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Somerville + Twitch + New Record = Infographic

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You might have heard that Team Pro Jason Somerville set some records last week. Actually, the chances are you watched it too.

It happened in Event #7 of WCOOP. Somerville, who plays as "jcarverpoker" on PokerStars, was broadcasting on Twitch in the usual way. His Run it UP show was already hugely popular, but now his fans were logging on in their thousands to watch him close in on a WCOOP bracelet.

As they did so those viewers - 37,434 of them - were setting a new record, making Run it UP the most viewed channel on Twitch that day. It was some achievement, which you can see for yourself on PokerStars.tv.

The other details, you can see for yourself below.


Jason Somerville - Run it UP! infographic (Twitter).jpegClick to enlarge




Stephen Bartley is a staff writer for the PokerStars Blog.




WCOOP 2015: RuiNF tops leader board (again) at halfway stage

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We're into Day 12 of WCOOP 2015. Here's the latest update with 32 of 70 events now completed.


Today's highlights:

--nafnaf_funny wins Event 30, leaving Conor "blanconegro" Drinan in second.
--RuiNF is denied a second bracelet in Event #31, by eventual winner aricontre.
--gettingpwned wins Event #32 ahead of Track, Kihara, and Kenney.


yellow_chips_17sept15.jpg


Round up of latest results

There were various stories tucked into the three most recent WCOOP events, and not just relating to the winners.

In Event #30, nanaf_funny from Russia took the first prize of more than $38,000, denying runner-up Conor "blanconegro" Drinan a first WCOOP bracelet. As Martin Harris wrote for the Blog, it was one of those events that almost took as long to say as to play, it being a five-card-Omaha-hi-lo-six-max-two-rebuys-one-add-on tournament. Read his report here.

Event #31 was a little shorter in name, it being the Super Tuesday Special Edition. Its 1,624 players combined for a prize pool exceeding $1.6 million, which was won by aricontre from the United Kingdom. But it had been a close thing for RuiNF, a WCOOP winner last week, who narrowly missed out on a second title. As Pauly McGuire reported, he finished fourth, which should be enough to send him back to the top of the WCOOP leader board.

Lastly there was Event #32, won by gettingpwned, recording his second COOP win in the FL Omaha Hi/Lo Championship. In doing so they saw off some tough opposition. Bryn Kenney would finish seventh, behind Team Online's Naoya "nkeyno" Kihara in sixth and former EPT Prague winner Julian Track in fifth. Read Jason Kirk's report here.

Here are the scores in full:

Event #30: $215 PL 5-Card Omaha H/L (6-Max, 2R1A)
Entries: 396 (340 rebuys, 215 add-ons)
Prize pool: $190,200
Places paid: 54

1. nafnaf_funny (Russia) $38,040.00
2. Connor "blanconegro" Drinan (Mexico) $28,149.60
3. lozzz (United Kingdom) $20,922.00
4. Gambler4444 (Austria) $14,455.20
5. snafer1 (Poland) $10,556.10
6. AngryJuice (Finland) $6,752.10



Event 31: $1,050 NL Hold'em (Super Tuesday SE)
Entrants: 1,624
Prize Pool: $1,624,00
Places Paid: 198

1. aricontre (United Kingdom) $272,020.00
2. luffyou15 (Canada) $198,940.00
3. bartek901 (Mexico) $150,220.00
4. Rui "RuiNF" Ferreira $110,432.00
5. WhaTisL0v3 (Malta) $79,576.00
6. TISSO1709 (Germany) $63,336.00
7. ¿¿toneecho?? (United Kingdom) $47,096.00
8. Hoegh93 (Denmark) $30,856.00
9. onel4play (Romania) $16,727.20


Event #32, $1,050 FL Omaha Hi/Lo Championship (8-max)
Entrants: 208
Prize pool: $208,000
Places paid: 32

1. gettingpwned (Germany) $36,700*
2. Maicoshaa (Russia) $37,660*
3. Ben "BensBenz" Yu (Mexico) $23,920
4. grindhardcor (United Kingdom) $17,680
5. Julian "jutrack" Track (Germany) $11,440
6. Team Online Naoya "nkeyno" Kihara (Japan) $9,360
7. Bryn "BrynKenney" Kenney (Mexico) $7,280
8. bokkie87 (Netherlands) $5,720
* denotes results of a heads-up deal


For all the WCOOP 2015 results so far, check out our aptly named WCOOP results page, which also has links to all final table reports.


Coming up today

Three more events are scheduled today, with three more set to finish

Today
Event 36: $200 NL Hold'em (1R1A) 08.00 ET
Event 37: $300 8-Game 11.00 ET
Event 38: $500 NL Hold'em (Progressive Super KO) 14.00 ET

Still to conclude
Event 33: FL Badugi Championship (13 of 113 remaining)
Note: Jason Mercier in contention for a third WCOOP bracelet.
Event 34: NL Hold'em (6-max, Optional re-entry) (30 of 2,016 remaining)
Note: Johnny Lodden returns second in chips
Event 35: PL Omaha w/Rebuys (6-max) (7 of 553 remaining)


Leader board

As alluded to earlier RuiNF's fourth place finish in Event #32 puts him back at the top of the leader board after making way for Aftret yesterday. RuiNF now has 290 points, ahead of Aftret's 240. Shaun Deeb has moved up in to fourth place while Jason "jcarverpoker" Somerville drops out of the top ten.


wcoop_leaderboard_17sept15.jpg

Find all the leader board details right here


Today's dubious fact

ReiNF is the first and only player to reach 10 cashes in WCOOP so far. Three other players, Jason Mercier, nizmo jiz and shaundeeb have nine cashes each, although Mercier looks certain to record his tenth cash later today.


Image of the day

The numbers behind Jason Somerville's record breaking Twitch appearance as he reached the final of Event #7 last week.


Jason Somerville - Run it UP! infographic_17sept15.jpegClick to enlarge


On to Day 13

WCOOP is now just about at the half way stage with Event #35 (of 70) starting later today. Find out everything there is to know about the Championship on the WCOOP homepage, and good luck to everyone playing this weekend, whether in WCOOP or other events. Send us your thoughts and comments to us on Twitter: @PokerStarsBlog.


Stephen Bartley is a staff writer for the PokerStars Blog.

WCOOP 2015: ekziter denies Adamyid to win Event 33 ($700 FL Badugi Championship)

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It was a small tournament but a talented tournament and an often-viewed tournament as it got deeper. Badugi tournaments don't generally draw the same crowd you might see in your standard, No Limit Hold'em, bet it and forget affair.

You have to intentionally register, knowing full well what you are getting yourself into. People occasionally register for the wrong NLH tournament but that doesn't happen with Badugi. This time PokerStars tweaked the WCOOP Badugi event, giving it a bigger buy-in, smaller field, same guarantee.

The $700 version this time around drew 113 players to easily top the $50,000 guarantee but people started paying attention as the tournament neared the end of the first day. There were more than a few top players in contention but most spectators were viewing for two legends.

Jason Mercier was running deep in yet another major online tournament, he has two WCOOP titles to his name and six SCOOP to go along with them. While Mercier is great, just as many were there cheering on Thor Hansen.

Hansen is a true poker legend and has been battling cancer for nearly four years. That hasn't stopped him, perhaps slowed him down at some times, but he's managed to stay a positive influence and play some damn good poker along the way. Hansen even earned himself a couple WCOOP titles after the doctors said he was "terminal".

Play was paused for the evening at the end of Level 18, shortly after the elimination of Team PokerStars' Bryan Huang, but they still weren't in the money. Despite playing for half a day, there were still 17 players remaining with only 16 getting a piece of the prize pool.

2015 WCOOP Event 33 Day 2.jpg

Thor Hansen cashed but missed the final table

Sirocko was the shortest stack, coming back to just four big bets, and he quickly dropped out to put the last two tables in the money. There were plenty of successful players on those tables besides Mercier and Hansen.

Mark "The Omaholic" Roland was there looking for his first COOP victory to go with his Super Tuesday success. Gambler4444 also has a Super Tuesday victory along with a 2013 SCOOP title and Sunday Million win. secky0222 finished fourth in the 2014 SCOOP-M Main Event, skalexjung sports some 2011 SCOOP-H Stud/8 hardware, and Andrey "Kroko-dill" Zaichenko's SCOOP and WCOOP titles have him 2/3rds of the way toward the triple crown.

The UK's Adam "Adamyid" Owen was an interesting character in the mix. Easily the most vocal and he's had a lot of heart break in major events. He finished fourth only 10 days ago in the opening 2015 WCOOP event but the tough ones have to be his three runner-up results in SCOOP tournaments.

It didn't take long to get from two tables to the final table, and they reached that point when Fresh_oO_D hit the road in 9th place to set things up for the final run. Thor Hansen was one of the shorter stacks throughout Day 2 and was able to make the cash but fell short of the final table.

NEIL0395_EPT12BAR_Thor_Hansen_Neil Stoddart.jpg

2015 WCOOP Event 33 Final Table.jpg

Event 33 Final Table

Seat 1: ViTaMin_F22 (182,265 in chips)
Seat 2: ekziter (128,940 in chips)
Seat 3: Jamie Keeler (58,615 in chips)
Seat 4: JasonMercier (113,775 in chips)
Seat 5: Gambler4444 (138,410 in chips)
Seat 6: Andrey "Kroko-dill" Zaichenko (118,850 in chips)
Seat 7: secky0222 (240,440 in chips)
Seat 8: Adam "Adamyid" Owen (148,705 in chips)

Limits: 4,000/8,000

Gambler4444 hit twice by Owen; gone early

Gambler4444 (with a really bad Badugi hand in his name) began the final table in the top half of the chip counts but that was his peak chip count for the rest of the tournament.

Nothing went right, he soon found himself at the other end of the spectrum and found himself up against Adam "Adamyid" Owen in back-to-back hands. The first hand saw him discard one on each of the three draws and checking as first to act.

He called bets on the second and third draws before mucking after seeing Owen's sweet [6s][4d][3c][2h] Badugi. That left Gambler444 with only 2,410 in his stack and they went in the middle after a Jason Mercier raise.

Not a good sign for Gambler444, Mercier and Owen capped the betting before the first draw. Mercier stood pat, Gambler4444 drew one card, and Owen stood pat behind. Mercier checked/called a bet from Owen before thinking better of his hand to draw two this time around.

Gambler4444 stayed with his routine and drew one more while Owen continued to stand pat. Mercier check/folded to the second draw big bet from Owen and it was heads up. Gambler4444 drew one more card and hit his [9d][8s][7c][4h] Badugi.

That would have been a good hand most times but Owen was dealt [7d][5h][3s][2c] for a better Badugi to send Gambler4444 out of the Championship in 8th place for $2,254.

