Poker 2013 Final Table

2021年6月2日
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The 2013 World Series of Poker main event has reached a final table after seven days of grueling action for the final nine grinders. At around 3 a.m. local time in Las Vegas on Tuesday, an official final table of nine was formed after 2001 main event champion Carlos Mortensen was eliminated in 10th on the bubble.
*World Series Of Poker 2013 Final Table
*Poker 2013 Final Table Online
*Poker 2018 Final Table
A total of 6,352 players turned out for this year’s no-limit hold’em championship, and some big names are still alive to fight for the $8.3 million first-place prize this fall.
*Final table of EPT Madrid Grand Final Season 7 Episode 5/5 Players by seat: Eugene Yanayt (USA) Tamas Lendvai (HUN) Juan Maceiras (ESP) Andrey Danilyuk (RUS) Andrew Li (USA) Ivan Freitez (VEN.
*POKER STARTS AT 2:00 PLS ENJOY IT AND SUBSCRIBE.The World Poker Tour (WPT) is a series of international poker tournaments and associated television series br.
Here’s a look at the chip stacks:
JC Tran — 38,000,000; Amir Lehavot — 29,700,000; Marc McLaughlin — 26,525,000; Jay Farber — 25,975,000; Ryan Riess — 25,875,000; Sylvain Loosli — 19,600,000; Michiel Brummelhuis — 11,275,000; Mark Newhouse — 7,350,000; and David Benefield — 6,375,000.
Tran is by far the most accomplished no-limit hold’em tournament player at the final table. He has won nearly $9 million lifetime in poker tournaments over his career. He is looking for his third WSOP bracelet. He has been deep in the main event before, but never this deep.
The final table of nine players was reached on July 15, with the November Nine returning on November 4. The Main Event attracted 6,352 entrants, creating a prize pool of $59,708,800. The top 648 finishers placed in the money, with the top nine players receiving at least $733,224. The winner of the Main Event earned $8,359,531. He has $19.5 million in career earnings, including $3.1 million in 2013. To go along with the cash, Negreanu also became the first player to make a final table at each of the three WSOP locations.
Despite being the chip leader, Tran will have to run well to beat the likes of Lehavot, Newhouse and Benefield. Lehavot won a WSOP bracelet in 2011; Newhousea took down a World Poker Tour title in 2006 for $1,519,020; and David Benefield was once one of the toughest high-stakes cash game players on the Internet prior to his decision to focus on school.
2001 Champ Runs Out Of Steam
Mortensen was looking to have a chance at his second main event title, but he fell just short of another piece of poker history. It was Tran who busted him.
Mortensen’s final hand began with him raising to 800,000 from the cutoff. Action was folded to Tran, who called 400,000 more from the big blind. Both players saw a flop of 10 6 3. Tran checked, Mortensen bet the same amount of 800,000, and Tran called.
The 9 fell on the turn. Tran shoved, which put Mortensen all in for about 3.5 million (about nine big blinds). Mortensen thought about it briefly before making the call.
Tran tabled the 8 7 for a straight, while Mortensen exposed the A 9 for a pair and the nut-flush draw. The pair was meaningless, as he could only stay alive with another club.
The 2 on the river ended the tournament for Mortensen. He walked away with $573,204 in prize money for his efforts.
Tran played excellent all day, and even knocked out a player by picking off a huge bluff.
Tran Makes Great Call To Bust Fabian Ortiz in 17th Place
One of Tran’s defining moments of the day began when Fabian Ortiz raised to 500,000 preflop. Action was folded to Tran, and he called. The flop fell K 9 7. Tran checked. Ortiz fired 500,000, and Tran decided to make the call.
The 4 landed on the turn, and action went check-check. The 6 on the river prompted another check from Tran. Ortiz shoved for 2.78 million.World Series Of Poker 2013 Final Table
Tran went into the tank before making the call.
Ortiz turned over the A Q for a stone-cold bluff, and Tran exposed the 9 8 for a pair of nines. He took the pot and knocked out Ortiz.
Tran and the other finalists played very well, but they were also aided by a couple of big names bowing out relatively early in the day.
Yevgeniy Timoshenko Eliminated in 22nd Place
Yevgeniy Timoshenko, arguably the most successful player in online poker tournament history, was short when he shoved for for 2,165,000 in the hijack. Next to act was Jan Nakladalt, and he made the call. The two were eventually heads up. Timoshenko flipped over the A 8, while Nakladal had A J.
