1443,768-6,683$62,820,200
20157411,7163,963-6,420$60,348,000
20167641,7334,240-6,737$63,327,800
20177952,1644,262-7,221$67,877,400

"C'est incroyable. 7221 joueurs, énorme field, énorme prizepool, une tonne de gens qui vont repartir avec de l'argent, plein de gens qui vont gagner beaucoup d'argent [...] C'est un tournoi spécial, qu'il y ait 100 ou 10 000 joueurs, c'est le tournoi le plus spécial de la planète. Plus de 8 millions à la gagne ça change la vie mais faire partie d'un club de 48 vainqueurs, enfin un peu moins avec ceux qui ont gagné plusieurs fois, c'est savoir que vous serez immortalisé pour l'éternité, c'est un accomplissement en soi même que de gagner ce tournoi", a indiqué Jack Effel. "Il y a tellement d'énergie qui se dégage, c'est tellement de fun aussi. Il faut tellement d'attention, de patience et une endurance physique et mentale... je ne suis pas sur que l'argent entre tellement en compte avant d'avoir triomphé. C'est magique, c'est un feeling, chaque année on le sent, les gens sont excités, j'ai hâte de voir qui va l'emporter", a poursuivi le directeur du tournoi qui avait bien noté que le "Rio était plein tout l'été".

Avant de gagner, il fallait déjà passer l'obstacle du Jour 1C et de ses 5 niveaux de 120 minutes. Absent des débats, Phil Ivey n'aura donc pas participé à cette édition 2017 des WSOP.

Les anciens champions ont eux relevé le défi. Vainqueur en 1987 et 1988, Johnny Chan a plus que doublé pour finir avec 120 000 jetons. Belle entame aussi pour Scotty Nguyen (1998) qui finit avec 108 400 pions. Arrivé en late-reg, Phil Hellmuth a emballé 87 400 alors que le champion du monde 2009 Joe Cada a terminé avec 63 000. Chris Ferguson aura lui 56 000 jetons à l'entame du Jour 2.

Les vainqueurs Ryan Riess (2013) et Joe McKeehen (2015) étaient encore en lice à une heure de la fin du Jour 1C, il faudra attendre quelques heures pour savoir s'ils ont rejoint les 5 cités précédemment.

Jason Mann (236 000) et la future maman Natasha Mercier (218 000) ont bien débuté aussi... mais moins que Jérôme Brion. Le Français a très probablement terminé le Jour 1C en tête en ensachant 248 000 jetons. Tyson Mao (242,800), Michael Pedley (240,900), Rudy Sawa (238,600) et Carl Carodenuto (237,800) complètent un Top 5 qui n'est pas encore officiel vu l'affluence énorme.

Nick Maimone (213,000), Andre Akkari (189,900), Brandon Shack-Harris (160,000), John Monnette (123,800), Brian Rast (126,900), Daniel Negreanu (26,000) et Jason Mercier (26 000) ont passé l'obstacle au contraire de Mark Newhouse, John Juanda, Ron Ware, John Duthie, Johnny Lodden, Dan Heimiller, Bill Klein, John Racener, Ari Engel ou encore Russell Thomas.

Au moins une cinquantaine de Français ont passé le Jour 1C pour rejoindre la cinquantaine de tricolores déjà qualifiés pour le Jour 2. Outre le chipleader Jérôme Brion, Victor Choupeaux, Jeremie Sarda, Romain Nardin, Giuseppe Zarbo, Sébastien Comel et [Removed:13] ont doublé lors du Jour 1 pour emballer au moins 100 000 jetons.

Ben Pollak, Jeremy Saderne, Benjamin Ane, Estelle Denis, Fabien Perrot, Jacques Gueni, Sulaiman Sesay, Jonathan Therme, David Benyamine, Victor Saumont (après une journée passée avec Negreanu et Mercier et un passage en table TV), Remy Biechel, Raymond Domenech, Pierre Husson, Jean Montury, Maxime Chilaud, Thi Xoa Nguyen, Adrien Delmas, Jean Fabre, Alexandre Reard ou encore Guillaume Dupuy et Timothée Marlin poursuivent aussi leur route !