It's Zaichenko's time to deal with Adamyid

Before Owen knocked Gambler4444 nearly down to the felt, he put a big hurt on Zaichenko as well. That occurred when Owen hit his [td][3s][2c][ah] Badugi on the first draw while Zaichenko called bets all the way down.

Zaichenko hung around long enough to ladder up with Gambler4444's dismissal but he had to take a shot at some point. He put in a third bet against Mercier before the first draw then stood pat on the first two draws firing a bet each time to get all-in.

Mercier stood pat on the third draw and Zaichenko broke his hand to pull one last card for his tournament. Mercier showed a [9s][5h][3d][2c] Badugi while the best Zaichenko could pull was a three-card [ts][7d][4c][2d] Badugi to go out in 7th place.

secky0222 three-cards Keeler out of the Championship

Jamie Keeler, playing under the secret name Jamie Keeler, was sitting pretty and it took three hands to get the Brit out of the tournament. The first was a 92,000 chip pot going to Mercier, then it was another 75,000 pot going ViTaMin_F22.

Both those hands left Keeler feeling short and the final hand was against secky0222 after he called a raise from the small blind. secky0222 drew one card while Keeler drew two and called a bet from secky0222. It was the same thing on the next round, secky0222 drawing one and Keeler drawing two, but this time Keeler moved all-in after a bet from secky0222.

They each discarded one on the final draw and each tabled a three-card Badugi. secky0222's [5h][3c][2d] was just a little better than Keeler's [6s][3h][ac] to send the next player off the final table, a 6th place finish for $3,757.

No seventh COOP for Mercier this time around

Jason Mercier making a COOP final table is almost common place these days. If you see him late in a big online event, you just have to assume he'll find a way to get there.

The spectator count was climbing throughout the final table but dropped quickly at the mid-point. Mercier was hanging around the middle of the counts for most of the second day and finally ran out of space.

He lost a big pot to secky0222 that left him in the dangerzone, a spot for Owen to pick off the rock star player. It began when the two of them capped the betting with ViTaMin_F22 before the first draw to get a "gg in advance" from ekziter.

Owen and ViTaMin_F22 stood pat while Mercier drew one card. ViTaMin_F22 bet out, Mercier called for his last 1,250 and Owen came along. The two live players stood pat once again, they checked, and the same action came on the third draw.

Owen showed a [9d][8h][4c][as] Badugi to get mucks from the other two players. Neither could match the hand and one of the best players in the world hit the door in 5th place for $4,884.

ViTaMin_F22 loses the war of attrition

Half of the final table players were gone and the four remaining players settled in for a grind. There were some pretty big swings at these levels so they were pushing chips around for a while.

Someone had to run into a cold streak and it was ViTaMin_F22 succumbing first. He lost an 87,000 chip pot to ekziter and tried to get something back on the next hand when he called a bet in the big blind from secky0222.

The first two draws were the same pattern; each drew one card, ViTaMin_F22 fired a bet, and secky0222 called. ViTaMin_F22 stood pat on the final draw, secky0222 drew one final card, and called when ViTaMin_F22 put in his last 10,530.

It was a good draw and easy call for secky0222 with [6c][5h][4d][2s] and ViTaMin_F22's [9c][7s][3d][2h] Badugi was only good for 4th place and $6,763.

secky0222 slow burn comes to an end

If four-handed play seemed to go on forever, it really took a break on the action after ViTaMin_F22 hit the rail. The last three players pushed their chips around the table for nearly 40 minutes before anyone was in danger.

Turns out it was going to be secky0222, architect of a few eliminations already today, to be the next to fall. As with most limit games, the major hands just knock a player's stack way down. The knockouts come later.

secky0222's bad hand came against Owen in a six-digit pot when one Queen-high Badugi beat another. Owen's [qd][7c][5s][3h] was good enough against [qh][jd][9c][4s] to put secky0222 in trouble.

secky0222's final hand saw more action then most of them at the final table, there were three bets in the pot each for secky0222 and ekziter before the first draw.

ekziter drew one card while secky0222 drew two and the chips got in the middle with the third bet from ekziter. secky0222 stood pat after ekziter drew one card but decided against that strategy after ekziter stood pat on the third draw.

They each tabled a Badugi but ekziter drew better to a [8d][6c][5s][ah] while the best secky0222 could do was [th][6s][2c][ad] for a second best Badugi. It was a struggle but secky0222 was gone in 3rd place to set up a heads up match between Owen and ekziter.

EPT12_barcelona_main_event_adam_owen.jpg

Could Adam "Adamyid" Owen finally pick up a COOP title?

ekziter denies Owens to win Event 33

Seat 2: ekziter (422,025 in chips)
Seat 8: Adamyid (707,975 in chips)

Limits: 8,000/16,000

Owen had a nice lead over ekziter at the start of heads up play and offered to look at the numbers, if he could get a 2% bump when they were run. ekziter politely declined and off they went.

Heads up in limit games can take a long while and this one was no different. There were swings both ways with each taking a turn at the top. The two raged on for more than an hour and hit their second break of the match.

At this point, ekziter had pulled up to a 10-to-1 chip lead on Owen and it only lasted three more hands once they returned. They each picked up the blinds in the first two hands before they each hit a decent heads up hand.

Owen called a raise and drew two cards followed by ekziter taking three new ones, then called a bet from Owen. ekziter must have liked his first draw because he only took one card the next time around with Owen doing the same.

Two big bets later and Owen was all-in with a big draw. They each took one more card for the final time but neither hit. It turns out ekziter had a bigger draw and his three-card Badugi [6h][4d][2c] was better than Owen's [7d][4h][2s].

Owen was drawing live for the double up but missed out for yet another COOP second place finish. ekziter is your latest WCOOP winner after picking up the Badugi Championship and the $18,410 to go along with it.

WCOOP-33: $700 FL Badugi Championship
Entrants: 113
Prize pool: $75,145
Places paid: 16

1. ekziter (Belarus) $18,410.55
2. Adam "Adamyid" Owen (United Kingdom) $12,774.65
3. secky0222 (Japan) $9,768.85
4. ViTaMin_F22 (China) $6,763.05
5. Jason Mercier (Canada) $4,884.42
6. Jamie Keeler (United Kingdom) $3,757.25
7. Andrey "Kroko-dill" Zaichenko (Russia) $3,005.80
8. Gambler4444 (Austria) $2,254.35

Matt "plattsburgh" Vengrin finds the source, more WCOOP gold

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Imagine waking up every day worried about something. Anything. Nothing. The worries roll in and over like waves, crashing white-capped stressors that beat you into the coral until you're a bloody psychic mess. It can be as exhausting as it is tedious and terrible.

"You can't stop the waves," John Kabat-Zinn once said, "but you can learn to surf."

Kabat-Zinn, an MIT-trained PhD expert on stress reduction was speaking in metaphors, but if you talk to almost any surfer, you'll know what happens just offshore is more than a matter of metaphor. Or, as the kid in Point Break (don't judge me!) said, "Surfing's the source. Can change your life. Swear to God."

But, for second, let's put aside platitudes and consider plattsburgh, better known to his friends as Matt Vengrin, better known around these parts as WCOOP's newest repeat champion. While he may not have been beaten and bloodied by worry, those niggling little life problems weren't helping.

matt_vengrin_2015.jpg

Vengrin splits his time between Mexico and Las Vegas, the latter of which saw him nearly win a WSOP bracelet in the $3,000 HORSE event and post a cash in the Main Event. Still, even in a place surrounded by desert, it's easy to feel like the walls are closing in.

"I was going kind of stir crazy in Vegas," he said.

If he had the stir crazy fever, he knew the only cure: WCOOP by the ocean.

"It was nice to have a change of scenery," Vengrin said this week. "Going to bed by the ocean is something I could get used to."

While the change of scenery may have played a role in Vengrin's most recent success, there's a lot more to it than that, and not all of it is happy.

"I lost a father figure, a mentor, and a friend."

Vengrin tweeted that at the end of last year upon the death of Howard Shultz. Shultz was known in entertainment circles as a famed reality TV producer, but to Vengrin, Shultz was a lot more. He was the man who helped turn Vengrin into the man and poker player he has become.

"He was instrumental in my mental game and being able to close the deal in tournaments," Vengrin said, dedicating his WCOOP win to Howard Schultz and his family.

Vengrin has come to understand that there is a lot more to winning than playing his cards well. He's learned to listen to people who know a little bit about rising above basic accomplishment to something greater.

Vengrin found himself talking to Hollywood writer and director Scott Derrickson (who is currently in the middle of making Dr. Strange with Benedict Cumberbatch and Rachel McAdams).

"I have stopped taking things so seriously. I have found that if I just relax and go with the flow that good things will happen. I have Scott Derrickson to thank for that," Vengrin said. "He took some time to speak with me about success, and I think that really helped me."

Today, Vengrin is among the top ten players in the 2015 WCOOP series. He sits at #7 on the overall leader board at the halfway point in the series. While the leader board is nice, Vengrin's mind may be more focused on another sort of board altogether.

plattsburgh_surf.jpeg

While Vengrin says it's still a work in progress, he's been working on his surfing since this time last year. While he doesn't necessarily come right out and credit his time in the water, he mentions surfing in the same breath as a new sort of peace he's harnessed.

"I am a little more calm. I don't let the little things bother me as much as before," he said. "I think I am maturing. I am realizing that the less you try to control things the more they fall into place. I may be growing up into an adult. It's certainly possible."

Of course, this is also the man who turned his PokerStars avatar into a Klingon (in honor of his best friend, The Omaholic) and still watches Star Trek: The Next Generation almost daily. Nevertheless, we assert this doesn't disqualify him from adulthood.

"I hear the Klingons are planning war on the federation," Vengrin revealed. "I do not suggest this course of action, but it seems as if it is coming. Klingons are excellent fighters with tremendous honor."

And just when we thought we'd put all our worries behind us...


Ready to sign up for PokerStars? Click here to get an account.


is the PokerStars Head of Blogging.

WCOOP 2015: Victory for Yorane "viirusss" Kerignard, stops Mike Leah short of 2nd win in wk.; Lodden 5th (Event #34, $320 NLHE 6-Max, Opt. Re-Entry)

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It looked for a while like a WCOOP bracelet would be going to a red-spade sporter this afternoon, as Team PokerStars Pro Johnny Lodden had the chip lead late in Event #34, a $320 buy-in no-limit hold'em affair with optional re-entry.

Then it appeared Mike "goleafsgoeh" Leah might be earning his second WCOOP bracelet this week -- and third overall -- as he led to start the final table and was ahead during heads-up play.

But in the end it was Yorane "viirusss" Kerignard playing from Malta outlasting Lodden in fifth and Leah in second to earn the bracelet and a handsome $95,256 first prize.


