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Monte Carlo, Kenny Rogers, and the Milly champ

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Catch up on all of this week’s PokerStars Blog content…

  • The latest from EPT Monte Carlo
  • Meet 13th Anniversary Milly winner Wang Li
  • 5-Card Fiction: “Kenny Rogers as The Gambler”

Plus:

Southern Europe’s SCOOP generates €17.6M

LATEST FROM EPT MONTE CARLO

Things are off and running over in Monaco as EPT Monte Carlo kicked off yesterday with two events, including the €10K High Roller. PokerStars Blog is on the ground to bring you all the latest.

Catch up on everything that happened yesterday here, then check back later today for updates on today’s action.

MEET 13TH ANNIVERSARY MILLY WINNER WANG LI

China got it’s first ever Sunday Million winner when Wang Li (known as wangli0402 on PokerStars) took down the 13th Anniversary Sunday Million for $611K.

Our Jason Kirk caught up with Li to find out more about him, his background in poker, and his plans for the future.

Read the interview here.

Your Sunday Million 13th Anniversary champion, wangli0402 of China

5-CARD FICTION: “KENNY ROGERS AS THE GAMBLER”

In the latest addition of 5-Card Fiction, PokerStars Blog’s Martin Harris does a deep dive on Kenny Rogers’ 1978 hit “The Gambler”, the film inspired by it, and the classic hands that play out.

If you want to know when to hold ’em and when to fold ’em, click here.

5-Card Fiction

SOUTHERN EUROPE’S SCOOP GENERATES €17.7M

The first ever Spring Championship of Online Poker (SCOOP) for PokerStars’ Southern Europe shared liquidity market is in the books, with more than 54,000 unique players taking part from France, Spain and Portugal. The advertised €15 million prize pool guarantee was surpassed, reaching €17.7 million when it was all over.

The €250 buy-in Main Event reached a total prize pool of €1,151,340, with “TimeForPlanBtc” beating a field of 4,952 entries to win more than €120,000.

“It was a major achievement to increase Southern Europe’s SCOOP prize pool guarantee from €10 million in 2018 to €15 million in 2019, thanks to the addition of Portugal to the shared liquidity of France and Spain this time around,” said Severin Rasset, Director of Poker Innovation and Operations at The Stars Group. “It has been an enjoyable period for our players and we are delighted with its success. We hope that Italy will join soon so we can continue to improve the offer for all players of these markets.”

Meanwhile, Italy’s SCOOP series was the biggest SCOOP ever held in the country. The 10th edition exceeded its €5 million guarantee to reach €5.7 million, with more than 25,000 players enjoying the 126-event schedule. The €250 buy-in Main Event on April 7 also broke its advertised €500,000 guarantee, reaching €583,650.

MORE CONTENT YOU MIGHT HAVE MISSED:

NJSCOOP returns to PokerStars NJ this May

Mammoth heads back to Dublin next month

Poker In The Ears welcomes Nick Walsh


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Vote for the best bad beat

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As part of our 200 billion hand celebration, we’re giving you the chance to win Spin & Go tickets when you vote on some of your favourite poker moments.

Vote for the most crushing bad beat right here.


The people have spoken!

Yesterday (Thursday, April 25) on Twitter, we asked you for your favourite brutal bad beats from the annals of Twitch poker. You answered, we listened, and here we present you with the top four nominees.

Watch the video clips from the shortlisted hands below, then click the link to the tweet at the bottom to cast your vote.


BAD BEAT #1

LEX VELDHUIS


BAD BEAT #2

XFLIXX


BAD BEAT #3

EASTERDAMN


BAD BEAT #4

bballjake16

Head to this tweet and vote now!


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New Oculus Quest headset PokerStars VR ready

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If you’re a poker player, you might notice something familiar when the new Oculus Quest headset is launched later this year.

PokerStars is the principle launch title for the hotly anticipated headset, which will transform the VR experience for eGamers everywhere.

We can announce that PokerStars VR will be one of the games you’ll be able to play from the moment you first put on the headset.

We think it’s a great fit (excuse the pun). Not least because the new Oculus technology will enable eGamers to play games like PokerStars VR, without the need for a powerful gaming PC.

But also, because it represents another step in the evolution of the game we all love. We’re excited to put PokerStars VR at the forefront of that next leap forward.

So, you can look forward to PokerStars VR being available to play immediately on the new Quest platform later this year. Complete with food to throw, pots to splash, and all the other props now available.

If you’re curious, here’s a sneak peek.

We think it’ll be worth the wait, but let us know what you think.

Book Excerpt: "Mastering Mixed Games" by Dylan Linde (due out in June)

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Do you love poker but have grown tired of no-limit hold’em? Perhaps it’s time to give some of the other variants a try. As you do, Dylan Linde’s new book Mastering Mixed Games: Winning Strategies for Draw, Stud and Flop Games can help you start winning right away.

Due out this June just in time for the World Series of Poker, Linde’s book provides a thorough introduction to a variety of games, including Omaha hi-lo 8 or better, no-limit 2-7 lowball draw, razz, and seven-card stud hi-lo 8 or better — in other words, all the games that feature prominently in “mixed game” formats like dealer’s choice, H.O.R.S.E., and the 8-game mix.

After introducing you to each game, Linde explains basic strategy before moving onto advanced concepts, providing solid preflop and early hand strategies and ranges while explaining how to apply generic concepts to each individual game and how to recognize and exploit game flow.

Linde has accumulated more than $3.8 million in live tournament winnings. He’s additionally won more than $6 million in tournaments online (according to PocketFives), the majority of which coming on PokerStars where Linde plays as “ImaLucSac.” He’s also a mixed-game regular (both live and online), having gathered a wealth of experience to go along with those earnings.

Here’s an excerpt from Linde’s discussion of Omaha 8 or Better strategy, including an Omaha 8 or Better hand quiz.


from Mastering Mixed Games (Omaha 8 or Better):

Omaha 8 or better (also known as Omaha 8) is a split-pot flop game, played with communal board cards as in normal pot-limit Omaha. The pot is split between the best high and the best low hand. Low hands must qualify. This means that they must consist of five cards all eight or lower. You also must use exactly two cards from your hand. You can use one two-card combination for high and a different two-card combination for low but, as in pot-limit Omaha, you cannot use one, three or four cards. For example, if you hold A♣3♠5♠6♠ on a board of K♣Q♣J♣4♣5♥ you do not have a flush. This means that for there to be a low there must be three low cards on the board. You also must have five unique low cards to make a low (straights are fine so A-2-3-4-5 is the nut low). So, if you have A-Q-10-2 on a K-J–5-4-2 board you do not have a low, because you have only four unique low cards. Therefore, having a backup low card is important.

Structurally Omaha 8 plays exactly like limit hold’em, with preflop, flop, turn and river play. This makes it appear that there could be a lot of strategic commonalities between the two but that is not really the case. Preflop play in Omaha eight or better is very different from hold’em. In hold’em, especially limit hold’em, preflop play is an escalation of aggression. Each player attempts to take the lead in the hand and then use this momentum to win uncontested pots. A player opening UTG doesn’t often get cold-called. Instead if someone else enters the pot they usually do so by re-raising. However, this is not the best strategy in Omaha 8. Firstly, each player has more cards, so they will flop a good hand far more often than they will in hold’em. Hands are also more likely to go to showdown and so having the lead in the hand is less valuable since you will often have to make the best hand to win the pot. Furthermore, in Omaha 8, preflop equities run close.