Ca passe aussi avec un micro tapis pour Philippe Ktorza et Bertrand Grospellier mais le Jour 2 débute sur 300-600 (100), un comeback est toujours possible avec leurs 10 blindes !

Le Main Event se poursuit en direct sur PokerNews dans la nuit de mardi à mercredi avec le Jour 2A qui concerne les 2219 survivants du Jour 1A et du Jour 1B à partir de 20 heures...

Chipcount

(chipcount officiel dès que possible)

Tags: Adam LevyAndre AkkariAri EngelBrian RastCarl CarodenutoChris FergusonDaniel NegreanuEric BaldwinJack EffelJason MannJason MercierJoe CadaJohn DuthieJohn JuandaJohn MonnetteJohn RacenerJohnny ChanJohnny LoddenLaurence GrondinMark NewhouseNick MaimonePhil HellmuthPhil IveyScotty Nguyen

Joe Cada; Day 1C Chip Leader Twice?

Niveau 5 : 250/500, 75 ante
Joe Cada
Joe Cada

"I was chip leader on Day 1C," explained Joe Cada, recounting his triumph back in 2009. "I bagged 187,000, and the next day I bagged exactly 1,000 chips less!

"But that was with only a 30,000 starting stack."

"This guy misread his hand in level two that year, and he even thought that he won the hand when he turned his hand over!"

Cada currently sits just under starting stack, and will really have to go on a run of cards to get close to the chip lead.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Joe Cada us
Joe Cada
Main Event Champion
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 4X Winner
47,000 -3,000

Tags: Joe Cada

$8,150,000 Awaits the Winner in the Third Biggest Main Event Ever

Niveau 5 : 250/500, 75 ante
2017 WSOP Main Event Bracelet
2017 WSOP Main Event Bracelet

Day 1c of the 2017 World Series of Poker Main Event has attracted 4,262 players, the largest in recent history. Together with the 795 that came to the Rio All Suite Hotel and Casino for Day 1a and the 2,164 that played yesterday on Day 1b, that makes for 7,221 total players. With that, the 2017 edition of the Main Event is officially the third biggest Main Event in the history of the WSOP. The event only attracted bigger fields in 2006 (Jamie Gold beat a field of 8,773) and 2010 (Jonathan Duhamel beat a field of 7,319).

With the numbers now official, the payouts have been confirmed as well. The winner of the 2017 World Series of Poker Main Event takes home $8,150,000. All nine finalists are guaranteed to make $1,000,000, and a total of 1,084 players get in the money. The min-cash is, again, $15,000. A complete breakdown of the payout:

PositionPrizePOY Points
1st$8,150,000433.2
2nd$4,700,000360.6
3rd$3,500,000326.8
4th$2,600,000296.0
5th$2,000,000271.2
6th$1,675,000255.7
7th$1,425,000242.3
8th$1,200,000228.8
9th$1,000,000215.3
10th$825,001201.9
11th$675,000188.9
12th-13th$535,000174.8
14th-15th$450,000165.0
16th-18th$340,000150.3
19th-27th$263,532138.0
28th-36th$214,913129.0
37th-45th$176,399120.7
46th-54th$145,733113.3
55th-63rd$121,188106.5
64th-72nd$101,444100.4
73rd-81st$85,48294.8
82nd-90th$72,51489.8
91st-99th$61,92985.2
100th-162nd$53,24781.0
163rd-225th$46,09677.2
226th-288th$40,18173.7
289th-351st$35,26770.6
352nd-414th$31,17067.8
415th-477th$27,74365.2
478th-540th$24,86762.8
541st-603rd$22,44960.7
604th-666th$20,41158.8
667th-765th$18,69357.1
766th-864th$17,24355.6
865th-963rd$16,02454.3
964th-1084th$15,00053.1

Here's a breakdown of the numbers in recent years:

 Day 1aDay 1bDay 1cDay 1dTotalPrize Pool
20081,2971,1581,9282,4616,844$64,333,600
20091,1168731,6962,8096,494$61,043,600
20101,1251,4892,3142,3917,319$68,798,600
20118979852,1812,8026,865$64,531,000
20121,0662,1143,418-6,598$62,021,200
20139431,9423,467-6,352$59,708,800
20147712,1443,768-6,683$62,820,200
20157411,7163,963-6,420$60,348,000
20167641,7334,240-6,737$63,327,800
20177952,1644,262-7,221$67,877,400

Phil Hellmuth Flops it vs. Michael Mizrachi

Niveau 5 : 250/500, 75 ante
Phil Hellmuth_ Mike Mizrachi
Phil Hellmuth_ Mike Mizrachi

There was an open to 1,100, and Michael Mizrachi called on the button. Action was on Phil Hellmuth in the small blind, and he wasn’t going to put any chips into the pot without making a little speech.

Hellmuth said to the raiser that he was thinking of raising it up, as it had been working out pretty well for him so far, but would just call this time

Three players saw the flop come {j-Clubs}{8-Hearts}{3-Spades}. Action checked to Mizrachi, who bet 2,500. Hellmuth called, and the original raiser folded to make it a heads-up pot. The turn card was the {a-Spades}, and Hellmuth checked. A bet of 5,000 from Mizrachi saw Hellmuth break out a check-raise to 15,000. Mizrachi mulled it over and called. The river was the {q-Diamonds} and both players checked.

Hellmuth showed {j-Hearts}{j-Spades} for flopped set.

Mizrachi gave Hellmuth a look at his cards, and they were then retrieved from the muck by the dealer after the “show one, show all” rule was invoked by another player.

Mizrachi had {j-Diamonds}{8-Clubs} for a flopped two pair, and Hellmuth was left wondering at some lost value on a missed flop raise.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Phil Hellmuth us
Phil Hellmuth
Main Event Champion
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 17X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
110,000 46,000
Michael Mizrachi us
Michael Mizrachi
WSOP 5X Winner
85,000 23,000

Tags: Michael MizrachiPhil Hellmuth

Snow Shoveling Chips in the Miranda Room

Niveau 4 : 200/400, 50 ante
Alan Snow
Alan Snow

Alan Snow has been having a fantastic day on the felt. "I've been running great," said Snow when we caught up with him at the table. "Straights, sets, nut flushes," he went on to say about the hands with which he's dragged pots.

In the most recent pot that scaled him up to the top of the leaderboard, Snow started with pocket sixes. Five players went to a {6-}{j-}{k-} flop with two spades. Snow bet 5,000 and called a raise to 15,000. Just Snow and one opponent saw the {6-} hit on the turn, and Snow just called a bet of 20,000. The river blanked, and Snow bet 25,000, almost covering the remainder of his opponent's stack.

The call came, Snow showed his quad sixes, and his opponent mucked.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Alan Snow us
Alan Snow
225,000

Tags: Alan Snow

“Royal Versus Quads” Laurence Grondin Claims the Crown

Niveau 3 : 150/300, 25 ante
Eric Baldwin
Eric Baldwin

Eric Baldwin opened from under the gun and picked up three callers including Laurence Grondin in the big blind.

The flop was {10-Diamonds}{2-Spades}{k-Diamonds} and Grondin led out, picking up just one caller in Baldwin.

The turn was the {q-Diamonds} and Grondin bet again and Baldwin called once more.

The river was the {2-Clubs} and a bet from Grondin saw a raise from Baldwin and then Grondin moved all in.

Baldwin was given pause for thought. He had more chips than Grondin , but if he called and lost, he would be left a lot shorter than the start of the hand.

In the end, Baldwin felt he could not fold and he called, That’s when the cards were turned over and the table, apart from the two players involved, went nuts.

Grondin : {a-Diamonds}{j-Diamonds}
Baldwin: {2-Hearts}{2-Diamonds}

“Royal versus quads,” the cry went up as players and cameramen and reporters rushed over to witness and record the hand.