The flop fell A J 10, putting Timoshenko in horrible shape. The king on the turn gave him some outs for a chop, but the jack on the river sealed the elimination. Timoshenko left with $285,408 and disappointment.
Steve Gee Eliminated in 24th Place
Steve Gee was looking to make the improbable back-to-back final table, but he fell short. His final hand began when he opened to 250,000 from the small blind. Anton Morgenstern, who was the chip leader at the time, raised to 550,000 from the big blind. Gee went all in for 2.93 million. Morgenstern called with pocket eights and was up against Gee’s 10 7.
The board ran out Q 8 2 A 3 and last year’s ninth-place finisher was gone with $285,408 in his pocket, but with another main event disappointment.
Morgenstern used the hand to build a huge chip lead, but he eventually crashed and burned.
Massive Chip Leader With 24 Left Exists In 20th
With close to 30 million with just 24 left, Morgenstern looked like a near lock to make the final table. However, Newhouse got in the way.
Newhouse was relatively short when he doubled up with A-Q versus Morgenstern’s pocket eights. A little bit later, the largest hand of the tournament at that point went down, and it was Newhouse vs. Morgenstern once again. The action began with Morgenstern raising to 325,000 from the hijack. Mark Newhouse called on the button. Everyone else folded.
The flop fell A A 2.
Morgenstern led for 425,000. Newhouse just called.
The 3 on the turn prompted a 750,000 bet from Morgenstern. Newhouse woke up with a raise to 2 million. Morgenstern made it 3.9 million. Newhouse moved all in for just fewer than 11 million total. Morgenstern called to put the North Carolina native at risk.
Newhouse exposed pocket deuces for a flopped full house, while Morgenstern had A-J for tips. The German was in bad shape, and a 4 on the river didn’t change things.
After the hand, Newhouse had more than 22 million, which was good for the chip lead, while Morgenstern had about 5 million and was one of the short stacks. He exited in 20th.
Stay tuned to CardPlayer.com for a closer look at all the finalists.Related Articles
As the 2013 World Series of Poker makes its preparations for the start of the $10,000 Championship Event this weekend, there are still a few preliminary events that are left on the schedule. One of those tournaments, the $50,000 Poker Players’ Championship, has worked its way to the final table while the second is down to heads up action to determine a champion later today.
Event #55 – $50,000 Poker Players’ Championship
The tournament that most of the eyes in the Amazon Room have been on is one of the most coveted titles at the World Series, the Poker Players’ Championship. Because of its mixture of poker disciplines, the champion of the tournament is often thought of as “the best poker player in the world” – at least for a year! On Wednesday, 26 players came back for battle in the pursuit of the WSOP bracelet and the coveted Chip Reese Memorial Trophy.
Leading the way on Wednesday was Don Nguyen, who was the only player over the two million chip mark after Tuesday’s action. The remainder of the leaderboard was stacked with excellent players including former World Champions Jonathan Duhamel, Joe Hachem and Huck Seed, 2013 WSOP bracelet winner Erick Lindgren, popular Canadian pro and two-time WSOP bracelet winner Greg Mueller and 2009 $50K H.O.R.S.E. (the predecessor of the PPC) victor David Bach. With the notoriety of winning this particular event weighing on the minds of all (as well as the factor that ten players would walk away with no payout from the tournament), the players got to business fairly quickly.
A short-stacked John Juanda was able to find a double on the first hand of action, but he would be the first casualty of the day also as that double wasn’t enough to bolster his stack. Hachem was next to go during the Seven Card Stud Hi/Lo segment, never getting the right cards to prevent his chip stack from slipping away. Down to 24 players, the tables redrew and continued to send professionals to the rail.
Stephen Chidwick, Mueller, Lindgren, Bach and Justin Smith would all be gone before the first break of the day was taken, bringing the field to 18 players and intensifying the pressure as the money bubble approached. When Tommy Hang sent Max Pescatori to the rail in Razz around 6PM, the bubble was upon the men on the baize. After almost an hour and a half of play, the double eliminations of Australian poker legend Gary Benson (by George Danzer) and Joe Cassidy (by Seed) popped the bubble, with both men earning a $55,947 piece of the 16th place prize.
Down to 15 players, Nguyen was still in the lead, but Danzer had closed to less than 200K in chips behind him. Still in the mix also were John Hennigan, Bryn Kenney, David Benyamine, Duhamel, Minh Ly, Matthew Ashton, Mike Wattel, Kevin Song and Seed.