Omaha 8 or Better Quiz

Game:        $20/$40 Mixed Game: 6-handed
Hand:         A♠5♠Q♣J♦
Position:    Small Blind

UTG folds, the hijack folds and the cutoff folds. The button raises to $40. You are in the small blind with A♠5♠Q♣J♦.

Question 1

Do you:          a) Fold          b) Call          c) Raise

(a)                                (b)  ☐                              (c)  ☐

Raise.

You raise to $60. The big blind folds and the button calls $60. The flop is Q♥10♥3♠.

Question 2

Do you:          a) Bet          b) Check

(a)                                (b)  ☐                       

Bet.

You bet $20 and the button raises to $40.

Question 3

Do you:          a) Fold          b) Call          c) Raise

(a)                                (b)  ☐                              (c)  ☐

Raise.

You raise to $60 and the button calls. The turn is the 7♣, leaving the board as Q♥10♥3♠7♣.

Question 4

Do you:          a) Bet          b) Check

(a)                                (b)  ☐                       

Bet.

You bet $40 and the button calls. The river is the 7♠ leaving the board as Q♥10♥3♠7♣7♠.

Question 5

Do you:          a) Bet          b) Check

(a)                                (b)  ☐                       

Bet.

Omaha 8 or Better Quiz: Answers and Analysis

Answer 1
c) Raise

You are certainly ahead of the button’s opening range with your suited ace, two wheel cards and some broadway cards. This hand benefits greatly from achieving a heads-up pot.

Answer 2
a) Bet

You have top pair, a gutshot and both backdoor flushdraw plus backdoor low draw. More than enough equity to build the pot against the button’s range.

Answer 3
c) Raise

This is a great spot for the button to put some pressure on your hands that are primarily comprised of low cards and may either fold immediately or on high turns. On this texture your opponent is also more weighted towards draws when you do not have any blockers to flush draws but do have a blocker to top set and strong two pairs. By raising you can extract value from hands with worse showdown value and still not overexpose yourself when they do have a better high hand. You also prevent the in position player from being able to check turns and get a half-priced turn card by raising the flop.

Answer 4
a) Bet

No reason to stop value-betting your top pair. To go along with your gutshot you also have a weak low draw. Your opponent will have many hands with worse absolute showdown value or draws that need to continue to the river.

Answer 5
a) Bet

Your hand still has a lot of showdown value and you will have some bluff combos in this scenario. Some hands with which you may have three-bet the flop now need to bluff, such as A-K-J-x with not many hearts or A-J-9-3. Thus, your opponent will need to bluff-catch with worse Q-x and some 10-x to keep you from bluffing with impunity, given the great price being laid on your river bet.

 


Mastering Mixed Games: Winning Strategies for Draw, Stud and Flop Games is available for pre-order in paperback and as an e-book at D&B Poker.

D&B Publishing (using the imprint D&B Poker) was created by Dan Addelman and Byron Jacobs 15 years ago. Since then it has become one of the leading publishers of poker books with titles by Phil Hellmuth, Jonathan Little, Mike Sexton, Chris Moorman, Dr. Patricia Cardner, Lance Bradley, Greg Raymer, Martin Harris and more, all of which are available at D&B Poker.

EPT Monte Carlo 2019: Results

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Event #8 – NLHE Hyper Turbo
Dates: April 26, 2019
Buy-in: €550
Entries: 168
Prize pool: €81,480

POS NAME COUNTRY PRIZE
1 Jiayu Ruan China €16,110*
2 Vahe Ter-Khachatryan Armenia €12,000*
3 Joe Nalbandyan Russia €10,500*
4 Nicola Benedetto Italy €6,800
5 Domenico Romano Italy €5,450
6 Marco Reggini Italy €4,190
7 Michael Soyza Malaysia €3,050
8 Imed Mahmoud Tunisia €2,200
9 Eric Abbas France €1,825
10 Plateau Gaetab France €1,550
11 Glen Cymbaluk Canada €1,550
12 Yan Li China €1,350
13 Skander Kamoun Tunisia €1,350
14 Andreas Vlachos Greece €1,220
15 Jean Minassian France €1,220
16 Ekrem Sanioglu Turkey €1,100
17 Ivar Orn Boovarsson Iceland €1,100
18 Eusebiu Jalba Romania €985
19 Tarik Ozdemir Germany €985
20 Enrico Pagnucco Italy €985
21 Jessica Drissi France €900
22 Zhapar Sultanov Kazakhstan €900
23 Alberto Bari Argentina €900
24 Borge Sandsgaard Norway €815
25 Alexandre La Vaillant France €815
26 Yehia Said Egypt €815
27 Zorlucan Er Turkey €815

* three-way deal

EPT Monte Carlo: Image gallery

Vote for the best roller coaster hand

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As part of our 200 billion hand celebration, we’re giving you the chance to win Spin & Go tickets when you vote on some of your favourite poker moments.

Vote for the best rollercoaster hand right here.


The people have spoken!

Yesterday (Saturday, April 27) on Twitter, we asked you for your favourite roller coaster hands from the annals of Twitch poker. You answered, we listened, and here we present you with the top four nominees.

Watch the video clips from the shortlisted hands below, then click the link to the tweet at the bottom to cast your vote.


ROLLER COASTER #1

Spraggy


ROLLER COASTER #2

Lex Veldhuis


ROLLER COASTER #3

Buehlero


ROLLER COASTER #4

Vanessa Kade


Head to this tweet and vote now!


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Kurganov wins the HRC Supersonic

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A recap of the major results from this weekend on PokerStars…

  • High Roller Club titles for Kurganov, Margereson, and Jones
  • Romania’s “sica26” wins Sunday Million for $101K
  • Top 5 High Roller Club results
  • Top 5 results from the weekend majors

 


KURGANOV WINS HRC SUNDAY SUPERSONIC

PokerStars Team Pro Igor Kurganov was back in the High Roller Club winner’s circle this weekend, capturing yet another title with a victory in the $1,050 High Roller Club Sunday Supersonic. Kurganov banked $42,858 for his first-place finish.

Igor Kurganov

Igor Kurganov

A total of 215 entries created a $218K prize pool, which was then shared between the top 24 players. While there were many top tier pros in the late stages, including Parker “tonkaaaa” Talbot (13th – $4,070), Kurganov was able to take it down.

HRC TITLES FOR MARGERESON AND JONES

There were plenty of other recognisable names taking down High Roller Club titles this weekend.

Scott Margereson bagged another online trophy in style, coming out on top in one of the toughest tournaments online. The $2,100 Sunday High Roller always attracts the game’s very best, and this week was no exception. Margereson was able to outlast a 104-entry field–and a final table which included Igor Kurganov (7th) and Romeo “RomeOpro” Romanovsky (3rd)–to win it for $47,930.

Scott “Aggro Santos” Margereson

Meanwhile, Ben “jenbizzle” Jones was busy capturing another title with his victory in the $1,050 Sunday Warm-Up. Jones added $49K to his bankroll after that win.

