Author: inspector

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the London Triton: Barbero, Yan, the Turbo, the Luxon Pay ….

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the Lond...

The Super High Rollers festival has turned London upside down. What a torrent of news from the London capital about the Triton Poker Series.

We must open with Event #7 200k $ 8-Max and the final table that Juan Pardo, our only representative in the tournament, managed to reach.

It goes without saying that the registration of the tournament had not yet closed, so the first thing to emphasize is that the growth of the field to 83 entries made available to the 13 players who had room in prizes more than $ 16,000,000 to be distributed, and that was noticeable in how tense and challenging the bubble was in this tournament.

In other events, the heads-up phase had been resolved relatively quickly, but with a $325,000,000 min-cash within reach, the all-ins didn’t come out so easily. Juan Pardo approached the prizes from relative safety valued at 22bb, but the unusual ranges applied in this case ended up getting him into trouble.

Daniel Dvoress and Cristoph Vogelsang had the target on their backs for a long time, but both found a hand before they were blinded out and stayed in play while others lost capital waiting for their defenestration. The last blind raise before prizes left Malaka with 11bb and Mikita Badziakouski in an even more delicate situation. The Belarusian had 77 on the button and went for the blind of Espen Jorstad, who was waiting for him with AK. The former Main Event champion won the flip and certified Juan’s second cash of the festival.

As torturous as the prize bubble was, it turned into placidity for the FT bubble. In addition to improving his own stack as much as possible in the immediate aftermath of the bubble, the Spaniard was grateful for the cooperation of his opponents when the deck once again denied him something playable.

Vogelsang and Dvoress finally accepted their fate, Sam Grafton abandoned his precautions and Seth Gottlieb happily paid with fifth pair on the river trying to put Nacho Barbero in his place to stay with pipes. The pair of Seths, Gottlieb and Davies, ended up all-in at the same time at different tables and left their seats empty.

With all this, John, who still hadn’t seen a decent hand, found himself sitting for the final table photo and $600,000 secured.

There was no more gum to stretch, andbetween David Yan and Nacho Barbero, who had led the last two tables during heads-up play and the FT bubble, Malaka decided to stand up to the Asian. With a K6 dominated by KT, Pardo resigned himself to appear in eighth place in the final standings.

David Yan and Nacho Barbero reached the last stage of the game with another partner, Espen Jorstad, and together they found an agreement to limit the variance and split half of the tournament purse. This is undoubtedly the year of Barbero, who despite losing to Yan in the HU, had secured the biggest payout of all during the negotiations($3,446,807).

The barbaric amount of money that ended up at stake in Event #7 is going to pale before what is expected in the Luxon Pay Invitational, which is going to be the biggest of all those held to date, by far.

With just a few hours to go, the list of participants already contains 93 names, which at $250,000 an entry and without waiting for re-buys puts a purse north of $23M in conversation.

Adrian Mateos appears on the starting grid, sitting at a super-attractive table that should pit him against Badziakouski, Steve O’Dwyer, Andrew Robl, Patrik Antonius, Espen Jorstad, Ben Heath and the Swede Robert Flink, the mythical “gulkines” of the nosebleed tables era.

As a cherry on top, players who didn’t have their afternoon occupied with Event #7 or preparing for the Luxon Pay Invitational were able to sign up for a $30k buy-in turbo tournament.

It staged the first Brazilian HU in Triton Series history. Pedro Garagnani and Bruno Volkmann shared the first two prizes, with the former winning.

The only thing left to do was to wait for lunchtime and prepare for an after-dinner chat with the Triton streaming channels on the screen, in the hope that Adrian’s table would get some attention. In reality, any of the tables where the professional players will be confined during the first eight levels is very worthwhile.

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the Lond...

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the London Triton: Barbero, Yan, the Turbo, the Luxon Pay ….

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the Lond...

The Super High Rollers festival has turned London upside down. What a torrent of news from the London capital about the Triton Poker Series.

We must open with Event #7 200k $ 8-Max and the final table that Juan Pardo, our only representative in the tournament, managed to reach.