Over the next four hours, the players would work their way down to the eight handed final table that will contest the Poker Players’ Championship this afternoon. Song was an early elimination in 14th place, dropping to Michael Glick in Limit Hold’em, as Nguyen improved his lead by knocking off Hang in 13th place by the time the dinner bell rang. After dinner and with six-figure paydays awaiting all the players, the play predictably would slow down.
Kenney would find his way to the rail in 12th place just after 11PM, his 10♠ 6♠ flopping a couple of spades (but not finding a third) to fall to Hennigan’s pocket sevens during a round of No Limit Hold’em. Once Seed fell at the hands of Ashton (his A-J failing to catch against Ashton’s Big Slick) and Glick dropped out in tenth place (Ly got him during Omaha Hi/Lo), the unofficial final table of nine convened with one more knockout remaining on the agenda.
Ashton would make the first big move during nine-handed play, scooping an Omaha Hi/Lo pot against Nguyen to push his stack near the three million mark (Nguyen was still over five million after the hand). After a short stacked Mike Gorodinsky’s A-9-8-7 fell to Benyamine’s A-10-6-2 in Pot Limit Omaha (the final board read 6-4-10-J-J), the prestigious final table for the Poker Players’ Championship was set:
1. Don Nguyen, 5.068 million
2. Matthew Ashton, 2.996 million
3. George Danzer, 2.868 million
4. David Benyamine, 2.709 million
5. Minh Ly, 2.307 million
6. Jonathan Duhamel, 1.627 million
7. John Hennigan, 1.412 million
8. Mike Wattel, 810,000
While it looks like Nguyen is cruising to the title, Ashton and Danzer are both men that will have to be reckoned with. They have both had outstanding 2013 WSOP runs and it isn’t out of the question that they could rise up to challenge Nguyen. Benyamine, Ly, Duhamel and Hennigan could also present a roadblock to Nguyen, while Wattel has his work cut out for him if he is to come back to take the championship.
Event #56 – $2500 No Limit Hold’em
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The 23 players who came back on Wednesday for the finale of Event #56 were unable to work down to a champion early this morning, with two men returning on Thursday to complete their work a crown a victor.
The unknown starting the day was O. J. Ojiri, who led the final 23 despite not having even one tournament cash to his credit. Some notables that were looking to take him down were Nicolas Levi, Josh Arieh and Owen Crowe China slot machine. and, with a long day’s work ahead of them, the players wasted little time putting their chips in play.Poker 2013 Final Table Online
Sebastien Comel would knock Ojiri out of the lead, picking off an ill-timed bluff from the chip leader when his A-7 played on a 2-10-Q-A-8 board (Ojiri could only muster K-4 for air) and the bad news would continue for Ojiri. Chris Karambinis used an A-Q to defeat Ojiri’s pocket tens to knock Ojiri down to only 75K and, moments later, he would depart in 19th place at the hands of Crowe when his K-J failed to catch up with Crowe’s A-J.
Down to two tables, the carnage would continue as it became possible for the players to complete the tournament on Wednesday. Crowe would fall victim to Vincent Maglio in a hand where the lead shifted three times. Crowe’s A-J was behind Maglio’s A-K pre-flop, but the A-J-10 flop gave him Aces up and the lead. A Queen on the turn flipped the script, however, giving Maglio Broadway and leaving Crowe drawing to a King to split the pot. The five river wasn’t the card he needed, though, sending Crowe to the rail in 11th and setting the unofficial final table.
After Alex Dovzhenko’s elimination in tenth place, the final table was set with Comel in the lead over Maglio. Arieh lurked in the middle of the pack, while Levi was on a short stack. Levi would depart in ninth place 22 hands into the final table, his A-3 crushed by Nikolaus Teichert’s A-Q, but Arieh would stunningly knock out Comel (who had started to bleed chips) to get his name to the top of the ladder. As the midnight hour approached, five men were still in contention for the championship only separated by 1.8 million chips.
Maglio would make his play for the championship when, on an A-K-10 flop, he would knock off Arieh in fifth place with his Q-J for a flopped Broadway (Arieh’s A-9 never found any help on the turn or river). Maglio would continue his rampage, eliminating Sergey Lebedev in fourth and, after Teichert eliminated Dan Owen in third, heads up action was set.
Although Maglio started the heads up match with the lead, Teichert would flip the table over an hour of action. After completing the tenth level of the day (the WSOP “ten level rule” being put into effect), the players bagged their chips and will come back on Thursday to determine the champion:Poker 2018 Final Table
Nickolaus Teichert, 7.62 million
Vincent Maglio, 5.415 million
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