“sica26” WINS SUNDAY MILLION FOR $101K

The $109 Sunday Million has yet another Romanian winner, with “sica26” emerging victorious over the 10,224-entry field to win $101,770 after a heads-up chop. Their final opponent, Canada’s “slarki1”, banked $81,770 for finishing in second.

This week saw a prize pool of $1,022,400 split between the top 1,826 finishers. Both Fintan “easywithaces” Hand and Lex Veldhuis made the money, finishing in 500th ($314) and 846th ($273) respectively.

Fintan "easywithaces" Hand

Fintan “easywithaces” Hand

TOP 5 HIGH ROLLER CLUB RESULTS

TOURNAMENT PLAYER COUNTRY PRIZE BOUNTIES
High Roller Club: $530 Bounty Builder HR [Progressive KO], $450K Gtd SmilleThHero Austria $43,689.28 $31,942.78
High Roller Club: $1,050 Sunday Warm-Up [8-Max], $225K Gtd jenbizzle United Kingdom $49,818.77
High Roller Club: $2,100 Sunday HR, $200K Gtd Aggro Santos Mexico $47,930.46
High Roller Club: $1,050 Sunday Supersonic [6-Max, Hyper-Turbo], $175K Gtd IgorKurganov United Kingdom $42,858.17
High Roller Club: $530 Sunday 500, $125K Gtd 9antifan9 Czech Republic $30,664.64

TOP 5 WEEKEND MAJOR RESULTS

TOURNAMENT PLAYER COUNTRY PRIZE
$109 SUNDAY MILLION, $1M Gtd sica26 Romania $101,770.63
$215 Sunday Warm-Up, $150K Gtd AchoBogdanov Bulgaria $30,354.69
$215 Sunday Supersonic [6-Max, Hyper-Turbo], $125K Gtd MBGrig Russia $23,396.59
$22 Mini Sunday Million, $175K Gtd Advenator Russia $19,588.21
$11 Sunday Storm, $200K Gtd SlyderS1 Hungary $17,217.37

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VIDEO: Bubble bursts in €100K SHR at #EPTMonteCarlo

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There might not be a live stream of the €100K Super High Roller, but there’s always PokerStars Blog. Watch clips from the bubble right here.


There’s only one person who enjoys a bubble, and that’s the big stack. With eight remaining and seven paid in the €100K Super High Roller at EPT Monte Carlo, however, that big stack switched hands.

We arrived just after Luc Greenwood’s first-hand elimination (A♥10♥ < Mikita Badkiakouski’s A♠J♠), and Sergio Aido was the table short-stack. He got busy quickly, doubling through Badziakouski when his A♦9♦ binked a nine versus A♠K♦.

Aido doubled again the very next hand, this time through chip leader Daniel Dvoress. Aido’s A♣Q♣ won a flip versus Dvoress’s pocket fives, but that didn’t really dent Dvoress’s stack. However, just a couple of hands later, some damage was done.

LATEST | SCHEDULE | NEED-TO-KNOW | TIMELINE | IMAGE GALLERY | RESULTS

Dvoress shoved on Sam Greenwood in a battle of the blinds, and the defending champion (Greenwood took down this event back in January at the 2019 PCA) had a big ICM decision to make. He liked his hand, that much was certain, but was he willing to risk it all when there were some shorter stacks?

Roll the clip.

Greenwood’s A♥Q♥ held up against the A♦8♥ of Dvoress to give the former the chip lead.

Some time then passed with not much action, before finally the bubble burst. Action folded to Koray Aldemir in the cutoff and he opened to 750,000 (with the blinds at 40K/80K with an 80K big blind ante). Aldemir had 480,000 behind, and after Dvoress got a count he set Aldemir all in. Call.

Aldemir had 9♥9♦, Dvoress had A♥K♦, and…well…you’ll see.

A brutal river for Aldemir sent him out in eighth place, while all remaining players are now guaranteed €268K.

Follow live updates from the €100K Super High Roller right here.

Aido beats Cortes as Spain dominates €100K

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There was a time in poker’s modern history, not even all that long ago, when Spanish players were the great underachievers in the world game. Even at EPT Barcelona, where the poker boom was even more incendiary than anywhere else in the world, no Spanish player could make the breakthrough and actually win a tournament.

Eventually, it was here in Monte Carlo in 2015 where Adrian Mateos broke the hoodoo. But today in Monaco, Spain stamped its authority on the game even more emphatically when Sergio Aido and Jesus Cortez went heads up for the €100,000 Super High Roller title.

Time was when you never used to hear Spanish spoken among the last five of a major tournament, but today it was the only language required as these two tried to arrange a deal for more than €2.6 million.

They couldn’t agree on the specifics — Aido’s chip-lead was so dominant it didn’t seem worthwhile — but by that point both men were already assured a payday of €1.147 million. A few hands later, Aido closed it out, winning €1.590 million, the biggest single payday of his career and enough to take him past $10 million in live earnings. He has come a long way since his breakthrough on the UKIPT.

LATEST | SCHEDULE | NEED-TO-KNOW | TIMELINE | IMAGE GALLERY | RESULTS
Quite apart from the size of his pay-check, something about the nature of the victory will also massively please the man from Aviles. He came back to a stack of only seven big blinds today, the shortest in the room, and a strong favourite to go home without a penny to his name. “I was thinking I was 25 percent to make the money,” Aido told us. Instead, he’s the man with the massive trophy and quite possibly the largest prize that will be awarded this week.

Sergio_Aido_Winner_SHR

The first two days of the tournament were the usual story of entries and re-entries building a multi-million euro prize-pool, then a rush to the door as matters went awry, leaving only a handful in search of the big bucks.

In all, there were 52 entries including 18 re-entries, and that left prizes for the top seven. (The full pool hit more than €5 million.) But when Day 2 wrapped late last night, nine players were still involved. That’s how come we still had the bubble to burst today.

READ THE PLAY-BY-PLAY ACCOUNT
(In association with PokerNews)

Luc Greenwood at least didn’t waste much time. He was out on the first hand of the day, losing with a dominated ace. But it was crueller for Koray Aldemir, who went out on the stone bubble, losing a flip to Daniel Dvoress.

Koray Aldemir: Stone bubble

As is customary at this level, no one allowed any emotion to cross their ice-cold visage, but the dealer left it until the last moment to put Dvoress’s ace on the river, giving him the pot with his A♥K♦ and beating Aldemir’s 9♥9♦. We captured all this restrained indifference in full.

That ace cost Aldemir at least €264,860 and left all those remaining with at least that to look forward to. Aido was already likely happiest of them all, having not only successfully laddered into the money having started with relative pittance, but having doubled at least three times to now have a workable stack.

Sergio Aido on the comeback trail

Indeed, he had Day 1 chip-leader Wiktor Malinowski covered in the first post-bubble all-in showdown, and Aido’s A♠K♥ remained best against Malinowski’s A♥8♠. Malinowski, an online cash-game specialist and professional handball player was making his debut on the Super High Roller scene. Making it to the cash represents a fine result in any circumstances, and no doubt he will return.

Fine debut for Wiktor Malinowski

Charlie Carrel became the next man out, leaving in sixth place, earning €327,930, and once again falling foul of Aido. Carrel open-pushed his small blind with 9♣5♣ and Aido picked him off with A♠2♣. Carrel has made two final tables from his two events so far, so he is putting together a profitable week. But he couldn’t get past Aido either.