It goes without saying that the registration of the tournament had not yet closed, so the first thing to emphasize is that the growth of the field to 83 entries made available to the 13 players who had room in prizes more than $ 16,000,000 to be distributed, and that was noticeable in how tense and challenging the bubble was in this tournament.

In other events, the heads-up phase had been resolved relatively quickly, but with a $325,000,000 min-cash within reach, the all-ins didn’t come out so easily. Juan Pardo approached the prizes from relative safety valued at 22bb, but the unusual ranges applied in this case ended up getting him into trouble.

Daniel Dvoress and Cristoph Vogelsang had the target on their backs for a long time, but both found a hand before they were blinded out and stayed in play while others lost capital waiting for their defenestration. The last blind raise before prizes left Malaka with 11bb and Mikita Badziakouski in an even more delicate situation. The Belarusian had 77 on the button and went for the blind of Espen Jorstad, who was waiting for him with AK. The former Main Event champion won the flip and certified Juan’s second cash of the festival.

As torturous as the prize bubble was, it turned into placidity for the FT bubble. In addition to improving his own stack as much as possible in the immediate aftermath of the bubble, the Spaniard was grateful for the cooperation of his opponents when the deck once again denied him something playable.

Vogelsang and Dvoress finally accepted their fate, Sam Grafton abandoned his precautions and Seth Gottlieb happily paid with fifth pair on the river trying to put Nacho Barbero in his place to stay with pipes. The pair of Seths, Gottlieb and Davies, ended up all-in at the same time at different tables and left their seats empty.

With all this, John, who still hadn’t seen a decent hand, found himself sitting for the final table photo and $600,000 secured.

There was no more gum to stretch, andbetween David Yan and Nacho Barbero, who had led the last two tables during heads-up play and the FT bubble, Malaka decided to stand up to the Asian. With a K6 dominated by KT, Pardo resigned himself to appear in eighth place in the final standings.

David Yan and Nacho Barbero reached the last stage of the game with another partner, Espen Jorstad, and together they found an agreement to limit the variance and split half of the tournament purse. This is undoubtedly the year of Barbero, who despite losing to Yan in the HU, had secured the biggest payout of all during the negotiations($3,446,807).

The barbaric amount of money that ended up at stake in Event #7 is going to pale before what is expected in the Luxon Pay Invitational, which is going to be the biggest of all those held to date, by far.

With just a few hours to go, the list of participants already contains 93 names, which at $250,000 an entry and without waiting for re-buys puts a purse north of $23M in conversation.

Adrian Mateos appears on the starting grid, sitting at a super-attractive table that should pit him against Badziakouski, Steve O’Dwyer, Andrew Robl, Patrik Antonius, Espen Jorstad, Ben Heath and the Swede Robert Flink, the mythical “gulkines” of the nosebleed tables era.

As a cherry on top, players who didn’t have their afternoon occupied with Event #7 or preparing for the Luxon Pay Invitational were able to sign up for a $30k buy-in turbo tournament.

It staged the first Brazilian HU in Triton Series history. Pedro Garagnani and Bruno Volkmann shared the first two prizes, with the former winning.

The only thing left to do was to wait for lunchtime and prepare for an after-dinner chat with the Triton streaming channels on the screen, in the hope that Adrian’s table would get some attention. In reality, any of the tables where the professional players will be confined during the first eight levels is very worthwhile.

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the Lond...

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the London Triton: Barbero, Yan, the Turbo, the Luxon Pay ….

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the Lond...

The Super High Rollers festival has turned London upside down. What a torrent of news from the London capital about the Triton Poker Series.

We must open with Event #7 200k $ 8-Max and the final table that Juan Pardo, our only representative in the tournament, managed to reach.

It goes without saying that the registration of the tournament had not yet closed, so the first thing to emphasize is that the growth of the field to 83 entries made available to the 13 players who had room in prizes more than $ 16,000,000 to be distributed, and that was noticeable in how tense and challenging the bubble was in this tournament.