2015-WCOOP-34-kerignard2.jpg

Yorane "viirusss" Kerignard

There were 1,481 players taking part in this one, and with 535 re-entries taken the total prize pool added up to $604,800 -- over three times the $200K guarantee. When play concluded on Day 1 just 30 players remained, with Canada's Christopher "UncleAnte9" Lockhart the frontrunner among them and Team PokerStars Pro Johnny Lodden in second position.

Also standing out near the top of the leaderboard at night's end were Mike "goleafsgoeh" Leah in fourth position, fresh off winning Event #27 ($215 PLO 6-Max Progressive Super-KO) on Monday, and European Poker Tour founder John "Blessed" Duthie who took runner-up in this year's kickoff Event #1 ($109 NLHE).

Here's how the top of the leaderboard looked to begin Day 2:

1. Christopher "UncleAnte9" Lockhart (Canada) -- 738,949
2. Team PokerStars Pro Johnny "johnnylodden" Lodden (Norway) -- 651,906
3. LearnToFlyy (United Kingdom) -- 610,071
4. Mike "goleafsgoeh" Leah (Canada) -- 584,505
5. gregor7878 (Poland) -- 565,654
6. Marko "Kuconi" Bošković (Serbia) -- 555,380
7. 10Badboy10 (Russia) -- 551,826
8. Be@trixKiddo (Canada) -- 513,176
9. Nelisschuif7 (Malta) -- 467,564
10. John "Blessed" Duthie (United Kingdom) -- 423,313

It would take almost two hours for the 30 returners to play down to 12, with Christopher "UncleAnte9" Lockhart (who finished 18th) and John "Blessed" Duthie (knocked out in 16th) among those hitting the rail along the way. By then Lodden had moved into the top spot, with Leah still among the top five.

Over the next 15 minutes hdjgkfkgsdl (12th), Nelisschuif7 (11th), and João "Naza114" Vieira (10th) were all eliminated, picking up $6,048 apiece.


2015-WCOOP-34-vieira.jpg

João "Naza114" Vieira

toril274 (ninth) and Noah "dirty.brasil" Vaillancourt (eighth) followed, then Mike Leah won a big hand to knockout Be@trixKiddo (seventh), with those three each taking away $9,072.

On the strength of that big pot, it was "goleafsgoeh" out in front as the final table began.


2015-WCOOP-34-finaltable.jpg

Seat 1: Team PokerStars Pro Johnny "johnnylodden" Lodden (Norway) -- 1,727,421
Seat 2: Gleb "psyhoagromor" Kovtunov (Ukraine) -- 1,190,668
Seat 3: Keep2p34Ch" (Morocco) -- 869,576
Seat 4: Mike "goleafsgoeh" Leah (Canada) -- 3,636,563
Seat 5: pellompogos (Cyprus) -- 1,484,883
Seat 6: Yorane "viirusss" Kerignard (Malta) -- 1,170,889

The final six wished each other good luck, with Lodden chiming in "hopefully the most lucky wins!"

A little less than a half-hour into the final table, the blinds were 17,500/35,000 when it folded around to pellompogos in the small blind who shoved all in for just under 400,000, and Yorane "viirusss" Kerignard called from the big.

pellompogos had [Qs][8d] and was in need of help versus Kerignard's [Ks][Qc]. The board didn't provide any, however, coming [2s][3s][5h][Jh][Jd], and pellompogos was done in sixth.

About 20 minutes after that, Lodden had slipped down to about 620,000 (about 15-and-a-half big blinds) to become fifth of five, and after watching leader Mike "goleafsgoeh" Leah open from the minimum from the cutoff, Lodden shoved from the small blind and Leah called.

Lodden had [6s][6d] while Leah held [As][Tc], and the [Ac][2h][9d] flop swiftly had Lodden searching for one of the two remaining sixes to survive. Alas for the Norwegian, the turn was the [Jh] and river the [Qs], giving Leah the pot and Lodden a fifth-place finish.


2015-WCOOP-34-lodden.jpg

Team PokerStars Pro Johnny Lodden

Less than five minutes later Keep2p34Ch" was the one shoving all in from under the gun for just under 680,000 (about 17 BBs) and getting called by Gleb "psyhoagromor" Kovtunov from the big blind. Keep2p34Ch" had [9h][9c] but Kovtunov had woken up with [Qs][Qc], and five cards later -- [Ts][6c][Ah][3d][4s] -- they were down to three.

The fourth-place finish marked another nice score for Keep2p34Ch" who just won the Super Tuesday a couple of months ago and chatted with PokerStars Blog about it afterwards.

The final three battled onward, then just after the day's four-hour mark came another knockout.

Lean was leading with just over 5.36 million, Yorane "viirusss" Kerignard was next with about 3.71 million, and Gleb "psyhoagromor" Kovtunov had become the short stack with just a touch under 1 million even.

Kerignard opened with a just-over-2x rise to 105,000 from the small blind, Kovtunov shoved from the big blind, and Kerignard called in a flash. Kovtunov had [Kc][9s] but Kerignard had him crushed with [Ah][Ac], and after the board rolled out [2c][5c][9d][8s][Js] Kovtunov was out in third.

That's a seventh cash during this year's WCOOP for Kovtunov. He's following up a strong WCOOP last year on PokerStars, too, when he earned a bracelet (and a big $242K payday) in a $1,050 NLHE event.

Here we were again, watching Leah for the second time this week battling heads-up for a WCOOP bracelet. Earlier this week Leah had been behind to start heads-up play, but today he enjoyed a slight lead with a little less than 5.36 million to Yorane "viirusss" Kerignard's 4.72 million.


2015-WCOOP-34-leah.jpg

Mike "goleafsgoeh" Leah

On just the fourth hand between the pair -- while Kerignard was asking about a possible deal and Leah was declining -- the Canadian won a 4.3 million-plus chip pot to move up over 7.8 million versus his opponent's less than 2.3 million.

Kerignard gradually fought back, however, and about 20 minutes later had edged in front of Leah to claim the advantage. Fifteen minutes after that Kerignard was up over 8.95 million to Leah's 1.12 million when the following hand took place.

The blinds were 40,000/80,000, and Leah opened by raising to 160,000 from the button. Kerignard responded with an all-in push, and Leah called with what he had left, turning over [Ac][Kd] and seeing he was ahead of Kerignard's [Ah][7s].

But the flop came [5d][7h][4c], hitting Kerignard's kicker to put the player from Malta in the lead. The turn was the [9c] and river the [6c], and Leah had come one spot shy of a second bracelet of the series and third overall as Kerignard had won.


2015-WCOOP-34-kerignard.jpg

Yorane "viirusss" Kerignard

Congratulations to Yorane "viirusss" Kerignard for topping a big field and tough final table to earn the hardware in Event #34.

WCOOP-34: $320 NL Hold'em (6-Max, Optional Re-Entry)
Entries: 2,016 (1,481 entries, 535 re-entries)

Prize pool: $604,800

Places paid: 252

1. Yorane "viirusss" Kerignard (Malta) $95,256.00
2. Mike "goleafsgoeh" Leah (Canada) $71,064.00
3. Gleb "psyhoagromor" Kovtunov (Ukraine)
4. Keep2p34Ch" (Morocco) $34,776.00
5. Team PokerStars Pro Johnny "johnnylodden" Lodden (Norway) $23,708.16
6. pellompogos (Cyprus) $13,547.52


We're only today crossing the midway point of the 70-event World Championship of Online Poker. Visit the WCOOP page for a complete (and instantly updated) list of results so far, the Player of the Series Leader Board, and a full schedule of what's still to come.

Haven't gotten a PokerStars account yet? Join the world's biggest site now.



Martin Harris is Freelance Contributor to the PokerStars Blog.

WCOOP 2015: Veni, vidi, viebu! Vladimir 'vovtroy' Troyanovskiy vanquished, viebu victorious

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There were four differents attempts at making a deal in this event. Four. I'll tell ya, they're a stubborn bunch, these PLO geniuses. But we'll get into the deal-making squabbles a bit later.

Tonight was the second and final day of event 35 of the 2015 WCOOP, a $320+R PL Omaha [6-Max] tournament with a guaranteed prize pool of a quarter of a million. When there's rebuys involved, that amount was always likely to grow, and grow it did to $490,500 after 553 entries, 649 rebuys and 433 add-ons.

The most familiar face was that of Russian high roller Vladimir 'vovtroy' Troyanovskiy, a man (and SCOOP champion) who - if his performance at EPT Deauville in February was anything to go by - needs little sleep to crush at the poker tables. Any guesses at what he got up to last night would be pure speculation.

vladimir_troyanovskiyFT.jpg

He don't need no sleep... - Vladimir 'vovtroy' Troyanovskiy

But the player who came out on top tonight was Israel's viebu, who took home a monster pay day of $83,040.17. Back in 2009 he won $38,991.05 plus an Audi TT RS in a $1 Million Turbo Takedown tournament, but we're sure his first ever WCOOP title is even sweeter than that sweet ride.

Day two kicked off with just seven players remaining, each guaranteed a $10,300.50 pay day. It meant we needed just one bust out to get our final table of six, and within 15 minutes of play resuming the spotlights were on. The first player leaving the tournament was the shortest stack coming into the day, Supernova player ComptonMasta from Canada, who exited in 7th.

Under the spotlights

Here's a look at the chip counts at the beginning of this final table:

1. rmdr (Germany) 1,706,855
2. viebu (Israel) 1,212,106
3. Vladimir 'vovtroy' Troyanovskiy (Russia) 1,082,641
4. Shhh00kem (Canada) 1,038,180
5. Konstantinos "arxigos" Nanos (Austria) 441,843
6. Joel "Odonkor1" Nordkvist (Sweden) 289,375

Konstantinos "arxigos" Nanos has a TCOOP PLO victory for $55K, Sunday Warm-Up win for $112K, and several SCOOP and WCOOP final tables, so a win here would have given him his second COOP title. Meanwhile, Shhh00kem is a very accomplished player, having taken down the Super Tuesday and scoring a massive $430,650 with a runner-up finish in the 2012 $10,300 NLHE High Roller.

We also had chipleader rdmr from Germany, a former SCOOP final tablist, as well as Joel "Odonkor1" Nordkvist, an extremely talented high stakes cash game player.

rdmr wasted no time in proposing a deal, something he would continue to deal throughout, despite being the chip leader for much of it. "You guys want to take an early look on numbers? Fine playing it all the way out but just throwing it out there," he said, but got no response.