Charlie Carrel: Two from two

Cortes had taken something of a back seat as his countryman did all the damage, but then inflicted a mortal blow on Mikita Badziakouski as he double up. Cortes’s A♥Q♥ beat Badziakouski’s K♥Q♠, leaving Badziakouski with one blind. And then he was out on the next hand when Cortes again had ace-queen and Badziakouski could manage only six high. Badziakouski took €428,830.

Mikita Badziakouski: Another major score

Dvoress, the overnight chip leader, was next to hit the rail. His A♦9♥ lost to Aido’s K♠K♥. Aido flopped quads for good measure, and Dvoress left with €554,950. He is still hunting his first major title, but is, as ever, playing some of the best poker in the world at the moment.

The three-handed battle was intriguing. The two Spaniards flanked Sam Greenwood, this tournament’s defending champion. No one has ever successfully defended a Super High Roller title on the EPT, but Greenwood was, in theory, now in with an excellent chance.

However, the Spanish quickly completed a perfect pincer movement on Greenwood, with Aido flopping two pair with K♠3♣ to win a massive pot, and then finding pocket kings again to beat Greenwood’s A♥10♠. Greenwood’s €731,530 gets his week off to a decent start too.

The game is up for Sam Greenwood

After the briefest of discussions in the attempt to secure a deal, Aido quickly brushed off the proposed arrangement. Cortes didn’t push it, and they quickly sat down again to play for the title. Aido had something like a five-to-one lead and Cortes had no choice but to push at every opportunity. He got it through a couple of times, but then slammed 9♠2♦ into Aido’s K♣Q♥ and that was the end of that.

Jesus Cortez, left, in heads-up action

“It feels very nice,” Aido said–as he then hopped immediately into the €25,000 single-day high roller. No rest.

 

 

EPT Monte Carlo Super High Roller
Buy-in: €100,000
Entries: 52 (inc. 18 re-entries)
Prize-pool: €5,045,040

1 – Sergio Aido, Spain, €1,589,190
2 – Jesus Cortes, Spain, €1,147,750
3 – Sam Greenwood, Canada, €731,530
4 – Daniel Dvoress, Canada, €554,950
5 – Mikita Badziakouski, Belarus, €428,830
6 – Charlie Carrel, UK, €327,930
7 – Wiktor Malinowski, Poland, €264,860

Win an EPT Open Madrid satellite ticket from PokerStars School

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Looking to improve your poker game? You’re in the right place. Here’s what’s new this week from our friends at PokerStars School.


Question of the Week: EPT Open Madrid Edition

PokerStars School is your ace in the hole for EPT Open Madrid satellite tickets

Have you ever wanted to play a live EPT event? This week PokerStars School wants to give you a chance to qualify for the next one on the schedule — and for free, no less!

You can earn a chance to attend the EPT Open Madrid in June by answering one simple question in 40 words or more. Even better, you already have a head start because you just read the question in the previous paragraph:

Have you ever wanted to play a live EPT event?

Head over to the PokerStars School forums and post your answer before the end of the week. The top five answers as judged by the moderation team will win an $11 EPT Open Madrid satellite ticket, and the overall winner will receive 25T$.


Learn to interpret BB/100 and you’ll know when it’s time to move up in stakes

What is BB/100?

Have you ever heard someone boasting or moaning about their BB/100 in their regular game and thought to yourself, “What in the world are they talking about?”

Put simply, BB/100 is your win rate — the number of big blinds you earn per 100 hands played. It’s one of the best ways to determine when you should consider moving up in stakes, and also a way to measure just how tough your opponents are.

Click over to Pete Clarke’s explanation of one of the most fundamental statistics in poker and learn what your BB/100 says about your game (or your opponents’).


Taking notes: one of the most underrated skills in poker

Taking good notes while you play is one of the most underrated skills in poker

When you’re trying to become a better poker player, it’s tempting to only focus on the big picture. Sometimes, though, leveling up requires getting into the nitty-gritty nooks and crevices of your game that are easy to overlook.

One of those is note-taking. If you’re not in the habit of taking notes on your opponents while you play, you’re probably missing chances to take advantage of your opponents’ tendencies. But where to start? This week OP-Poker’s Nick Walsh offers you not one but two videos focused on the art of taking notes.

The first focuses on why you should take notes, Nick’s process for note-taking while playing, and how you can use those notes in your future games. In the second video, Nick plays a session of $15 Spin & Go’s and talks through his process.

Check out the videos here and here and boost your note-taking game today!


Other new PokerStars School content you might enjoy

• Featured Promotion: 200 Billion Hands Celebration
• Twitch Stream: 100 NL ZOOM with Pete Clarke
• Video: MTT Course | Lesson 9
• Winners Wall: OMG @PokerStars! Did this really happen?


Open a PokerStars account today and start learning from PokerStars School. Click here to get started, and then click here to register for PokerStars School.

EPT Monte Carlo: Charlie Carrel grows up

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For a “former professional poker player” (and former garish dresser), Charlie Carrel has been putting on a stellar display so far at EPT Monte Carlo, final tabling three high rollers in a row for more than half a million euros.

But if it’s not poker, what does Carrel now consider his job? And what does he make of the current high roller world he’s still a crusher in? We caught up with him during his epic Monaco run to find out.


A poker career lasts for as long as you want it to last…assuming things are going well, of course. If you find yourself without a bankroll and without a backer, the duration of your stint in poker is pretty much out of your hands.

But when you’ve racked up millions in earnings and created a name for yourself, why would anyone choose to retire?

It’s a scenario we’ve seen a bunch of times over the past few years. Take Mike McDonald, for example. He went from a regular on the Super High Roller circuit to starting his own business, PokerShares, after which we’ve barely seen him at the tables at all. Then there’s Fedor Holz, the German wunderkind who rocketed to poker stardom and the top 10 of the all-time money list, only to step away from the professional high rolling poker life to set up Primed Mind, his own company.


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You can now add Charlie Carrel to that list of top poker talent branching out into new endeavours. Although, like Holz, he’s not quite ready to step away from the tables altogether.

“I never made an official public statement saying I was retired,” Carrel laughs, on break during a €25,000 buy-in single-day high roller at EPT Monte Carlo. “I think I may have mentioned it on my YouTube channel once, like ‘Oh, by the way, I kinda retired six months ago’ and everyone was like ‘Oh my God!’. I wish I hadn’t said that.”

When you look at Carrel’s Hendon Mob results today, you certainly wouldn’t think he was on hiatus. Over the past four days, Carrel has final tabled all three high roller tournaments so far at this festival.

TOURNAMENT POSITION PRIZE
€10,300 High Roller 4th €69,940.00
€100,000 Super High Roller 6th €327,930.00
€50,000 Single-Day High Roller 4th €196,290.00
Total: €594,160.00

“It’s always a nice one,” Carrel says when asked why he chose to come to EPT Monte Carlo. “It’s always nice to come back to the place where I had my first big score.”

The score he’s referring to is the €25,000 High Roller here in Monaco back in 2015, which Carrel won for €1.11 million, completing his astronomical rise in poker which saw him go from grinding low-to-mid-stakes cash games in his grandma’s Jersey house in 2012 to becoming a millionaire poker personality. Carrel backed up that breakout result with a string of big cashes, not to mention the $1.2 million he won by taking down the Spring Championship of Online Poker (SCOOP) Main Event in 2017.