In other events, the heads-up phase had been resolved relatively quickly, but with a $325,000,000 min-cash within reach, the all-ins didn’t come out so easily. Juan Pardo approached the prizes from relative safety valued at 22bb, but the unusual ranges applied in this case ended up getting him into trouble.

Daniel Dvoress and Cristoph Vogelsang had the target on their backs for a long time, but both found a hand before they were blinded out and stayed in play while others lost capital waiting for their defenestration. The last blind raise before prizes left Malaka with 11bb and Mikita Badziakouski in an even more delicate situation. The Belarusian had 77 on the button and went for the blind of Espen Jorstad, who was waiting for him with AK. The former Main Event champion won the flip and certified Juan’s second cash of the festival.

As torturous as the prize bubble was, it turned into placidity for the FT bubble. In addition to improving his own stack as much as possible in the immediate aftermath of the bubble, the Spaniard was grateful for the cooperation of his opponents when the deck once again denied him something playable.

Vogelsang and Dvoress finally accepted their fate, Sam Grafton abandoned his precautions and Seth Gottlieb happily paid with fifth pair on the river trying to put Nacho Barbero in his place to stay with pipes. The pair of Seths, Gottlieb and Davies, ended up all-in at the same time at different tables and left their seats empty.

With all this, John, who still hadn’t seen a decent hand, found himself sitting for the final table photo and $600,000 secured.

There was no more gum to stretch, andbetween David Yan and Nacho Barbero, who had led the last two tables during heads-up play and the FT bubble, Malaka decided to stand up to the Asian. With a K6 dominated by KT, Pardo resigned himself to appear in eighth place in the final standings.

David Yan and Nacho Barbero reached the last stage of the game with another partner, Espen Jorstad, and together they found an agreement to limit the variance and split half of the tournament purse. This is undoubtedly the year of Barbero, who despite losing to Yan in the HU, had secured the biggest payout of all during the negotiations($3,446,807).

The barbaric amount of money that ended up at stake in Event #7 is going to pale before what is expected in the Luxon Pay Invitational, which is going to be the biggest of all those held to date, by far.

With just a few hours to go, the list of participants already contains 93 names, which at $250,000 an entry and without waiting for re-buys puts a purse north of $23M in conversation.

Adrian Mateos appears on the starting grid, sitting at a super-attractive table that should pit him against Badziakouski, Steve O’Dwyer, Andrew Robl, Patrik Antonius, Espen Jorstad, Ben Heath and the Swede Robert Flink, the mythical “gulkines” of the nosebleed tables era.

As a cherry on top, players who didn’t have their afternoon occupied with Event #7 or preparing for the Luxon Pay Invitational were able to sign up for a $30k buy-in turbo tournament.

It staged the first Brazilian HU in Triton Series history. Pedro Garagnani and Bruno Volkmann shared the first two prizes, with the former winning.

The only thing left to do was to wait for lunchtime and prepare for an after-dinner chat with the Triton streaming channels on the screen, in the hope that Adrian’s table would get some attention. In reality, any of the tables where the professional players will be confined during the first eight levels is very worthwhile.

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the Lond...

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the London Triton: Barbero, Yan, the Turbo, the Luxon Pay ….

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the Lond...

The Super High Rollers festival has turned London upside down. What a torrent of news from the London capital about the Triton Poker Series.

We must open with Event #7 200k $ 8-Max and the final table that Juan Pardo, our only representative in the tournament, managed to reach.

It goes without saying that the registration of the tournament had not yet closed, so the first thing to emphasize is that the growth of the field to 83 entries made available to the 13 players who had room in prizes more than $ 16,000,000 to be distributed, and that was noticeable in how tense and challenging the bubble was in this tournament.

In other events, the heads-up phase had been resolved relatively quickly, but with a $325,000,000 min-cash within reach, the all-ins didn’t come out so easily. Juan Pardo approached the prizes from relative safety valued at 22bb, but the unusual ranges applied in this case ended up getting him into trouble.

Daniel Dvoress and Cristoph Vogelsang had the target on their backs for a long time, but both found a hand before they were blinded out and stayed in play while others lost capital waiting for their defenestration. The last blind raise before prizes left Malaka with 11bb and Mikita Badziakouski in an even more delicate situation. The Belarusian had 77 on the button and went for the blind of Espen Jorstad, who was waiting for him with AK. The former Main Event champion won the flip and certified Juan’s second cash of the festival.