Entering the final table with just under ten big blinds was always going to making things challenging for Sweden's Odonkor1, but unfortunately anything resembling a comeback wasn't to be in this event. With the blinds at 12,500/25,000, viebu min-opened to 50,000 and arxigos called from the small blind. Having seen his stack drop to just 138,175, Odonkor1 raised all-in and viebu called the 88,175 more. Now arxigos decided to put all his remaining chips at risk too, and also moved all-in for 532,686 total. Veibu called the 384,511 more and the cards were flipped.

WCOOP35-3.jpg

arxigos: [Ac][Ad][7h][Kc]
viebu: [4h][7d][Qd][Kh]
Odonkor1: [Qs][9s][2d][Qh]

The flop fell [ks][2h][5c], meaning the aces of arxigos were in front. The [4s] on the turn gave Odonkor1 a flush draw and saw viebu take the lead with two pair, kinds and fours, but the [5d] on the river paired the board, meaning the aces were back in use. With a higher two pair, aces and fives, arxigos scooped both pots and Joel "Odonkor1" Nordkvist was sent to the rail with 6th place money worth $15,696.

More talk of deals, more players bust

At this point the five remaining players were considering a deal and opted to see the chop numbers. Rdmr, who posed the question of seeing the numbers at the very beginning of this final table, was chipleader at the time and again suggested that the table take a peek. After tournament host and Team PokerStars Online's Randy 'nanonoko' Lew presented the numbers, rdmr then requested more than the ICM figures presented - something which other members of the table didn't take too kindly to, notably Vladimir 'vovtroy' Troyanovskiy. The players didn't reach an agreement, and Vlad and rdmr would develop something of a trolling rivalry moving forward.

Shortly after the first of three potential deals fell through, we lost another player. It was a roller coaster orbit or two for arxigos, who had gone from having roughly a million in chips after the big hand which eliminated Odonkor1, to a stack of just 135,605. With 45,000 in the middle as the cards were dealt, arxigos put out a committing bet of 105,000 which chipleader rdmr called. Now viebu bumped the price of poker up to 450,000, leading to arxigos calling off his remaining 30,605 and rmdr getting out of the way.

viebu: [6h][Td][Ad][Ah]
arxigos: [Jh][Qh][9d][Th]

The flop was the [3c][8h][6d], giving arxigos a gutshot, but veibu's aces were still in the lead. The turn was the [6s], which discounted the aces giving viebu a set of sixes, and the [4c] on the river changed nothing. Konstantinos "arxigos" Nanos collected $24,525 for 5th.

konstantinos_nanosFT.jpg

Konstantinos "arxigos" Nanos

Now down to four, the players decided to consider a chop once again. Vovtroy had won a few pots off of rdmr by this point, giving him the chiplead.

"Oh you're that rich Russian whale. don't worry, we'll deal when he busts," said rdmr of vovtroy, perhaps with a tongue firmly in his cheek, as one quick Google of Vlad shows he could very well be rich, but he's far from a cash machine.

The next player to exit was Shhh00kem of Canada. With just under 18 big blinds he held the shallowest stack of the final four, so would need to make something happen to get back in this thing. After rdmr made it 75,000 to go, Shhh00kem raised to 240,000 - a large percentage of his chips. Rdmr wasted no time in setting his opponent all-in, which was called.

Shhh00kem: [As][Jd][Ks][3d]
rdmr: [Qs][Ah][Ad][6d]

To the flop we went, and it arrived with the [7c][6c][4h] - nothing for Shhh00kem. The [7s] on the turn changed nothing, and although the [js] on the river gave him two pair, it wasn't enough to beat rdmr's aces and sevens. For 4th place Shhh00kem won $34,335.

Once again the tournament was paused to discuss a deal, and once again there was no agreement.

WCOOP35-6.jpg

As rdmr's stack grew, vovtroy's shrank. With the stacks at 3M for rdmr, 1.7M for viebu and 947,466 for vovtroy, the Russian found a much needed double up through the chip leader. The blinds had gone up to 20,000/40,000 and vovtroy opened for 84,000 only to see rdmr raise to 292,000, which was called.

We went to a flop of [7s][Ts][Jd] and after rdmr bet 624,000 - just about all of his opponents stack - vovtroy put his remaining chips in and was called.

rdmr: [8s][Qs][2h][Ah]
vovtroy: [Qh][3h][7d][Ks]

Both players had draws a plenty, and the turn was always going to be an action card. It was the [8c], giving rdmr a pair, but the [9h] gave both players a straight. As vovtroy's was higher, he took down the pot and shot up to 1,934,932.

Not long after vovtroy became chipleader again, taking the role of consistent aggresor, but soon lost a big to his rival rdmr. Vlad dropped to around 1,000,000 while the other had about 2,300,000 each. Just a few hands later with the blinds at 25,000/50,000 it was viebu's turn to take a commanding lead, with roughly 2,800,000 to vovtroy's 1,400,000 and rdmr's 1,500,000.

The fall of vovtroy

We would lose Vladimir 'vovtroy' Troyanovskiy in third. The blinds were now 30,000/60,000 and vovtroy opened to 120,000, finding a caller in his nemesis rdmr. The flop of [8s][4c][3s] saw rdmr fire out 144,000, which was called, resulting in the [kc] on the turn. Leading out again was rdmr with a bet of 588,000, and now vovtroy moved all-in for 767,652 which was called.

rdmr: [6s][7h][5s][7c]
vovtroy: [Jd][9c][Jc][3h]

Troyanovskiy was ahead but rdmr had a huge drawing hand. The [kc] on the turn only improved vovtroy's hand, adding a club flush draw, but the [4s] on the river completed rdmr's spade flush draw and sent the Russian to the rail with third place money of $50,276.25.

WCOOP35-9.jpg

It would take just one hand of heads-up play before another deal was discussed. "Fine to just play for bracelet and 5k, so up to u," said rdmr, to which viebu responded "50 50 buddy, that's my minimum".

But after the numbers were presented - $78,824.83 for rdmr, $78,040.17 for viebu with $5,000 left to play for - both players agreed and after four attempts, a deal was made. With a ton of money each locked up, the players wished each other luck and we got right back to the action.

The final stretch

It was a topsy turvy head-up war which at times saw both players have a demanding lead over the other. Ultimately though it was Israel's viebu who would come out victorious.

At the beginning of the final hand, rdmr had just 671,228 to viebu's 5,099,772. It was a timid start to the hand, with viebu simply completing the 80,000 big blind and rdmr checking his option. The flop came the [2s][Th][6h] and rdmr bet 99,200, only to see viebu raise 358,400 to 457,600. Now rdmr moved all-in for 591,228 and viebu called the remaining 133,628.

rdmr: [Td][Jc][5s][3s]
viebu: [7s][6s][8s][2c]

viebu's twos and sixes were ahead of rdmr's tens, but there was still hope. The [ad] on the turn didn't provide much help though, and the [8d] on the river only improved viebu's hand to eights and sixes.

WCOOP35-12.jpg

A big congratulations to our winner, viebu, who took down $83,040.17 for his first WCOOP championship, and also to rdmr, who wins a mighty fine $78,824.83 for finishing second.

WCOOP-35: $320+R PL Omaha [6-Max]

Entries: 553 (649 rebuys and 433 add-ons)
Prize pool: $490,500
Places paid: 72

1. viebu (Israel) $83,040.17*
2. rmdr (Germany) $78,824.83*
3. Vladimir 'vovtroy' Troyanovskiy (Russia) $50,276.25
4. Shhh00kem (Canada) $34,335.00
5. Konstantinos "arxigos" Nanos (Austria) $24,525.00
6. Joel "Odonkor1" Nordkvist (Sweden) $15,696.00

*indicates prize money after a heads-up deal was made

There are plenty of WCOOP events left for you to play leading up to the Main Event on September 27th - check out the schedule here.

Don't have a PokerStars account? Then what are you waiting for - sign up today.

Jack Stanton is a professional journalist and a freelance writer for PokerStars.

WCOOP 2015: TheFish77 denies Katchalov in Event #37 ($320 8-Game)

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It's rather exciting when a Team PokerStars Pro makes a deep run at a major title such as those on offer at the World Championship of Online Poker. There are many reasons why a player is chosen to adorn the red spade of PokerStars, but above all, it's about a player's skill, and success, on the poker felt.

We've seen some great runs by Team PokerStars Pros already this series and we came awfully close to adding another WCOOP title for the team today as Ukrainian Eugene Katchalov navigated his way through the field in WCOOP Event #37 to reach heads-up play. Katchalov found himself matched against a player called TheFish77, but this Norwegian was no fish as he was able to overcome the pro to claim an impressive victory.

It was Event #37 of the World Championship of Online Poker -- a $320 8-Game event which attracted a strong field of 533 entrants. They created a prize pool of $159,900 to easily surpass the advertised guarantee.

George Danzer, Adrienne Rowsome, Bertrand Grospellier, Jason Somerville, Jason Mercier and 2003 World Champion Chris Moneymaker were all in the field representing Team PokerStars but they would fall short of the money for the top 72 players.

When Russia's Iwantbearich was bounced out on the bubble, the remaining players had secured a minimum $511.68.

There were a couple of red spades making a deep run in this one. Japanese star Naoya "nkeyno" Kihara reached 15th place for a $1,487.07 however it was Eugene Katchalov who was making big waves as the chip leader entering the final two tables.

eugene_katchalov_wcoop.jpgWould you like to play alongside Eugene Katchalov? Join the world's biggest site now!

Katchalov was able to maintain his stack on one table while TheFish77 was running rampant on the other. TheFish77 was catching cards and betting with aggression as his table quickly became short-handed.

birddy420, who claimed to be playing his first ever 8-game tournament, was the one to bubble the final table. The luck didn't go his way late and when birddy420 committed in a hand of Omaha Hi-Lo, he was narrowly pipped for the high and low by TheFish77 as our final table was set:

wcoop2015-ev37-ft.jpg

Final Table Line up
Seat 1: isDatLekker? (110,560 in chips)
Seat 2: Eugene Katchalov (288,659 in chips)
Seat 3: Raabinator93 (227,834 in chips)
Seat 4: Leon_Javur (715,862 in chips)
Seat 5: TheFish77 (1,101,214 in chips)
Seat 6: Jonas Palsgård "Palsgaard1" Christensen (220,871 in chips)

Team PokerStars Pro Eugene Katchalov was in the middle of the pack, but caught an early double up with a pretty 7-4-3-2-A in Razz against TheFish77.

However Raabinator93 wasn't quite so fortunate to become the first eliminated from our final table. The game had switched to Seven-Card Stud, and after a series of raises, all the chips were in on third street. Raabinator93 started with a pair but could improve no further on a board of [7s][Qc][7h][6c][4s][As][3h] as TheFish77 had that well covered with [Td][Qs][Qd][Tc][Jd][7c][Ac] for queens and tens. That left Raabinator93 to pick up $5,116.80 for sixth place.