Charlie Carrel in action at EPT Monte Carlo

Charlie Carrel in action at EPT Monte Carlo

Carrel’s consistent results in Monaco this week take his career live earnings up past $7.1 million. And yet throughout 2018, we barely saw Carrel at live stops at all.

“I was taking a lot of time off because of my charity and another business that I’m starting,” he says. “A lot of my energy has gone into that. But the last few months have been revolving more around healing myself, spiritually, emotionally, physically, all of those different things. Coming to the almost apex of that, I feel like I’m abler now to do other things, which before I couldn’t have done without spreading myself too thin.

“Now I still have time for charity meetings and other meetings for the business, but I also have time to play poker, and I feel like hopefully, I can continue to juggle all three of those.”

The charity in question is called Abundance, and little is known about it at the time of writing (Carrel hopes it will be unveiled fully in three to six months). The project is clearly close to Carrel’s heart though, and his passion is evident.

“I honestly believe Abundance has the potential to change the world. The structure, at least, is beautiful. Whether I’ll be able to carry that through is another question.

“It’s primarily focused on lifting people out of poverty, specifically homeless people. It also focuses on bringing health to the masses, cheaper and more transparently than is currently available to them. It’s a hell of a complicated system that usually takes me 30 minutes or so to describe all the way.”

While away from the full-time live grind, Carrel kept busy. YouTube content, Twitch streaming, and coaching seemed to take up a lot of his time.

“YouTube and Twitch was quite a small percentage of my year, it was more just like me keeping a diary,” he explains. “The Twitch thing links in with a lot of the coaching I’ve been doing, and I love coaching. I live for it. It’s so fun.”

This eventually led to Carrel producing his own poker training course.

“The masterclass was amazing, I’ve had the best feedback on anything I’ve ever done,” he says. “I think it’s because it was behind a paywall, and the people there really wanted to be there, rather than just being random people from YouTube. I’ve had lots of people tell me they’ve turned their results around, showing me graphs that went down, down, down, and after the masterclass go up, up, up. I’m probably going to do another one in the next couple of months.”

Despite his experience playing on live streams in front of thousands of players, and appearances on TV shows (Channel 4’s How’d You Get So Rich? In the UK) and podcasts (True Geordie), Carrel still wasn’t comfortable in front of the cameras.

“I feel like Twitch, and YouTube to some extent, really helped me get to grips with a certain version of myself that’s more of, let’s say, a ‘showman’ whereas before I was more inclined to be inwards towards myself. Even after three or four days of Twitching, it’s still not something that comes naturally to me.”

What does seem to come naturally to Carrel is poker. We always hear how tough it is to keep up with the best players at the top of the game, and yet here comes Charlie Carrel, a player who admits to “never having run a poker sim in his life” yet somehow continues to crush.

“I thought there might have been some sense of being rusty, and there usually would be, but for my game specifically I’ve still been coaching people, albeit not at the high stakes,” he says. “I’ve still been having conversations about what’s going on at the high stakes with my best friend Ben Heath. He’s running sims on PioSOLVER every day, and now and then he’ll mention a hand, see what I think about it, and see how we could exploit from the sim. So I think I still have an understanding of how people are playing to a certain extent, but the nooks and crannies of GTO (Game Theory Optimal) I don’t, for the solver stuff at least. The style that I play is a lot more based on live reads anyway, and they don’t change.”

A new smarter look for Carrel

While live reads don’t change, Carrel’s attire certainly has. Gone are the technicoloured hoodies and psychedelic trousers of old, replaced by smart suits and business shirts for an altogether more professional look. Was this a conscious decision Carrel made upon entering the business world?

“Exactly, yeah. I went kicking and screaming into this, I really did,” Carrel admits. “I didn’t want to change how I was. I was comfortable all the time, colourful, people were always saying hi to me and smiling when they saw me on the street.

“But I realised, when I was setting up the charity and getting my team together and starting the conversations, it was fine. I could be colourful, and people would listen to me because I was in charge of the conversation. However, now I’m at the point where I’m looking for further investment, and there are types of people in the world who will only take you seriously if you’re dressed in a way which appeals to them.

“At the same time, I would say that I feel like it’s time for me to grow up, y’know? Poker players tend to get stuck in adolescence for a long time, maybe even their whole life, and there are different aspects to my life now that I think are super important. I want to take responsibility, take action, and be calm and present, instead of just being a hippy who plays a game for a living.”

Hunt the Fight Cards in Rio and win exclusive UFC passes

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Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, is already gripped by UFC fever. Mixed martial arts originated here, so the game is already in the locals’ blood, but the city is also hotly anticipating its latest up-close glimpse of the Octagon on May 11 when Rose Namajunas and Jessica Andrade battle it out in UFC: 237.

Anyone walking through the streets of Rio over the coming weeks should also keep their eyes peeled for some vivid UFC-themed poker art works. These brilliant murals are not only spectacular in their own right, they also hold the key to an unprecedented giveaway.

Anderson Silva by Marcelo Ment

PokerStars, the UFC’s official poker partner, has its hands on tickets to ringside seats for the bout at the Jeunesse Arena, as well as exclusive passes to the weigh-in, and other special activities, ,where you can hob-nob with UFC royalty.

It’s an extraordinary prize for an extraordinary competition — and it all starts with the art.

HUNT THE FIGHT CARDS

Rio de Janeiro is a world-renowned destination for anyone with a passion for architecture, beaches, music, food, drink and parties (ie, everyone), and in recent years it has also developed a reputation as one of the global capitals for street art.

Rose Namajunas by Lidia Viber

The likes of Marcelo Ment, Carlos Bobi, Cazé and Lidia Viber started their careers with spray-can or marker pen in hand, decorating empty wall spaces across the urban landscape. As their work grew in depth and range, they began to gain global notice, and Rio’s street art became one of the most thrilling cultural movements of recent years.

It has now even infiltrated high-end galleries, with connoisseurs and collectors flocking to Rio to see the work of these trailblazers in its natural environment.

With the UFC coming to town, and PokerStars keen to tap in to the excitement of the movement, the company recently approached four of the city’s most celebrated artists with an idea for a unique commission. The brief was for each artist to produce a depiction of an MMA fighter from UFC 237 in their trademark style, and to place it on the background of two PokerStars playing cards.

The four artists represent a broad range of the art scene in Rio, each with a well-earned prominence in their field. They were encouraged to create a beautiful and eclectic range of portraits that capture the fighters in a unique way.

Jessica Andrade by Carlos Bobi

All the aforementioned artists — four of the best known in the city — accepted and got to work in their studios through the past several weeks. Now, these completed “Fight Cards” have been placed strategically in four locations across Rio de Janeiro, and the challenge for eagle-eyed UFC fans is to hunt them down.

The rules are simple: once you find one of the Fight Cards, pose for a photograph alongside it, share the picture on social media with the hashtag #UFCPokerStars, and then hope for the best. There are two packages to be won, for the winner and guests, with the lucky UFC fans selected at random from qualifying entries.

All entrants will be asked for their Stars ID in order to qualify for the draw.

Although it’s worth finding all of them, you only need a photo alongside any one of them to qualify. You have until 23:59 on May 7 to get involved.