As torturous as the prize bubble was, it turned into placidity for the FT bubble. In addition to improving his own stack as much as possible in the immediate aftermath of the bubble, the Spaniard was grateful for the cooperation of his opponents when the deck once again denied him something playable.

Vogelsang and Dvoress finally accepted their fate, Sam Grafton abandoned his precautions and Seth Gottlieb happily paid with fifth pair on the river trying to put Nacho Barbero in his place to stay with pipes. The pair of Seths, Gottlieb and Davies, ended up all-in at the same time at different tables and left their seats empty.

With all this, John, who still hadn’t seen a decent hand, found himself sitting for the final table photo and $600,000 secured.

There was no more gum to stretch, andbetween David Yan and Nacho Barbero, who had led the last two tables during heads-up play and the FT bubble, Malaka decided to stand up to the Asian. With a K6 dominated by KT, Pardo resigned himself to appear in eighth place in the final standings.

David Yan and Nacho Barbero reached the last stage of the game with another partner, Espen Jorstad, and together they found an agreement to limit the variance and split half of the tournament purse. This is undoubtedly the year of Barbero, who despite losing to Yan in the HU, had secured the biggest payout of all during the negotiations($3,446,807).

The barbaric amount of money that ended up at stake in Event #7 is going to pale before what is expected in the Luxon Pay Invitational, which is going to be the biggest of all those held to date, by far.

With just a few hours to go, the list of participants already contains 93 names, which at $250,000 an entry and without waiting for re-buys puts a purse north of $23M in conversation.

Adrian Mateos appears on the starting grid, sitting at a super-attractive table that should pit him against Badziakouski, Steve O’Dwyer, Andrew Robl, Patrik Antonius, Espen Jorstad, Ben Heath and the Swede Robert Flink, the mythical “gulkines” of the nosebleed tables era.

As a cherry on top, players who didn’t have their afternoon occupied with Event #7 or preparing for the Luxon Pay Invitational were able to sign up for a $30k buy-in turbo tournament.

It staged the first Brazilian HU in Triton Series history. Pedro Garagnani and Bruno Volkmann shared the first two prizes, with the former winning.

The only thing left to do was to wait for lunchtime and prepare for an after-dinner chat with the Triton streaming channels on the screen, in the hope that Adrian’s table would get some attention. In reality, any of the tables where the professional players will be confined during the first eight levels is very worthwhile.

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the Lond...

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the London Triton: Barbero, Yan, the Turbo, the Luxon Pay ….

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the Lond...

The Super High Rollers festival has turned London upside down. What a torrent of news from the London capital about the Triton Poker Series.

We must open with Event #7 200k $ 8-Max and the final table that Juan Pardo, our only representative in the tournament, managed to reach.

It goes without saying that the registration of the tournament had not yet closed, so the first thing to emphasize is that the growth of the field to 83 entries made available to the 13 players who had room in prizes more than $ 16,000,000 to be distributed, and that was noticeable in how tense and challenging the bubble was in this tournament.

In other events, the heads-up phase had been resolved relatively quickly, but with a $325,000,000 min-cash within reach, the all-ins didn’t come out so easily. Juan Pardo approached the prizes from relative safety valued at 22bb, but the unusual ranges applied in this case ended up getting him into trouble.

Daniel Dvoress and Cristoph Vogelsang had the target on their backs for a long time, but both found a hand before they were blinded out and stayed in play while others lost capital waiting for their defenestration. The last blind raise before prizes left Malaka with 11bb and Mikita Badziakouski in an even more delicate situation. The Belarusian had 77 on the button and went for the blind of Espen Jorstad, who was waiting for him with AK. The former Main Event champion won the flip and certified Juan’s second cash of the festival.

As torturous as the prize bubble was, it turned into placidity for the FT bubble. In addition to improving his own stack as much as possible in the immediate aftermath of the bubble, the Spaniard was grateful for the cooperation of his opponents when the deck once again denied him something playable.