Grondin and Baldwin looked stunned, but it was Grondin who went to the dinner break the victor in this rarest of rare poker hand outcomes.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Laurence Grondin ca
Laurence Grondin
96,000 96,000
Eric Baldwin us
Eric Baldwin
WSOP 2X Winner
21,200 -28,800

Tags: Eric BaldwinLaurence Grondin

Saumont Makes Great Laydown Against Mercier

Niveau 3 : 150/300, 25 ante
Jason Mercier
Jason Mercier

Jason Mercier opened to 750 from under the gun with {j-Hearts}{j-Diamonds} and Victor Saumont flatted with {k-Diamonds}{k-Clubs} from mid-position and the player in the big blind also called.

The flop came {4-Clubs}{j-Clubs}{10-Spades} and Mercier bet 1,100, getting a call from Saumont.

The turn was the {4-Hearts} and Mercier checked. Saumont bet 2,200 and Mercier raised to 6,100. Saumont called.

The river was {3-Hearts} and Mercier bet 15,800, sending Saumont deep into the tank. After a few minutes, Saumont slid his cards towards the muck.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Victor Saumont fr
Victor Saumont
51,475 51,475
Jason Mercier us
Jason Mercier
WSOP 6X Winner
48,125 7,475

Tags: Jason MercierVictor Saumont

Negreanu Takes Mercier to Value Town

Niveau 3 : 150/300, 25 ante
Daniel Negreanu
Daniel Negreanu

Jason Mercier opened to 750 with {10-Diamonds}{10-Clubs} and Daniel Negreanu three-bet to 2,200 holding {a-Diamonds}{k-Spades}. The flop was {3-Diamonds}{2-Diamonds}{8-Clubs}, Negreanu continued with a bet of 2,200, and Mercier called.

The turn came {k-Hearts} and Negreanu bet 3,500. Mercier check-called. The {8-Hearts} fell on the river and Negreanu bet 6,000. Mercier thought briefly before calling and mucked when Negreanu tabled a better pair.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Daniel Negreanu ca
Daniel Negreanu
WSOP 6X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
57,425 14,425
Jason Mercier us
Jason Mercier
WSOP 6X Winner
40,650 -11,450

Tags: Daniel NegreanuJason Mercier

John Smith Loses to Quad Aces

Niveau 3 : 150/300, 25 ante
John Smith
John Smith

It's been a tough day for John Smith, but he's still battling in the Day 1c field of the Main Event.

In this hand, he opened to 700 from early position and was three-bet by Wyatt Ault to 1,400. Smith called and the flop came {a-Hearts}{a-Clubs}{k-Spades}.

Both players checked. The turn was the {6-Clubs} and both players checked again.

The river was the {5-Clubs} and Smith bet 1,000. Ault immediately raised to 5,000 and, after some consideration, Smith called.

Ault showed {a-Spades}{a-Diamonds} for quad aces and won the pot.

"Can't beat that!" said Smith, mucking.

"It's hard to play that one," replied Ault with a smile.

Smith still has an above starting stack midway through Level 3.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Wyatt Ault us
Wyatt Ault
60,000 60,000
John Smith us
John Smith
54,000 -6,000

Tags: John SmithWyatt Ault

Another Pot for Barstool Nate

Niveau 2 : 150/300, 0 ante
Barstool Nate
Barstool Nate

Eric Nathan (a.k.a. Barstool Nate) raised to 750 from early position and got two callers including mixed-games pro Adam Owen.

The flop came {2-Clubs}{k-Diamonds}{3-Spades}. Nathan bet 800 on a flop of {2-Clubs}{k-Diamonds}{3-Spades} and Owen was the only caller.

The turn was the {5-Hearts} and Nathan bet again for 1,300. Owen called.

The river was the {5-Spades} and Nathan bet a third time for 2,000. Owen called and was shown {j-Spades}{j-Diamonds} for two pair, jacks and fives, and Nathan took down the pot.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Eric Nathan us
Eric Nathan
125,000 20,000
Adam Owen gb
Adam Owen
26,500

Tags: Adam OwenEric Nathan