PLEASE SEE COMPLETE TERMS AND CONDITIONS

Jared Cannonier by Caze

The project is to demonstrate the power of a partnership between the UFC and PokerStars, Poker and MMA are disciplines that reward those that come best prepared, they are about style, patience and timing – they are more aligned than most people might realise and this is something that this project is designed to show.

“It has been a really fantastic project to work on, and to be part of the celebration of PokerStars and UFC here in my hometown is an honour,” said Ment, who has spearheaded the Rio street art scene. “I hope that the people of Rio enjoy seeing UFC fighters captured in true Brazilian street art style.”

Additionally, a unique “Sand Sculpture” of the Fight Cards, created by the world-renowned Rogean Rodrigues, also appeared on Copacabana beach on April 29. Rodrigues, who is a massive UFC fan, has previously been commissioned to welcome such luminaries as Pope Francis to Rio, and he was the obvious man to turn to to showcase his talents again. The sculptures wowed the crowds in Copacabana as the promotion kicked off. And although a thunderstorm was approaching, the Fight Cards won out and will remain in the sunshine this week.

Click and swipe left/right to see images

Is it a hoodie or a ball? Both...and a lifesaver too

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Few things have the power to change a child’s life like play. Sadly, many children don’t get the chance to play.

That’s where Right To Play comes in. The Stars Group’s official charity partner since 2014, RTP has raised more than £1.5 million to help vulnerable children around the world. And today they’ll be raising lots more through two special promotions.


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The special edition Right To Play hoodie, in black

The charitable giving arm of The Stars Group, Helping Hands, has teamed up with Right To Play to create a limited-edition hoodie. But it’s not just any old hoodie. This one is also a soccer ball. It’s true: although parents the world over may normally struggle to get their children to fold their clothes, there’s an added incentive for this one.

If you follow five simple steps to fold the hoodie in the correct way, you can turn it into a ball.

The hoodie honors a young boy from Eritrea who found out that his hoodie-folding abilities made him remarkably popular in the playground, where sports equipment was scarce. A visiting humanitarian ambassador — Norwegian speed skater Johann Olav Koss, representing Olympic Aid, which latterly became Right To Play — noticed the boy’s popularity and learnt the reason, and eventually decided to market to hoodie/ball back home.

How to turn a hoodie into a football

It finally hit the shelves today. As of this afternoon, you can visit the Stars Store to buy your own football-making hoodie in red or black. And if you happen to be attending EPT Monte Carlo, you can buy one from the on-site store. Regardless of where you purchase, 100 percent of the profits from their sales will be donated to Right To Play. They cost $40, an amount that can do extraordinary good.

The hoodie was the centerpiece of the action earlier today here at Sporting Club Monte-Carlo in the Right To Play Keepie-Uppie Challenge.

A lot of poker players tried their hands at juggling the ball/hoodies, with mixed results. (Don’t worry, they have other talents.)

See how a few of them fared in the clip below:


Today’s other special event is the EPT Monte Carlo Right To Play Charity Tournament. Set to begin at 7pm CET tonight in the Americas Room at Monte Carlo Bay, it sports a $300 buy-in and unlimited $100 rebuys for the first hour of play. Register in the normal way, at the desk in the Sporting Club lobby.

Beyond the chance to support a great cause, you can also pick up some valuable prizes:

 

Place Prize
1st EPT Barcelona package (€8,766 value)
2nd EPT Open Madrid package (€2,510 value)
3rd EPT National ticket (€1,100 value)
4th Win The Button ticket (€550 value)
5th Hotel + dinner donated by PokerStars Travel

We’ll be dropping by the tournament tonight to check things out, so stop and say hello if you’re there to play!


Back in 2016 PokerStars visited Accra, Ghana, with England rugby star Mike Tindall to see firsthand the impact Right To Play has had there. Brad Willis was along for the ride and produced two unforgettable stories: Hidden hope and the Princess of Jamestown and Running toward New Horizon.

Right To Play reaches 1.9 million children per week at 2,600 schools in 15 countries throughout Africa, Asia, and the Middle East.

Click and swipe left/right to see some of the hoodie-ball keepie-uppie players in action:

6+ Hold'em live at EPT Monte Carlo

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Tonight sees the first ever 6+ No Limit Hold’em tournament at a PokerStars Live stop. The €2,200 Single Re-entry (Triple Chance) event kicks off at 9pm.


There’s a first time for everything, even after 15 years of European Poker Tour stops.

While the EPT Main Event and €50,000 Single-Day High Roller play out in their respected corners, a brand new live event for PokerStars Live will take place tonight, as 6+ Hold’em moves from the online streets to the virtual felt.

The €2,200 buy-in tournament allows a single re-entry, and also offers a ‘triple chance’ stack format. This means players can either take their entire 30,000 starting stack at the beginning of play, or divide it into three 10,000 stacks which they can claim at any point (in a bid to reduce variance). Indeed, variance plays a big role in this format.


Scroll down for a full breakdown of how 6+ differs to regular NLHE


Max Silver: Another 6+ convert

“I think €2,200 is a very reasonable buy-in point for players who may want to play 6+ for the first time,” said UK pro and SnapShove founder Max Silver, who will be in the mix tonight. “6+ is a gambly game and equities run really close, so I expect to either win a lot of all-ins or be out pretty fast!”

Like Silver, Mike “SirWatts” Watson is another seasoned pro who will be pulling up a chair in tonight’s game. Both have played 6+ a lot on PokerStars, but neither have made a trip to Asia to try it out live yet. Luckily, thanks to this EPT addition, they won’t have to.

“I think it will be interesting to see how the game catches on in America and Europe with traditional Hold’em players and tournament players,” Watson told us. “I hope there’s going to be a lot of interest in the game, as people who are used to NLHE should be able to pick it up quickly, especially if they have a little PLO experience too.

“I think it’s the kind of game that when people get exposed to they’re going to really enjoy playing. I hope it catches on far and wide.”

Unfortunately, as it clashes with the aforementioned EPT Main Event and €50,000 Single-Day High Roller, there’s a good chance we won’t see many of the high rollers here in Monaco taking a seat. Nevertheless, we asked Watson who he wouldn’t like to see at his 6+ table.

Mike Watson in action today at EPT Monte Carlo

“The players who are spending a lot of time over in Asia are ahead on the experience curve,” he says. “I know Rui Cao plays a lot, Peter Jetten plays quite a bit, Isaac Haxton has had some success, and Stephen Chidwick is great at every game. All of these guys would be great guys to bet on, but I don’t imagine any will be playing tonight. It will be interesting to see who turns up, it seems like it could go any way. I hope we make a few more converts today.”

Play kicks off at 9pm tonight.

Unsure of how to play? Here’s all the info you need.


€2,150 – NL Hold’em – Single Re-Entry – Triple Chance – 6+

Date: April 30 – Tuesday | Start Time: 21:00 | Starting Stack: 10,000
Buy-In Breakdown: entry – €2150 | entry-cost – €2000 | entry-fee – €150

  • Everyone posts an ante and only the button posts a blind – known as the ‘button blind’
  • The left of the button will be first to act
  • Triple chance (Players may start with 10,000/20,000/30,000 chips) from the start of the tournament
  • All chips must be claimed before the close of registration
  • Registration closes at the start of Level 9
  • Single re-entry
  • All of the 2 to 5’s are removed to make a total deck just 36 cards
  • A flush beats a full house
  • As in regular Hold’em an ace can play high or low
  • The highest straight is still T-J-Q-K-A, the lowest straight is now: A-6-7-8-9

You can play 6+ on PokerStars. Simply click here to open an account.