The chips were heavily on one side of the table with TheFish77 and Leon_Javur well out in front while the other three tried to survive.

isDatLekker? found quads at the right time but had to split the pot in Stud Hi-Lo, however the double up came in No Limit Holdem when isDatLekker?'s ace-queen held against Leon_Javur's dominated ace-five.

It was the No Limit Holdem round where Eugene Katchalov also made a move with pocket aces landing a big double up through the open-ended straight draw of TheFish77.

It would take until the Pot Limit Omaha round for the next casualty with isDatLekker? the one to go. With the chips all-in preflop, isDatLekker? went with [6s][Qd][As][Qc] but ran into Palsgaard1's [7h][Kd][Kh][8d]. The board ran out [2c][Js][Th][5d][9s] to give Palsgaard1 the bottom end of a straight to take it down and eliminate isDatLekker? in fifth place for $7,995 in prize money.

TheFish77 continued to surge at the top of the counts, winning more than a fair share of pots to accumulate more than two-thirds of the chips in play with four players remaining.

Leon_Javur took a couple of hits during Triple Draw before Katchalov started to make a few moves with well-timed aggression in the Limit Holdem round. When Katchalov got three streets of value with ace-ten on a ten-high board against TheFish77, it was Katchalov who was into the chip lead.

The blinds got hold of Jonas Palsgård "Palsgaard1" Christensen who was all in preflop during Limit Holdem. Both TheFish77 and Katchalov made the call and fired a bet into the side pot on the flop before Katchalov gave it up on the turn. The board read [Ah][6d][Ac][7s] and Palsgaard1 was hopeful that [9c][7c] was good, but TheFish77 was all over that board with [ad][7d] for a full house! The river was the [th] leaving Palsgaard1 to pick up $11,193 for fourth place.

Two hands later and three became two as Leon_Javur was sent to the rail. Again it was Limit Holdem that did the damage, with Leon_Javur four-betting all in preflop against TheFish77. It was [8d][9h] for Leon_Javur against the [ad][td] of TheFish77. The flop landed [3s][3c][8h] and Leon_Javur had snuck ahead but that all changed again on the [Th] turn as TheFish77 paired the ten. The river bricked the [5c] to send Leon_Javur home in third place for $16,389.75 in prize money.

Heads-up chip counts
Seat 2: E. Katchalov (1,247,248 in chips)
Seat 5: TheFish77 (1,417,752 in chips)

Things were pretty even when heads-up play commenced with TheFish77 holding a narrow lead over the Team PokerStars Pro.

With the blinds so large in the limit games, it didn't take long for the chips to pass back and forth. Katchalov grabbed the early advantage but TheFish77 fought back with six pots in a row to take a two-to-one lead.

Big pots were exchanged during Omaha Hi-Lo before a crucial hand went the way of TheFish77 during Razz. There were bets on every street with TheFish77 showing up with a pretty 6-5-4-3-2 to scoop a pot worth 800k.

TheFish77 continued to grind down Katchalov who just couldn't get anything going before the final hand unfolded during Seven-Card Stud.

The chips were all in on third street with the boards running out as follows:

TheFish77: [Ks][8s][3c][7c][Qd][6c][3d]
Katchalov: [2h][7d][2s][5c][Qc][Jd][8c]

Katchalov started with a lowly pair of ducks which had the lead all the way until the river where TheFish77 paired the three to nudge ahead and claim the title!

wcoop2015-ev37-final-hand.jpg

Congratulations to Team PokerStars Pro Eugene Katchalov on a tremendous run. He fell just short of the WCOOP title but did pick up $22,386 in prize money for his runner-up result.

However on this occasion it would be Norwegian TheFish77 who topped the pro to collect the title and $30,381 in prize money. Congratulations!

WCOOP-37: $320 8-Game - $100K Guaranteed
Entrants: 533
Prize Pool: $159,900
Places Paid: 72

1. TheFish77 (Norway) $30,381.00
2. Eugene Katchalov (Ukraine) $22,386.00
3. Leon_Javur (Estonia) $16,389.75
4. Jonas Palsgård "Palsgaard1" Christensen (Denmark) $11,193.00
5. isDatLekker? (Netherlands) $7,995.00
6. Raabinator93 (Germany) $5,116.80

The 2015 World Championship of Online Poker is only just past the half-way mark with over 70 events throughout the series. Check out the WCOOP home page for the full schedule of events.

Haven't got a PokerStars account yet? Join the world's biggest site now!

Heath "TassieDevil" Chick is a freelance contributor to PokerStars Blog.

PCA 2015, Main Event Episode 3


Family, faith, and a third glass of wine: Trymean77's keys to WCOOP success

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Calmness in a clutch moments in poker is a trait to which not all of us can lay claim. While some, steadfast and almost without emotion, operate at optimal efficiency regardless of circumstance, others must rely on more traditional coping mechanisms, tested over centuries, and proven by the Dutch to enhance courage and confidence.

There may be players who occupy a middle ground - I hear deep breaths sometimes work - but others, like Josefine "Trymean77" Forssberg, 33, winner of WCOOP Event #23, choose tradition when facing the prospect of a first WCOOP final table.

"I was all over the place actually," she said. "I normally never drink alcohol while I play online, but I had to pour myself a glass of wine to calm my nerves. It went down rather quickly and I think I had finished almost three by the time the game was over. >_<


josefine_forssberg_18sept15.jpgJosefine Forssberg

There are two things you notice when talking to Forssberg. The first is that she speaks from the heart. The second is that she uses this symbol >_< as punctuation. But it seems to work, encapsulating a "close your eyes, have a little faith and give it a go" sentiment, which on this occasion worked perfectly.

It also downplays her obvious talent, now officially tested in the toughest of online theatres. Previous wins have included the Women's Sunday, which prompted her once to say how she felt she could only win the little events. It would seem the reality is otherwise.

"It was really exciting and rather nerve wrecking to be honest," she said. "I'm not used to going deep in big events, the money jumps are crazy and it's a bit difficult to come up with the best strategy when you haven't really been in that spot before. I'm pretty sure my tactic wasn't optimal for ICM, I kinda just went for it."

Forssberg hadn't actually planned on playing that day. A cash finish in the Sunday Million the previous weekend earned her around $2,000, ("I withdrew most and lost the rest"). But she deposited again to play the hyper satellite for Event #23, and "binked it first try".

And so she found herself going deep in her first big buy-in Omaha event.

"There weren't many key moments as such as I chipped up pretty early and didn't have to jeopardize my stack until just before the final table. One funny spot that was also rather important for my momentum was when a guy decided to stack off about 40 bb with top pair and a gut shot which made me a massive chip leader.

Another key pot fell for Forssberg before the final table, which led to a brave call from her opponent before she hit a straight.

"I had to jump up and down for like a minute before I could proceed playing."

Jumping up a down aside (there may or may not be a correlation with glasses of wine consumed) Forssberg's confidence held in tact through to the end.

"I'm really happy with how I played and I can't complain about the way I was running. Even though I lost chunks a few times I never lost my confidence and I kept coming back and chipping up without having to risk too much and picking really good spots for it as well."

A self-confessed procrastinator, who recently moved back to her native Sweden from London, she learned to play poker after watching TV, soon realising that to be good at it meant years of hard work.

But poker hasn't really been a priority for Forssberg this year. You might say it was sadness rather than celebration that preoccupied the past year, following the death of her mother nine months ago. It's something that has brought her a renewed closeness to her family, which can often be the perfect base on which to build an achievement like that of last week. No one would ever say poker was all that important in the general scheme of things, but few would challenge the importance of having a family to which you can turn, and with whom you can share moments like this.

Not that she was thinking clearly when the last card was dealt.

"I tried to focus, but had to scream like WHOOOAAAAAHHHHH to friends when I doubled up or got away with a massive bluff. >_< Then I wrote on my FB status and that's pretty much how everyone else found out. Except my dad who I told later in the morning when he woke up.

Unconventional (she then went for a swim in the sea), amiable, and a little inspiring, it's a win that would make anyone feel a little better. And if not a glass of wine might help. >_<


Stephen Bartley is a staff writer for the PokerStars Blog.

LAPT8 Uruguay: A new home on the eastern front

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The Latin American Poker Tour is back for its penultimate event of the season and we're as east as American time zones get.

After a one-season hiatus, the LAPT is back in the UTC-3:00 country of Uruguay.

Once again, the tournament is being held in the beautiful tourist haven of Punta del Este. This tiny city of about 11,000 people attracts tens-of-thousands of visitors each year with its pristine coastline, whale sanctuary and numerous landmarks, which includes a funky hand in the sand.

lapturuguay-Monumento_al_Ahogado.jpg

We've kept our eyes on this hand since 2008 and we assure you that it hasn't moved or given any indication that it's just the tip of some subterranean beach-dwelling titan.

What has moved is our view of the hand.

Since the birth of the LAPT, the Mantra Hotel had been home to the tournament here in Punta del Este, but now it has a new host.

For the first time, the Conrad Hotel is hosting LAPT Uruguay.

The venue is the only Conrad Hotel in South America and is therefore the first Conrad Hotel to host Latin America's largest poker tournament.

Conrad_Hotel.jpeg

The Conrad seems to be up to the challenge though, the building seems aptly prepared to handle all the poker that will run through its veins and ballrooms throughout the week.

The tournament area has around 30 LAPT-felted tables, one feature table, three rows of media tables and small snackbar area.

The tournament tables currently just have one occupant apiece, black-clad dealers with nine stacks of 20,000.

The snackbar has two occupants furiously loading up a fridge with drinks and a heater with snacks before poker players come to furiously devour them.

The media tables have a handful of sorry-looking folks, all working out the South American internet kinks before the tournament kicks into gear.

Right now though, it's all calm on the eastern front; an hour from now, it won't be.

When the tournament starts, the room will be abuzz with riffling chips until we crown a new champion.

The defending LAPT Uruguay champion is Carter Gill, who defeated a field of 508 players in Season 6 to take his first LAPT title and $218,692.

CarterGill_LAPT6Uruguay_Winner.jpg

Carter Gill

While it was his first major tournament victory, it was his second-consecutive LAPT final table after finishing 4th in LAPT6 Panama.

While there's still no sign that Gill will return to defend his title, there's a whole new batch of hopefuls looking to win their first.

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Photography from LAPT8 Uruguay by Carlos Monti. You can also follow the action in Spanish and in Portuguese.

Alexander Villegas is a freelance contributor to the PokerStars Blog.

2015 ACOP: The Preview

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We are just six short weeks away from the 2015 Asia Championship of Poker (#2015ACOP) - meaning the countdown is officially on for the richest poker festival in the Far East!