Vogelsang and Dvoress finally accepted their fate, Sam Grafton abandoned his precautions and Seth Gottlieb happily paid with fifth pair on the river trying to put Nacho Barbero in his place to stay with pipes. The pair of Seths, Gottlieb and Davies, ended up all-in at the same time at different tables and left their seats empty.

With all this, John, who still hadn’t seen a decent hand, found himself sitting for the final table photo and $600,000 secured.

There was no more gum to stretch, andbetween David Yan and Nacho Barbero, who had led the last two tables during heads-up play and the FT bubble, Malaka decided to stand up to the Asian. With a K6 dominated by KT, Pardo resigned himself to appear in eighth place in the final standings.

David Yan and Nacho Barbero reached the last stage of the game with another partner, Espen Jorstad, and together they found an agreement to limit the variance and split half of the tournament purse. This is undoubtedly the year of Barbero, who despite losing to Yan in the HU, had secured the biggest payout of all during the negotiations($3,446,807).

The barbaric amount of money that ended up at stake in Event #7 is going to pale before what is expected in the Luxon Pay Invitational, which is going to be the biggest of all those held to date, by far.

With just a few hours to go, the list of participants already contains 93 names, which at $250,000 an entry and without waiting for re-buys puts a purse north of $23M in conversation.

Adrian Mateos appears on the starting grid, sitting at a super-attractive table that should pit him against Badziakouski, Steve O’Dwyer, Andrew Robl, Patrik Antonius, Espen Jorstad, Ben Heath and the Swede Robert Flink, the mythical “gulkines” of the nosebleed tables era.

As a cherry on top, players who didn’t have their afternoon occupied with Event #7 or preparing for the Luxon Pay Invitational were able to sign up for a $30k buy-in turbo tournament.

It staged the first Brazilian HU in Triton Series history. Pedro Garagnani and Bruno Volkmann shared the first two prizes, with the former winning.

The only thing left to do was to wait for lunchtime and prepare for an after-dinner chat with the Triton streaming channels on the screen, in the hope that Adrian’s table would get some attention. In reality, any of the tables where the professional players will be confined during the first eight levels is very worthwhile.

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the Lond...

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the London Triton: Barbero, Yan, the Turbo, the Luxon Pay ….

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the Lond...

The Super High Rollers festival has turned London upside down. What a torrent of news from the London capital about the Triton Poker Series.

We must open with Event #7 200k $ 8-Max and the final table that Juan Pardo, our only representative in the tournament, managed to reach.

It goes without saying that the registration of the tournament had not yet closed, so the first thing to emphasize is that the growth of the field to 83 entries made available to the 13 players who had room in prizes more than $ 16,000,000 to be distributed, and that was noticeable in how tense and challenging the bubble was in this tournament.

In other events, the heads-up phase had been resolved relatively quickly, but with a $325,000,000 min-cash within reach, the all-ins didn’t come out so easily. Juan Pardo approached the prizes from relative safety valued at 22bb, but the unusual ranges applied in this case ended up getting him into trouble.

Daniel Dvoress and Cristoph Vogelsang had the target on their backs for a long time, but both found a hand before they were blinded out and stayed in play while others lost capital waiting for their defenestration. The last blind raise before prizes left Malaka with 11bb and Mikita Badziakouski in an even more delicate situation. The Belarusian had 77 on the button and went for the blind of Espen Jorstad, who was waiting for him with AK. The former Main Event champion won the flip and certified Juan’s second cash of the festival.

As torturous as the prize bubble was, it turned into placidity for the FT bubble. In addition to improving his own stack as much as possible in the immediate aftermath of the bubble, the Spaniard was grateful for the cooperation of his opponents when the deck once again denied him something playable.

Vogelsang and Dvoress finally accepted their fate, Sam Grafton abandoned his precautions and Seth Gottlieb happily paid with fifth pair on the river trying to put Nacho Barbero in his place to stay with pipes. The pair of Seths, Gottlieb and Davies, ended up all-in at the same time at different tables and left their seats empty.