Vote for the best laydown

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As part of our 200 billion hand celebration, we’re giving you the chance to win Spin & Go tickets when you vote on some of your favourite poker moments.

Vote for the best laydown right here.


The people have spoken!

Yesterday (Monday, April 29) on Twitter, we asked you for your best laydowns from the annals of Twitch poker. You answered, we listened, and here we present you with the top four nominees.

Watch the video clips from the shortlisted hands below, then click the link to the tweet at the bottom to cast your vote.


LAYDOWN #1

Lex Veldhuis


LAYDOWN #2

Spraggy


LAYDOWN #3

Fintan Hand


LAYDOWN #4

xflixx


Head to this tweet and vote now!


Opening a PokerStars account is easy. Click here to get an account in minutes.


EPT Monte Carlo 2019: Main Event Seat Draw

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EPT MONTE CARLO MAIN EVENT – DAY 3 SEAT DRAW

Name Country Chips Table Seat
Vlado Banicevic Montenegro 198000 1 1
Dominykas Karmazinas Lithuania 105000 1 2
Maksim Kolosov Russia 142000 1 3
Vincas Tamasauskas Lithuania 90000 1 4
Viktor Katzenberger Hungary 352000 1 5
Ambrose Travers UK 122000 1 6
Jack Maskill UK 431000 1 7
Masato Yokosawa Japan 262000 1 8
Karoly Odor Hungary 230000 2 1
Oshri Lahmani Israel 55000 2 2
Ermo Kosk Estonia 111000 2 4
Michel Bouskila Australia 117000 2 5
Konstantinos Asgoudakis Greece 477000 2 6
Manig Loeser Germany 410000 2 7
Govert Metaal Netherlands 397000 2 8
Jean Mikhael Lebanon 80000 3 1
Alisa Sibgatova Russia 303000 3 2
Charles La Boissonniere Canada 320000 3 3
Guy Catan France 64000 3 4
Massimo Mosele Italy 372000 3 5
Emrah Cakmak France 143000 3 6
Karim Jamil Belgium 185000 3 7
Ibrahim Ghassan Lebanon 312000 3 8
Martin Schacher Switzerland 222000 4 1
Vlad Darie Romania 90000 4 2
Patrik Antonius Finland 333000 4 3
Mikalai Vaskaboinikau Belarus 181000 4 4
Georgios Kitsios Greece 263000 4 5
Jonas Lauck Germany 64000 4 6
Ionut Voinea Romania 434000 4 7
Ramon Colillas Spain 134000 4 8
Eusebiu Jalba Romania 165000 5 1
Cedric Boussetta France 304000 5 2
Enio Bozzano Brazil 120000 5 3
Morgan Aceto France 131000 5 4
Corentin Ropert France 107000 5 5
Johann Zeitoun France 222000 5 7
Christophe Panetti Switzerland 495000 5 8
Tomas Macnamara UK 542000 6 2
Jorden Verbraeken Belgium 367000 6 3
Ludovic Geilich UK 606000 6 4
Luis Medina Portugal 128000 6 5
Huan Jiaming China 67000 6 6
Oleg Larichev Russia 170000 6 7
Andreas Klatt Germany 83000 6 8
Fady Kamar Lebanon 223000 7 1
James Romero USA 630000 7 2
Aram Sargsyan Armenia 82000 7 3
Nicola Grieco Italy 409000 7 4
Romain Lewis France 108000 7 5
Ryan Riess USA 202000 7 6
Orpen Kisacikoglu Turkey 361000 7 7
Nicola D’Anselmo Italy 292000 7 8
Wiktor Malinowski Poland 769000 8 1
Malikeh Razavi Iran 192000 8 2
Pierre Merlin France 172000 8 3
Seth Davies USA 684000 8 4
Vahe Ter-Khachatryan Armenia 88000 8 5
Ami Barer Canada 604000 8 6
Ramon Miquel Munoz Spain 491000 8 7
Nicolas Chouity Lebanon 156000 8 8
Ariel Celestino Brazil 411000 9 1
Julien Martini France 735000 9 2
Ivan Deyra France 142000 9 3
Danilo Velasevic Serbia 118000 9 4
Bruno Volkmann Brazil 348000 9 5
Tamer Kamel UK 106000 9 6
Vamshi Vandanapu UK 174000 9 7
Paul Michaelis Germany 573000 9 8
Artur Martirosian Russia 30000 10 1
Conor Beresford UK 248000 10 2
Sylvain Mazza France 207000 10 3
Markus Durnegger Austria 194000 10 5
Artur Koren Germany 199000 10 6
Fatima Moreira De Melo Netherlands 154000 10 7
Erwann Pecheux France 235000 10 8
Aladin Reskallah France 380000 11 1
Gen Nose Japan 215000 11 2
Dirk Wiele Germany 143000 11 3
Armin Rezaei Austria 169000 11 4
Michail Karapanos Greece 210000 11 5
Dario Sammartino Italy 365000 11 6
Robert Nesh Russia 76000 11 7
Serafim Kovalevskiy Russia 149000 11 8
Wei Huang China 147000 12 1
Boris Kolev Bulgaria 196000 12 2
Ignacio Barcenas Romera Spain 341000 12 3
Sergei Bagirov Russia 51000 12 4
Christoph Vogelsang Germany 193000 12 5
Rocco Palumbo Italy 163000 12 6
Thomas Hueber Austria 305000 12 7
Evy Widvey Kvilhaug Norway 162000 12 8
Rustam Hajiyev Azerbaijan 377000 13 1
Michael Wang USA 225000 13 2
Mikita Badziakouski Belarus 65000 13 3
Milos Lalovic Serbia 217000 13 4
Sam Greenwood Canada 245000 13 5
Andreas Vlachos Greece 97000 13 7
Pablo Melogno Uruguay 607000 13 8
Roberto Fernandez Spain 81000 14 1
Maxi Lehmanski Germany 327000 14 2
David Lascar France 204000 14 3
Jean Fontaine France 628000 14 4
Francois Evard Switzerland 435000 14 5
Timothy Adams Canada 482000 14 6
Antonio Scalzi Italy 87000 14 7
Remi Castaignon France 440000 14 8

Take the Quiz: How Ramon are you?

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Ramon Colillas turned a dream into reality back in January. He won the PSPC and a first prize of €5.1 million.

It’s not easy to have that level of success. But it can be done. You might even have the same talents and attributes required to do the same.

If you want Ramon levels of success you’ll need to possess, the same qualities that earned him that famous victory.

Which is why we created a special Dare to Dream quiz. It will help determine how far along you are in that process.

So in the spirit of popular teenaged magazines from the 1990s, you’ll find ten questions that will help you find out below.

Select the answer you think is correct for each question. Your score will determine just how “Ramon” you are.

Unscientific perhaps, but you’ll notice that the qualities Ramon used are the type anyone will need to succeed.

Keep track of your answers, then check them by scrolling below.