Hosted by PokerStars LIVE Macau, the 17-day poker festival will take place from October 30 to November 15. The weeks leading up to the 2015 ACOP will include several exciting announcements about the event including the biggest names in poker, celebrities that will be there, promotions, and giveaways.

But before we get into all that, let's stick to the plan of this piece and give you a preview for what's in store.

The 2015 ACOP is the annual event's fourth poker festival and concludes Season 9 of the Asia Pacific Poker Tour (APPT). The ACOP brings the world's best poker players to Macau for Asia's richest series of tournaments and is the only poker tournament in the region that features a Main Event with a HK$100,000 (USD $13,000) buy-in. The Main Event also comes with a HK$15 million prize pool guarantee.

Last year, the ACOP awarded more than HK$116 million (USD $15 million) in prize money and attracted nearly 3,000 entrants in the process. This year, organisers fully expect to exceed those totals.

2014 ACOP Main Event winner Gabriel Le Jossec.jpg

2014 ACOP Main Event winner Gabriel Le Jossec

One of the key aspects of the ACOP is its 2-tier levels of tournaments: the ACOP Title Events and Regular Events.

ACOP TITLE EVENTS
There are 15 'ACOP Title Events' on hand which award the prestigious Spadie trophies to each winner. These are the tournaments that attract the world's best since they all have buy-ins of HK$9,000 and above with the lone exception being the HK$2500 Rebuy Championship.

The focus for most players are on the Main Event and the Gold Spadie that goes to the champion. However, all Spadies tournaments hold historical significance as these titles are the measuring stick for all-time achievements at the ACOP.

REGULAR EVENTS
If you love poker but don't have a big bankroll, that shouldn't stop you from coming to experience the thrill and excitement of the ACOP. Many ACOP Title Events also have a lower-buy-in version of the same tournament that ranges from HK$500 to HK$4,000.

For example, if the price tag of HK$15,000 is too high to enter the PLO Championship you could register for the HK$2,500 PLO event.

Full schedule at: psta.rs/2015ACOP-schedule

Alright, that's all for now but stay tuned as there will be plenty more on the 2015 ACOP coming soon!

WCOOP 2015: Close calls for Team Pros as we head into the weekend

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We're into Day 13 of WCOOP 2015. Here's the latest update with 36 of 70 events now completed.


Today's highlights:

--ekziter wins Event #33 (FL Badugi Championship) collecting $18,000. Jason Mercier finishes fifth.
--French pro Yorane "viirusss" Kerignard win Event #34 to deny Mike "Goleafsgoeh" Leah a second WCOOP bracelet. Johnny Lodden finishes fifth.
--In Event #35 Viebu wins $83,000 in the PLO 6-max.
--The 8-Game, Event #37, is won by TheFish77, with Eugene Katchalov missing out in second place.


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Round up of latest results

This was another day in which the players finishing just behind the winners stood out as much as those collecting silverware.

In Event #33 ezkiter won his first bracelet, and a first for Belarus this year in the FL Badugi Championship. It proved to be well earned, with Adam "Adamyid" Owen finishing in second, as well as Jason Mercier in fifth and kroko-dill in seventh. Al Rash watched all of it, and you can read his report here.

In Event #34 Yorane "viirusss" Kerignard was adding a WCOOP title to his resume. The Frenchman, now playing out of Malta, has more than $1.5 million in live tournament earnings, and earned another $92,000 for this. As Martin Harris reported, it was nearly a story about Mike "goleafsgoeh" Leah's second bracelet in a week, but he was stopped in second place. Johnny Lodden finished fifth.

As Jack Stanton reported, Viebu from Israel took down Event #35, a PLO 6-max, for $83,000 ahead of Valdimir "vovtroy" Troyanovskiy, while The Fish77, won Event #37, an 8-Game contest. Eugene Katchalov closed out a day of near misses for Team PokerStars Pro, finishing runner up. Heath Chick has the story.


eugene_katchalov_wcoop_18sept15.jpgLaugh, otherwise you'll cry: Eugene Katchalov finished second in Event #37


Here are the scores in full:

Event #33: $700 FL Badugi Championship
Entrants: 113
Prize pool: $75,145
Places paid: 16

1. ekziter (Belarus) $18,410.55
2. Adam "Adamyid" Owen (United Kingdom) $12,774.65
3. secky0222 (Japan) $9,768.85
4. ViTaMin_F22 (China) $6,763.05
5. Jason Mercier (Canada) $4,884.42
6. Jamie Keeler (United Kingdom) $3,757.25
7. Andrey "Kroko-dill" Zaichenko (Russia) $3,005.80
8. Gambler4444 (Austria) $2,254.35


Event #34: $320 NL Hold'em (6-Max, Optional Re-Entry)
Entries: 2,016 (1,481 entries, 535 re-entries)

Prize pool: $604,800

Places paid: 252

1. Yorane "viirusss" Kerignard (Malta) $95,256.00
2. Mike "goleafsgoeh" Leah (Canada) $71,064.00
3. Gleb "psyhoagromor" Kovtunov (Ukraine)
4. Keep2p34Ch" (Morocco) $34,776.00
5. Team PokerStars Pro Johnny "johnnylodden" Lodden (Norway) $23,708.16
6. pellompogos (Cyprus) $13,547.52



Event #35: $320+R PL Omaha [6-Max]
Entries: 553 (649 rebuys and 433 add-ons)
Prize pool: $490,500
Places paid: 72

1. viebu (Israel) $83,040.17*
2. rmdr (Germany) $78,824.83*
3. Vladimir 'vovtroy' Troyanovskiy (Russia) $50,276.25
4. Shhh00kem (Canada) $34,335.00
5. Konstantinos "arxigos" Nanos (Austria) $24,525.00
6. Joel "Odonkor1" Nordkvist (Sweden) $15,696.00
* indicates prize money after a heads-up deal was made


Event #37: $320 8-Game
Entrants: 533
Prize Pool: $159,900
Places Paid: 72

1. TheFish77 (Norway) $30,381.00
2. Eugene Katchalov (Ukraine) $22,386.00
3. Leon_Javur (Estonia) $16,389.75
4. Jonas Palsgård "Palsgaard1" Christensen (Denmark) $11,193.00
5. isDatLekker? (Netherlands) $7,995.00
6. Raabinator93 (Germany) $5,116.80


For all the WCOOP 2015 results so far, check out our aptly named WCOOP results page, which also has links to all final table reports.


Coming up today

Three more events are scheduled today, with two set to finish later.

Today
Event 39: $665 Triple Draw 2-7 Championship 11.00 ET
Event 40: $500 NL Hold'em (6-max shootout) 14.00 ET
Event 41: $300 ET NL Hold'em (Ante Only) 17.00 ET

Still to conclude
Event 36: NL Hold'em (1R1A) 7 of 1,040 remaining
Event 38: NL Hold'em (Progressive Super KO) 55 of 1,748 remaining


Leader board

RuiNF remains at the top going as we pass the half way mark on 295 points, with Aftret in second with 240. The only major change a the top is the emergence of Mike "goleafsgoeh" Leah in fourth place, following a runner up finish in Event #34 yesterday.


wcoop_leaderboard_18sept15.jpgClick to enlarge

Find all the leader board details right here


Quote of the day

"I was all over the place actually. I normally never drink alcohol while I play online, but I had to pour myself a glass of wine to calm my nerves. It went down rather quickly and I think I had finished almost three by the time the game was over."

-- Josefine "Trymean77" Forssberg, interviewed about her Event #23 WCOOP win on the PokerStars Blog. Read the full interview here


Dubious fact of the day

TheFish77 becomes the second player this year with "77" in their username to win a WCOOP title, after Trymena77 in Event #23.


On to the weekend

As Jamie Staples pointed out, there are only ten days of WCOOP left. But while that might be tragically true there's still plenty of action left, especially this weekend, when WCOOP and the Sunday Majors combine for some big results.

You can find out everything there is to know about the Championship on the WCOOP homepage, and good luck to everyone playing this weekend, whether in WCOOP or other events.

In the meantime send us your thoughts and comments to us on Twitter: @PokerStars Blog. Good luck to everyone this weekend.


Stephen Bartley is a staff writer for the PokerStars Blog.

UKIPT set to host annual home game on Isle of Man

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It's no secret that PokerStars calls the Isle of Man its home, and now it's time to play PokerStars' grandest home game of the year. The people of PokerStars are welcoming all comers to the Isle of Man October 1-4 for the UK & Ireland Poker Tour's stop.

Situated along the Irish Sea coast and just down the road from PokerStars HQ, the UKIPT's Isle of Man stop is hosted in the beautiful and historic Villa Marina. The £440 buy-in event has two flights, and you can re-enter once per day, so you have a chance to fire four bullets if you need to!

For the next two Sundays, you can win seats online. PokerStars is running a five-seat guarantee satellite with a £100 buy-in this Sunday the 20th and next Sunday the 27th.

Want to qualify? Click here to get a PokerStars account.

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The UKIPT already has seats reserved for Liv Boeree, Chris Moneymaker, Jake Cody, and Jen Shahade, the latter of which will undoubtedly be a popular face at the Isle of Man International Chess Tournament and combined poker and chess event.

As if that wasn't all enough, every player in the Main Event will get a Manx National Heritage pass to explore all the heritage sites on the island for free.

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For full information on the festival, visit the UKIPT Isle of Man page.


Ready to sign up for PokerStars? Click here to get an account.


is the PokerStars Head of Blogging.

LAPT8 Uruguay: Alache vs. Teixeira, Round 3

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While the Conrad hotel is hosting it's first LAPT, several of the seats are filled with familiar players.

One specific pair of players looks like they can't get enough of each other.

For the second consecutive LAPT, Brazil's Renata Teixeira and Chile's Oscar Alache are seated right next to each other on Day 1a.

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Alache and Teixeira in LAPT8 Uruguay

But this is far from the first time the two have played against each other.

LAPT veterans might recall earlier this season, when Teixeira and Alache went heads-up for the title in Chile.

Regardless of who won, there was going to be a footnote added to LAPT history that day.

With a guaranteed second-place finish, Teixeira became the highest-finishing woman in LAPT history with a shot at becoming the first woman to take down an LAPT trophy.

Alache on the other hand was fighting for his second LAPT title. After winning, Alache became the third player to win multiple LAPT titles.

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Alache and Teixeira in LAPT8 Chile

The two haven't slowed down since their bout and both are in the top 5 players competing for this season's LAPT Player of the Year.

Alache is currently leading the race with 674.62 points while Teixeira is in 4th with 541.01.

The majority of Alache's points came from his victory in Chile, but he added another 172.08 points in Panama with a victory in a $600 Freezeout and a 58th-place finish in the Main Event.