With all this, John, who still hadn’t seen a decent hand, found himself sitting for the final table photo and $600,000 secured.

There was no more gum to stretch, andbetween David Yan and Nacho Barbero, who had led the last two tables during heads-up play and the FT bubble, Malaka decided to stand up to the Asian. With a K6 dominated by KT, Pardo resigned himself to appear in eighth place in the final standings.

David Yan and Nacho Barbero reached the last stage of the game with another partner, Espen Jorstad, and together they found an agreement to limit the variance and split half of the tournament purse. This is undoubtedly the year of Barbero, who despite losing to Yan in the HU, had secured the biggest payout of all during the negotiations($3,446,807).

The barbaric amount of money that ended up at stake in Event #7 is going to pale before what is expected in the Luxon Pay Invitational, which is going to be the biggest of all those held to date, by far.

With just a few hours to go, the list of participants already contains 93 names, which at $250,000 an entry and without waiting for re-buys puts a purse north of $23M in conversation.

Adrian Mateos appears on the starting grid, sitting at a super-attractive table that should pit him against Badziakouski, Steve O’Dwyer, Andrew Robl, Patrik Antonius, Espen Jorstad, Ben Heath and the Swede Robert Flink, the mythical “gulkines” of the nosebleed tables era.

As a cherry on top, players who didn’t have their afternoon occupied with Event #7 or preparing for the Luxon Pay Invitational were able to sign up for a $30k buy-in turbo tournament.

It staged the first Brazilian HU in Triton Series history. Pedro Garagnani and Bruno Volkmann shared the first two prizes, with the former winning.

The only thing left to do was to wait for lunchtime and prepare for an after-dinner chat with the Triton streaming channels on the screen, in the hope that Adrian’s table would get some attention. In reality, any of the tables where the professional players will be confined during the first eight levels is very worthwhile.

600,000 for Malaka in the craziest day of the Lond...

He won the biggest poker payout of the year at the Enjoy Viña del Mar event.

He won the biggest poker payout of the year at the...

In one of those incredible nights of poker that everyone wants to have, one lucky family player won a record 1.9 at the Enjoy Casino in Viña del Mar million dollar bonus. The exciting event took place at the Draw Poker 5 tables in the early hours of last Sunday.

The absence of competitive poker at Enjoy Viña del Mar remains notable.

The mysterious winner, 38 years old, of oriental descent, decided to keep his identity a secret, using only his first name showing the initials: SCH. S.H. reportedly celebrated his birthday just two days before the stunning win.

Casino Says 1.9 The $100 million prize pool is the largest awarded this year. Sch. He made his fortune by getting the coveted rare royal flush hand, a rare combination that astounded everyone. “I still can’t believe it. You come to play to have fun, but getting one of the rarest cards and making $190 million is almost unrealistic,” S.H. said in disbelief.

Rodrigo Bórquez, General Manager of Enjoy Viña, made no secret of his excitement when commenting on this unprecedented milestone: “We are delighted to present these awards” because of the great has had a positive impact on the lives of , but it also represents a major milestone for our casino as it is the highest amount delivered in 2023. ”

While news of this incredible victory spread quickly through the media throughout Chile. Although not part of sports poker, $190 million (equivalent to approximately $246,000) is an event worth highlighting on every news broadcast. In a country where this kind of money is considered surreal, S.H.’s performance has everyone excited to learn more about the exciting world of poker.

He won the biggest poker payout of the year at the...

Delaloye leads Godzilla DeepStack Day 2

Delaloye leads Godzilla DeepStack Day 2

Godzilla DeepStack at its best. After four Day 1 events and an exciting Day 2 this Thursday, Facundo Delaloye leads 18 finalists to battle for the final table and title this Friday.

Delaloye won 1,298,000 for Delaloye after registering 261 entrants worth $120,000 and establishing a $25,995,600 pot for distribution among the top 36 players chips, thus securing his victory

Silvina Solano ) for second in chips, tied with Colo Di Girolamo.