Q1. When you watch PokerStars TV coverage do you…

  1. Find it hard to understand what’s going on?
  2. Consider the players on screen to be way better than you?
  3. Think that one day it’ll be you that people are watching?

Your answer: ______

Q2. When you play against top players, do you…

  1. Keep folding and stay out of their way?
  2. Say to yourself that you’re capable of playing against anyone?
  3. Hope other players get knocked out instead of you?

Your answer: ______

Q3. You play freerolls on PokerStars to…

  1. Learn why the good players keep winning?
  2. Play without having to take the game too seriously?
  3. To try to get lucky and win some free money?

Your answer: ______

Q4. When facing set-backs, how do you tend to react?

  1. Figure it’s just not to be?
  2. Curse your bad luck and blame it on things beyond your control?
  3. Set about immediately getting back on your feet?

Your answer: ______

Q5. When you daydream, what do you day dream about?

  1. Work tomorrow?
  2. Poker?
  3. The weekend?

Your answer: ______

Q6. When you get a free hour how do you spend it?

  1. A Netflix binge?
  2. Sleeping?
  3. Studying and playing poker?

Your answer: ______

Q7. At what point in a tournament do you dare to dream?

  1. When you first take your seat?
  2. Heads up?
  3. When you reach the money?

Your answer: ______

Q8. If you lost your bankroll, what would you do?

  1. Give up?
  2. Work out what you needed to do to improve and start again?
  3. Blame it on luck and try something else like stamp collecting?

Your answer: ______

Q9. If your girlfriend insists that all she wants her birthday is to see you win your way to play poker in the Bahamas, do you…

  1. Tell her it’s impossible. You’re not a magician?
  2. Set about winning a Platinum Pass?
  3. Book tickets anyway, in case you don’t automatically win a seat?

Your answer: ______

Q10. Your favourite colour is…

  1. Green?
  2. Red?
  3. Black?

Your answer: ______

 

So. How Ramon are you?

 0 correct: We’re assuming you found this page by mistake.

1-3 correct: Well, you’ve made a start. And not everyone needs a big win to enjoy poker. And think of it this way. If you got the “favourite colour” question wrong, you’re practically in the next category already…

4-7 correct: Much better. You might still have a little work to do to get to Ramon’s level, but you’re in the right place. With a little effort (and maybe less Netflix) you could be up there with Ramon in no time.

8-10 correct: Congratulations! You’re practically related to Ramon. You’re showing signs of having the same dedication, commitment, and determination it took Ramon to win the PSPC. It won’t be too long before you step up.

Read more about the Ramon Colillas story on the Blog. Although if you got full marks in the quiz, it’s going to seem very familiar.

 

From Macau to Monaco -- for only $3

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A total of 337 players returned today to the Salle Des Étoiles here at Sporting Club Monte-Carlo for Day 2 of the EPT Monte Carlo Main Event. Of everyone in the room, nobody had fewer chips than Sio Hong Si. But that didn’t bother him in the least.

Just as Si’s short stack set him apart from the rest of the field, his journey here was unique among the competitors here in Monaco. Si lives in Macau, where he works as an activity coordinator and enjoys playing basketball. A year ago his friends got him into poker through a home game. He took to it quickly and began watching live streams from every EPT stop.


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Celina Lin and PokerStars qualifier Sio Hong Si share a laugh on Day 2 of the EPT Monte Carlo Main Event

Soon enough Si had opened an account on PokerStars, where he began playing as “Michaelsi1031.” And then, last month, he made a fateful decision: he played in a $3 Spin & Go. Nothing too out of the ordinary there, but the result certainly was: Si won a package to play in the €5,300 EPT Monte Carlo Main Event.

That was just the beginning. An arduous 35-hour journey took him from Macau to the other side of the planet. He played Day 1B of the tournament and survived with the smallest stack of any player from either starting flight, but he displayed no obvious sense of disappointment.

“I feel so excited that I can make it to Day 2, even with 7300 chips,” he told PokerStars Blog as he emptied his bag and placed his chips — one blue 5K, two yellow 1Ks, and three black-and-white 100s — on the table in front of Seat 3. “Now it’s only all-in! So I maybe double up.”

Team Pro Celina Lin arrived a moment later and sat directly to Si’s right. The rest of his table was a real murderer’s row. Mustapha Kanit, Nicolas Chouity, and Vlad Darie were all behind him in the rotation — the kind of players you expect to watch on TV, if not necessarily the kind you expect to sit down and play against. And yet here Si was.

Si and Lin chatted for a bit until he found himself under the gun with pocket kings. He made his one move: all-in. Darie called with Q-T and flopped two pair. It looked likely that Si would begin his walk for the exits right there, but another king on the river made him a set to take the pot.

The rest of the table cheered Si on as he stacked up, including Team Pro and new arrival Fatima Moreira De Melo, who arrived in the middle of the hand from a broken table and took her seat to Si’s left.

Sio Hong Si, all-in for his tournament life against Fatima Moreira De Melo

Si survived his big blinds and then found himself in the small blind with A♠7♥. He moved all-in again, and Moreira De Melo called in the big blind with K♠8♦. A king hit the flop and that was the end of the line for Si — at least in this tournament. He still gets to enjoy Monaco for the rest of the week.

Though Si’s story didn’t end in glory, he was thrilled just to be here. And why not? For just $3, he had the experience of a lifetime.

“I feel excited,” Si said. “It is a dream come true, I feel very good. Thank you PokerStars to make me come here!”

Sio Hong Si: excited to be in Monte Carlo, and rightfully so

Play an EPT Main Event from your own home! (Sort of)

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The popularity of playing on the European Poker Tour is matched only by the popularity of sitting at home and watching it. What PokerStars Blog pioneered, PokerStars Live continued and for a good few years thousands of people get their updates from the tournament via moving pictures as well as in text form.

Hundreds of armchair poker fans have also made the transition from passive to active participants by winning online satellites or competitions to take their seats in live competition. But now here’s the chance to sample the EPT experience without ever leaving the comfort of your own home.


LATEST FROM EPT MONTE CARLO:
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| NEED-TO-KNOW | TIMELINE | IMAGE GALLERY | RESULTS

This week, our good friends at the PokerStars Live webcast are hosting an online version of the EPT Main Event, for 1,000th of the price. This €5.50 single re-entry tournament will be played over four days (May 1–4), starting at 20:05 CEST each day, with registration open until the start of Day 2.

Type “EPT Online” in the search box in the PokerStars client to find the tournament.

It has a similar format (8-max) and structure to the EPT Main Event, but here’s something even players here in Monte Carlo don’t get: added money. The way it works is that at the start of Day 2, players at 10 random tables will all receive EPT Open Madrid satellite tickets.

Players at THREE tables will receive €162 tickets
Players at SIX tables will receive €22 tickets
And players at one other table will receive €11 tickets

That’s 80 tickets in total, representing €5,000 in added value. (PLEASE NOTE: The EPT Online is only open to players in global shared liquidity markets.)

As ever with tourneys arranged by the EPT Live webcasters, there will be a huge field. But there will also be some special guests no doubt playing, including Joe Stapleton and James Hartigan, as well as a number of their celebrity buddies who might opt to sit down for a bit of fun.

Knock out the webcast duo: James Hartigan and Joe Stapleton

Keep watching the stream and reading the updates to build the anticipation levels.

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