Then Alache finished 5th in the $5,000 High Roller in Peru for another 156.68 points.

That's the tournament Alache found himself seated next to Teixeira on Day 1a, a coincidence that everyone's ecstatic happened again.

While the two are currently even in chips, Teixeira is trailing Alache in the POY race by 133.61 points. The bulk of Teixeira's 541.01 points came from her runner-up finish in Chile and --just like Alache-- she scored another pair of points in Panama.

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Alache and Teixeira in LAPT8 Peru

Teixeira finished 6th in the $1,100 NLHE Re-entry for 101.32 points and picked up another 41.23 points when she finished 5th in a $600 Freezeout.

Teixeira then picked up another 92.45 points in Peru when she finished 9th in the $1,100 NLHE Re-entry.

Their results are so similar that we'd be convinced they're the same person if they weren't seated next to each other all the time.

But they're not, we know they know they're not. We think.

One is a bubbly Brazilian woman quickly climbing the country's poker ranks while the other is a stoic, bearded Chilean player approximately 2.2 Teixeiras in size.

One thing they do match up in is poker skill.

We'll see which one can make it further this event.

Photography from LAPT8 Uruguay by Carlos Monti. You can also follow the action in Spanish and in Portuguese.

Alexander Villegas is a freelance contributor to the PokerStars Blog.

WCOOP 2015: Matthew "mjw006" Wakeman wins first COOP in Event 36 ($215 NLH 1R1A)

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Thursday was a fine day for some good ol' No Limit Hold'em and WCOOP Event 36 gave players plenty of room to move. It was a $215 buy-in No Limit Hold'em tournament which gave players the chance to rebuy should they find themselves without chips plus a bonus add-on if they survive the first two hours.

The tournament drew 1,040 players to put more the 2/3rd of the guarantee in play before a single rebuy or add-on. Players hit the rebuy button 592 times and 648 players decided to put another 5,000 in their stack to boost the money. All told, they created a prize pool worth $456,000 with the last 135 of them set to earn a piece.

The tournament played down over 28 levels on Day 1 with only 28 players remaining when they paused action for the evening. gambler6868 had a comfortable lead as the only player to top 1 million to sit him with 200K more than second place Edison82. They returned for Day 2 and quickly reached the last two tables. The stacks stayed deep and it took more than two hours to reach the final table bubble.

2015 WCOOP Event 36 Day 2.jpg

Ti0373 was the only late running player with past WCOOP success, winning two titles during the 2012 series, but that didn't stop him from catching a bad beat. Ti0373 shoved his 600k stack in the middle with [ts][td] and Matthew "mjw006" Wakeman called with [ad][tc]. Great spot for a double but the [ac][qd][2d] took care of that and Ti0373's elmination set the final table.

Matthew "mjw006" Wakeman led the way with only nine players remaining, he was looking to add a WCOOP title to his Super Tuesday and Thursday Thriller titles. Barrrii was the player at the table with the most recent WCOOP success after finishing fifth in WCOOP-19 just a week ago.

It was FabOne1986 sporting the biggest result of those at the final table. He doens't have a WCOOP title or a major win to his credit, but his runner-up finish in WCOOP 2012 Event 42 was good enough to send $184,000 his direction. They all joined together and were ready to find a new WCOOP champion.

2015 WCOOP Event 36 Final Table.jpg

Event 36 Final Table

Seat 1: ramastar88 (2,286,715 in chips)
Seat 2: Matthew "mjw006" Wakeman (1,661,461 in chips)
Seat 3: Edison82 (1,493,147 in chips)
Seat 4: ThieF83 (432,208 in chips)
Seat 5: gambler6868 (1,415,215 in chips)
Seat 6: Brixinka (1,342,798 in chips)
Seat 7: alwayswin222 (419,836 in chips)
Seat 8: FabOne1986 (687,678 in chips)
Seat 9: Barrrii (1,660,942 in chips)

Blinds: 17,500/35,000 with 4,375 Ante

gambler6868 gambles and Jacks fail

No one at the final table was in immediate danger, though alwayswin222 and ThieF83 weren't exactly flush in chips, so it took two big pairs to get chips in the middle after the first orbit.

ramastar89 began the action with a min-raise under the gun and Wakeman raised it up next to act. gambler6868 moved all-in for just shy of 1 million and only Wakeman called.

Wakeman: [kd][kh]
gambler6868: [jd][jh]

It was a tough cooler for gambler6868, running a comfortable stack straight into Kings, and the board ran out a harmless [qc][7c][5h][6h][4s] to send him out in 9th place for $5,472.

alwayswin222 doesn't always win

alwayswin222 tried a few times to double up his stack but couldn't find anything takers for his shoves. He was picking up the blinds and antes until he found someone to give him a chance.

alwayswin222 open shoved from the cutoff for 372,961 with [as][5c] and FabOne1986 looked him up with [ks][qs] from the button. It was another good spot to get a double but the virtual dealer was unkind when the flop came [qh][4s][3c].

There was still the gutshot wheel draw and over card to catch but alwayswin222 blanked the [jd] turn and [7h] river to exit the tournament in 8th place for $9,120.

Brixinka goes racing and crashes out

Brixinka was floating a short stack around the final table and treading water as the payouts climb. Finding [as][jd] on the button had to look pretty good when action folded to him. He moved all-in for a bit over 1 million and Barrrii called in the big blind with [9h][9c].

They were off to the races and it looked good early for Brixinka when the flop came [qd][jc][4d] to give him the lead. The [ah] turn gave Brixinka Aces up and the remaining nines to dodge on the river. It would only be a double up story if the river blanked, but it was the two-out [9s] on the river for the bad beat elimination.

JackAce claims another to get them shorter

Just a few hands later, it was FabOne1986 picking up [ac][jd] and taking a stand. Wakeman opened to 168,575 and FabOne1986 three-bet shoved for 529,640 total from the button. The blinds let their hands go and Wakeman quickly called with [qh][qs].

Another JackAce all-in and FabOne1986 couldn't find help on the [kc][5d][5s] flop. It got worse on the turn, Wakeman hit a set when [qd] hit to leave FabOne1986 looking for one of the remaining tens in the deck. He missed the [6d] river and was gone in 6th place for $18,240.

Sticking with the theme, Barrrii get his own JackAce

JackAce wasn't running well at the final table and the hand popped up once more on the next orbit. TheiF83 opened the action when a shove from the button with [5h][5s] and Barrrii reshoved to isolate from the small blind with [ah][jc].

Just like Brixinka earlier, Barrrii hit the [qd][js]2c] flop to take the lead. Unlike Brixinka, the flopped pair of jacks held up as the board completed [qs] and [td] to give TheiF83 the win. The big ace hand held up and TheiF83 was eliminated in 5th place for $22,800.

Barrrii lives by the JackAce and dies by it as well

It's tough to make up, seeing the same hand pop up over and over, but it happened again. Barrrii knocked out TheiF83 with it and play settled down for an entire level. Then he found the hand again.

Wakeman opened to 211,575 from under the gun and Barrrii moved all-in from the small blind with [ah][js]. ramastar88 let his big blind go and Wakeman called with [qh][qs], ahead but covered by Barrrii.

Unlike the previous runouts with the JackAce, there was no drama as the board completed [td][7d][4c][5s][8h] to give Wakeman the big double up and drop Barrrii under one big blind.

He survived one all-in but was gone shortly afterwards at the hands of ramastar88 to give Barrrii 4th place money.

Wakeman and ramastar88 get tricky; does not end well for ramastar88

Plenty of action to go around with only the all-in hands9999 run out with all the betting done preflop. The more detailed hands weren't ending with someone going out until ramastar88 and Wakeman played an interesting three-handed pot.

ramastar88 limped from the small blind and Wakeman checked his option to see the all-diamond [ad][7d][2d] flop. ramastar88 led out for 133,335 then three-bet after facing a raise from Wakeman. Not content to leave it there, Wakeman put in a fourth bet to 632,934 and ramastar88 decided to call to see a turn.

ramastar88 bet another 170,000 after the [qs] turn, stopping and going, and Wakeman raised it up once more. Enough to put ramastar88 at risk and he called with the flush [td][8d]. Unfortunately for ramastar88, he had zero outs going to the river when Wakeman tabled the better flush [qd][4d].

ramastar88 will have to wait another day to add a COOP title to his MicroMillions win from 2013.

Wakeman survives a long battle to win Event 36

Seat 2: Matthew "mjw006" Wakeman (8,636,185 in chips)
Seat 3: Edison82 (2,763,815 in chips)

Wakeman began heads up play with a better than 3-to-1 chip lead but Edison82 took command without putting too much at risk. He won four straight seven-digit pots, never getting all-in, to move ahead.

The advantage didn't last long as our JackAce friend showed up once again. Wakeman was all-in with [ah][jc] to race against Edison82's [ts][td] and won thanks to the [jd][6h][4s] flop. The hand pushed Wakeman back into the lead and he stayed there.

The battle raged for almost 90 minutes before Wakeman was able to wrestle the title away from a determined Edison82. Naturally the final hand fit the framework of the other big hands in the tournament. Wakeman was holding 9 million of the 11 million chips in play and he put them in the middle with [ac][jc].

Edison82 found two Broadway cards and went with it, but behind holding [kh][jd]. This time there were no surprises on the board as it dropped [qs][4d][3h][qh][ts] to send all the chips to Wakeman and leave Edison82 with a runner-up result.

Wakeman was already a successful online player before this tournament and can now add WCOOP Champion to his profile along with the $88,080 bankroll boost. This title joins along with his previous Super Tuesday and Thursday victories, his own version of the Triple Crown.

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Matthew "mjw006" Wakeman

WCOOP-36: $215 NL Hold'em (1R1A)
Entrants: 1,040 (592 Rebuys, 648 Add-ons)
Prize pool: $456,000
Places paid: 135

1. Matthew "mjw006" Wakeman (Australia) $82,080.00
2. Edison82 (Brazil) $58,504.00
3. ramastar88 (Argentina) $43,776.00
4. Barrrii (Belgium) $32,832.00
5. TheiF83 (Cyprus) $22,800.00
6. FabOne1986 (Germany) $18,240.00
7. Brixinka (Czech Republic) $13,680.00
8. alwayswin222 (Germany) $9,120.00
9. gambler6868 (Cyprus) $5,472.00


LAPT8 Uruguay: Country captains

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Oscar Alache scored his first tournament cash just two years ago but quickly rose to become Chile's fourth highest-earning player.

Alache is just a few thousand dollars shy of breaking the $500,000 mark and is currently leading the LAPT8 Player of the Year race.

"It's a hard race," Alache said. "And I obviously want to win but I feel I've already reached a prestigious score that I'm proud of.