Following behind was Silvina Solano ($1,265,000) and Matías Tagliani ($1,202,000) came in third. Francisco Araujo (1,186,000) and Gonzalo Velozo (1,030,000) are the other two with over a million chips.

day 2 of 10 levels Action-packed, Luis Cabrera walked off like a cash bubble as the prize pool opened up, losing to Silvina Solano in a pre-flop all-in ) after the last cashless person, and the last cashless person.

Oddstable.

The 18 finalists will return to Class 21 at 15.00 this Friday, blind The bets are 8,000/16,000, with an additional 16,000 antes returned to the table. While the dream of being the champion is $6,454,707, all have already earned their minimum prize of $270,354 by the 18th.

Godzilla DeepStack Finalists Facundo Delaloye – 1,298,000 Silvina Solano – 1,265,000 Matias Tagliani – 1,202,000 Francisco Araujo – 1,186,000 Gonzalo Velozo – 1,030,000 Ariel Rosanova – 939,000 Alex is Romero Hernandez – 889,000 Franco Parieri – 788,000 Diego Arta Milano – 786,000 Horacio Coglia – 605,000 Samuel Yoon – 599,000 Marcos Rodriguez Grassi – 364,000 Cristian Lopez – 354,000 Cesar Luis Gotti – 313,000 Marcelo Belleri – 266,000 Cristian Quinones – 207,000 David Molina – 207,000 Mathias Veron – 175,000

Delaloye leads Godzilla DeepStack Day 2

CAP Iguazú: High Roller defined

CAP Iguazú: High Roller defined

First Buenos Aires, then Santa Rosa in La Pampa, then Rosario , since yesterday it was Iguazu. The Argentine Poker Tour has not stopped touring the country and is now celebrating the fourth event of its 11th season, CAP Iguazú, with live coverage today – final table High Roller matches will be broadcast exclusively.

The tournament, the most expensive event of the holiday season, started yesterday with a buy-in of $410,000 for the first day and ended with Andres Dos Santos becoming the chip leader with 375,000 chips leader. Registration is open until 2 today, with a starting stack of 45,000 chips and blinds increasing every 40 minutes. When the final table is determined, broadcast will begin with Manuel Sanchez and Emanuel Marso as hosts.

The main event will also start at CAP Iguazu.

Additionally, the Main Event will start with three races (the last being Turbo) at $205,000 per ticket, running today through Sunday, and then the winner will Decided at the final table, which will also be broadcast live on our screens.

In the Main Event, players will start with 40,000 chips and face 11 50-minute levels on Day 1 (25 minutes on Day 1C Turbo), while re-entry is open to Level 8 .

Then there are fields and a very interesting tournament schedule where you also get an $80,000 buy-in startup, $85,000 Mystery Bounty , a $90,000 Progressive KO and other rewards for the famous Second Chance, this time with a $100,000 buy-in. The table is already set.

CAP Iguazú: High Roller defined

Erik Seidel Strikes Back 10-time WSOP Champion in 60 FT Event

Erik Seidel Strikes Back 10-time WSOP Champion in...

In a story-filled tiebreaker, all eyes will be on Erik Seidel in Game 60: $1,500 No-Limit 2-7 Lowball Draw. A former WSOP champion, the veteran is targeting his first live tournament title since 2007. At the end of the third day, he was second with 3,065,000 in chips and about 31 big blinds.

He joins Brad Ruben (4,265,000). If he wins, he will claim his fifth bracelet in less than two years, a feat achieved only by Jeremy Osmus. The pro’s wins will also match that of one of his rivals, star Jason Mercier (2,565,000). The former PokerStars Pro is currently third with 24 BBS.

The other two finalists never won at the WSOP. Earlier this year’s PCA Main Event winner Mike Watson (2,350,000) has already been defeated in five heads-up matches. Jon Turner (1,390,000) is now on his 15th FT. The American also has an impressive 102 ITMs.

The Financial Times airs again at 4pm (Brasilia). Check out the full prize pool:

1. $151,276

2. $93,495

3. $63,505

4. $44,002

5. $31,114

Erik Seidel Strikes Back 10-time WSOP Champion in...

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