"But hopefully it goes well here and I can get the title in Brazil."

Aside from the events here in LAPT8 Uruguay, players can collect POY points in the Grand Final in São Paulo in November.

While poker has been exploding in Brazil and growing quickly in Argentina, Alache said there hasn't been much growth in Chile.

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Oscar Alache

"There aren't as many players [in Chile] as in Brazil or Argentina," Alache said. "I think Chileans still just associate it with casinos and not as a game of skill."

Alache says he hopes he can help change this view.

"I don't want really want to be a poker celebrity," Alache said. "I just want to help people understand the game more and see that you can make it far if you try."

As Alache said, Brazilians and Argentinians have already realized this en masse and are flocking to the game.

Several of them flocked here to Punta del Este, which is conveniently sandwiched between the two countries.

Some players from the Argentinian contingent include Jose Ignacio Barbero, who became the first player to win two LAPT titles after winning back-to-back tournaments in LAPT3 Uruguay and LAPT3 Peru.

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Jose Ignacio "Nacho" Barbero

To his left is another staple of Argentinian poker, Team PokerStars Pro Leo Fernandez.

Fernandez has an LAPT title of his own after he won LAPT5 Panama and came close to another major victory after he finished 2nd in the 2011 PCA High Roller.

While several of Fernandez's countrymen are in the field, his red-spade brethren have yet to take a seat this tournament.

In fact, they're probably seated about five miles in the air somewhere over the Atlantic Ocean.

Both Team PokerStars Pro Andre Akkari and Friend of PokerStars Felipe Ramos are currently on their way from Barcelona and will play tomorrow.

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Team PokerStars Pro Andre Akkari, currently in transit

There's no lack of Brazilians though.

Among them is Bruno Politano, who brought a sea of yellow and green to Las Vegas after he made the 2014 November Nine.

Politano was the first Brazilian player to make the November Nine but chances are good he won't be the last.

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Bruno Politano

Photography from LAPT8 Uruguay by Carlos Monti. You can also follow the action in Spanish and in Portuguese.

Alexander Villegas is a freelance contributor to the PokerStars Blog.

LAPT8 Uruguay: Springtime in the fall

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While Punta del Este proudly states its east-ness in its name, the city is pretty far south.

Not many people know what it's like to live this far south since about 88 percent of the world's population lives in the Northern Hemisphere and the only two major cities more south than Punta del Este are Melbourne and Auckland.

So, while most of the world's summer is ending, Punta del Este is just warming up.

It's springtime in the 34th parallel south and the weather isn't the only thing picking up.

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Casapueblo in Punta del Este

In preparation for the yearly wave of tourists that flock to Punta del Este, the Conrad is hosting more than a poker tournament; it's hosting a mini poker festival.

Throughout the next five days, players will have 10 different events to warm the very core of their poker hearts. Aside from the $3,300 LAPT8 Uruguay Main Event, players have a shot at a $200 Mix Max Freezeout today.

In addition to Day 1b of the Main Event, tomorrow will host a $200 PLO Freezeout at 5pm and a $600 NLHE Turbo Freezeout at 7pm.

After that, players will have a Dealer's Choice PLO.

But the choice won't be high or low, it'll be four or five.

Sunday's $200 PLO will allow players to chose between four and five card PLO every round.

If players bust out of that, they can fire as many bullets as they want in the $1,100 NLHE Re-entry event that day. There will be one flight at noon and another at 7pm.

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A coveted LAPT trophy

Then, on Sunday, players will get a shot at the $5,000 High Roller.

In the early days of the Latin American Poker Tour, the High Roller was the only side serving of poker to the main event.

But those days are gone.

As the region's appetite for poker continues to grow, so do the number of events.

Once the summer is in full gear in late November, so will the Latin American Poker Tour.

While the still brisk Punta del Este is hosting 10 events, the Grand Final in São Paulo --held during the Brazilian Series of Poker-- will have 32 different events.

While players can enjoy nine straight days of poker there, an early bustout will have the consolation prize of being able to enjoy the Brazilian summer.

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Celebratory Brazilians

Photography from LAPT8 Uruguay by Carlos Monti. You can also follow the action in Spanish and in Portuguese.

Alexander Villegas is a freelance contributor to the PokerStars Blog.

LAPT8 Uruguay: The small, the fierce, the day 1a field

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After players came back from their 75-minute dinner break, they were greeted with 300/600 blinds and a closed registration desk.

The total number of entrants for LAPT8 Uruguay Day 1a is now officially 91.

While it's not the largest field to grace the LAPT, it's one of the fiercest. This has led many people across Uruguay to dub this the "Joe Pesci" of tournament fields.

This petite, tightly-wound field is now down to 51 players but will only get more aggressive as the tournament goes on.

Several of these players have been there and know what it takes to get back there.

One of those players is Dr. Mario Lopez.

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Dr. Mario Lopez

No, the Dr. isn't a poker nickname, Lopez is a medical doctor with more than $1.4 million in tournament earnings.

Lopez's largest score came just a month ago, when he won the largest-ever Estrellas Poker Tour Main Event.

Lopez defeated a field of 3,292 players that event to win $451,107, his largest cash to date.

But the doctor isn't a one-trick pony; before that victory, Lopez already had nearly $1 million in live-tournament earnings.

Lopez had a few six-figure scores on the Argentinian poker circuit and then got another when he won LAPT7 Chile last year.

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Mario Lopez and his LAPT7 Chile trophy

Lopez's second-largest chunk of change was more recent.

Just a few months ago at the World Series of Poker, Lopez finished 2nd in the $1,111 Little One for One Drop and won $399,455.

Up until that WSOP, no Argentinian had won a WSOP bracelet. Just a few weeks before Lopez's runner-up finish, Ivan Luca won a $1,000 NLHE event to become the first ever Argentinian to don a WSOP bracelet.

Lopez came close to making it two.

There's no shortage of Argentinian contenders though.

Another fierce Argentinian in the field is reigning LAPT Player of the Year, Horacio Nicolas.

Nicolas has been in every LAPT field this season. Part of Nicolas's POY prize was a buy-in to every Main Event this season.

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Horacio Nicolas and his Season 7 POY trophy

Nicolas finished Season 7 with nearly 600 points more than POY runner-up, Amos Ben (Ben, the Season 6 POY, was actually fighting to defend his title).

While Nicolas only has one LAPT Main Event cash this season, he's currently well-above average with nearly 80,000 chips.

Side events brought Nicolas to the top of the leaderboard last season, but now he's hoping to make his first deep Main Event run.

Photography from LAPT8 Uruguay by Carlos Monti. You can also follow the action in Spanish and in Portuguese.

Alexander Villegas is a freelance contributor to the PokerStars Blog.

LAPT8 Uruguay: The growing percentage

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The percentage of women in the field has been slowly increasing as the day's progressed.

At the start of the day, women were just 2.2 percent of the field.

Now the field is 5.7 percent female.

There were no additional female entries throughout the day though, there's just been a persistent duo of LAPT regulars who've made it to the last level of the day.

Aside from their gender, the two remaining ladies also share the same nationality.

Renata Teixeira and Ale Braga both hail from Brazil and are both looking for another LAPT cash.

Braga has four LAPT cashes and is considered to be one of Brazil's top-three female players.

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Ale Braga

One of the other players in that coveted top-three is seated just one table away from Braga.

Renata Teixeira became the first female player to get heads-up for an LAPT title earlier this season and is now 4th in the LAPT8 Player of the Year race.

While it took eight seasons before Teixeira got heads-up for a title, another woman matched her finish the very next tournament.

In LAPT8 Panama, Ukraine's Olga Iermolcheva got heads-up against Canada's Shakeeb Kazemipur.

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Olga Iermolcheva

It was a long heads-up match and the lead changed several times but in the end, Kazemipur came out on top.

For the second tournament in a row, the LAPT was denied its first female champion on the final elimination.

Poker --especially in Latin America-- has typically been a man's game, but this season has strongly challenged that notion.

According to Teixeira, there are also more women playing poker in Brazil than ever before.

It's not a matter of if anymore, it's a matter of when a woman will win an LAPT title.

Both Teixeira and Braga are hoping that day will be this Tuesday.

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Renata Teixeira

Photography from LAPT8 Uruguay by Carlos Monti. You can also follow the action in Spanish and in Portuguese.

Alexander Villegas is a freelance contributor to the PokerStars Blog.

LAPT8 Uruguay: Patricio Rojas leads day 1a, hunts 2nd LAPT title

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Day 1a of LAPT8 Uruguay is in the books and Patricio Rojas is in the lead with 133,100.

This isn't the first time Rojas has had the lead in an LAPT.

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Patricio Rojas

A few years ago, Rojas started the final table of LAPT6 Peru with the chip lead and went on to win the tournament. Rojas is now looking to join the quickly-expanding list of two-time LAPT champions.

There's still a long way to go though and Rojas already has some stiff competition.

Two-time LAPT champion Oscar Alache also survived Day 1a and will be fighting for his third LAPT title.

While that hat-trick is still in the works, Alache got another one at the start of the day. For the third time this season, Alache has been seated next to Renata Teixeira.

Their first encounter was in LAPT8 Chile, where the two went heads-up for the title.

Then the two got seated right next to each other on Day 1a in LAPT8 Peru and it happened again today.

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Alache and Teixeira playing together in Chile...

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...in Peru...

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...and in Uruguay

The two say they've gotten to know each other pretty well and both have made it through Day 1a. Alache made it through the day with 44,400 while Teixeira survived with 30,100.

Teixeira is also one of two Brazilian women that survived the first 10 levels of play.

Ale Braga also made it through to Day 2 and will start that day with 43,800.

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Ale Braga

Another Day 1a survivor is Horacio Nicolas, the reigning LAPT Player of the Year. Nicolas made it through the day 3rd in chips with 115,000.

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Horacio Nicolas

Nicolas won his POY title without a single Main Event cash last season but is now trying to get his second LAPT Main Event cash this season.

Argentina's sole Team PokerStars Pro, Leo Fernandez, also made it through day with 77,700.

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Team PokerStars Pro Leo Fernandez

But these players represent the minority.

Ninety-one players started the day and nearly two-thirds of them were eliminated. A few of the fallen include Mario Lopez, Jose Ignacio "Nacho" Barbero, Amos Ben and Nick Yunis.

Their tournament isn't over though.

Players have another shot in Day 1b tomorrow and the field is expected to be larger than today's.

Join us tomorrow at noon UTC-3:00 as we see who shows up to take a shot at the LAPT8 Uruguay title.

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Photography from LAPT8 Uruguay by Carlos Monti. You can also follow the action in Spanish and in Portuguese.

Alexander Villegas is a freelance contributor to the PokerStars Blog.

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