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Karamalikis, Obst Impress on Aussie Millions Day 1a

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Poker pros had numerous distractions on Day 1a of the Aussie Millions Main Event with the Aussie Open Men’s Tennis Final taking place in the evening as well as the $100k Challenge at Crown Casino. 

Some of the other established pros were still in transit from the NBC National Heads-Up Championship.

In the end a total of 157 players registered on Day 1a with Toby Lewis, Jonathan Karamalikis, Ayaz Mahmood, James Obst, Eoghan O’Dea, Jackie Glazier, Brian Townsend and Mark Teltscher getting on the action.

Local Brian Payne looks to be the chip leader with 299,900 to end the day.

Fellow Australians Obst and Karamalikis also had good days finishing with 156,700 and 64,500 respectively.

Crafty veteran Ayaz Mahmood, who famously won the 2010 $10k WSOP Heads-Up event, ended with 154,700.

Richard Ashby, Toby Lewis, Eoghan O’Dea and Jackie Glazier also punched their tickets to Day 2 of the 2013 Aussie Millions. 

Former Champions Hit the Rail on Day 1a

Oliver Speidel
2012 Aussie Millions Champ Oliver Speidel
 

2012 Aussie Million champ Oliver Speidel’s title defense did not last long.

The Melbourne-native busted mid-way through the day after failing to get anything of consequence going.

It was a bad day all around for former Aussie Million champions as 2011 winner David Gorr lost a flip with pocket sixes to ace-king to bust out of the tournament.

Of course it wasn’t just former champs that hit the rail on Day 1a as Brian Townsend, Rupert Elder, Grant Levy, Leo Boxell and Valdemar Kwaysser all hit the rail.

A total of 70 players survived the day and will return to play Day 2 on Wednesday.

Meanwhile Day 1b of the 2013 Aussie Millions begins at 12:30 p.m. local time tomorrow.



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Kagawa, Robl, Selbst Make Aussie $100k Final Table

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Masa Kagawa, Igor Kurganov, Dan Shak, Tobias Reinkemeier, Vanessa Selbst, Andrew Robl and Niklas Heinecker will compete for a $1 million first-place prize tomorrow.

Thanks to a rare double-elimination on the last hand of the night, the final table will only have seven players instead of the usual eight.

Russian Kurganov busted both Chris “Genius28” Lee and Malaysian businessman Wilfred Yu in the hand.

This year’s $100k Challenge ended up drawing a total of 22 entries, exactly the same as 2012, with just Andrew Robl opting to re-enter after busting in a bad beat to Dan Shak early.

This meant the prizepool would tip the scales at $1.9 million (AUD) with the top four places paying out.

Hansen, Antonius, Mercier Bust Short of the Cash

Aussie Millions 100k Challenge
The $100k Challenge
 

High Rollers Gus Hansen, Patrik Antonius, Mike Watson, Jason Mercier, Sam Trickett, John Juanda and Tony Bloom all took part in the $100k Challenge but were eliminated before the final table.

Dan Smith, last year’s champ, surprisingly decided not to play the tournament.

Antonius made a very brief appearance in the tournament. The Finnish pro registered late, played for about 20 minutes, and then busted in a bad beat to a rampaging Dan Shak.

Apparently that was enough poker for Antonius on this day because he opted not to re-enter.

The final table begins at 2 p.m. local time tomorrow. Here’s a look at the chip counts heading into play tomorrow:

1. Masa Kagawa – 695,000 2. Igor Kurganov – 563,000 3. Dan Shak – 435,000 4. Tobias Reinkemeier – 160,000 5. Vanessa Selbst – 136,000 6. Andrew Robl – 129,000 7. Niklas Heinecker – 85,000

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Matusow Outlasts Hellmuth in Epic NBC Heads-Up Final

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Mike “The Mouth” Matusow capped one of the most impressive tournament performances of his career by beating Phil "Poker Brat" Hellmuth in the final heads-up match to claim the $750,000 first-place prize.

Matusow won the first match of the best-of-three series against Hellmuth but the Poker Brat stormed back and won the second match.

Phil Hellmuth
Second-place finisher Phil Hellmuth
 

The Mouth would not be denied, however, and he ran over Hellmuth in the tournament-deciding match.

It was a dream heads-up match for NBC producers with old-school pros Matusow and Hellmuth competing for the grand prize.

Matusow went on an inspired run in this year's championship that included victories against Michael “The Grinder” Mizrachi, Viktor “Isildur1” Blom, Barry Greenstein, John Hennigan and Scott Seiver.

A former member of Team Full Tilt, Matusow was hit hard by the events of Black Friday and played considerably less poker over the last couple years.

He was confident in this tournament, however, and said on Day 1 that it was “his time.”

Matusow beat a red-hot Hellmuth who has over $4 million in winnings over the last 12 months and two WSOP bracelet victories including one in WSOPE Main Event.

Hellmuth picked up $300,000 for finishing runner-up to Matusow.

Seiver, Matusow, Serock, Hellmuth in Final Four 

Scott Seiver
Scott Seiver took Mike Matusow to the edge.
 

The final four of the 2013 NBC National Heads-Up Championship had a new school vs. old school theme with Scott Seiver facing Mike Matusow and Joe Serock against Phil Hellmuth.

This time the old school won out with both Matusow and Hellmuth moving on. Matusow went through a marathon match against Seiver that finally saw the Mouth land the knockout blow with ace-ten against Seiver’s jack-ten.

Meanwhile Hellmuth beat Serock to enter the final heads-up match for the second time of his career. Hellmuth won the inaugural National Heads-Up Championship in 2005.

Both Serock and Seiver picked up a $100k consolation prize for making it to the final four.

Dan Cates, John Hennigan, Brian Hastings and Eugene Katchalov received $50,000 as they dropped out in the round of eight.

Here are the complete final day results:

Round of Eight

Scott Seiver def. Dan Cates Mike Matusow def. John Hennigan Joe Serock def. Brian Hastings Phil Hellmuth def. Eugene Katchalov

Final Four

Mike Matusow def. Scott Seiver Phil Hellmuth def. Joe Serock

Final

Mike Matusow def. Phil Hellmuth 2-1

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Weekly UK 3-Bet: Trickett Punt, NBC Whiff, Rochdale Fail

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Today in the 3-Bet we bring you a particularly in-the-red work day for Sam Trickett, a complete shutout for Brits at the NBC Heads-Up Championship plus the alarming gambling habits of Rochdale locals.

Any suggestions for a future UK 3-Bet can be left in the comments.

1) Trickett Blows $100k in Eight Hours

When most people punch in for an eight-hour shift they know how much money they're taking home at the end of the day.

Sam Trickett
Trickett once paid a tournament buy-in of $1 million. This is how he dressed.
 

That simple concept has no place in the world of high-stakes poker.

Most-successful-European-tournament-player-in-history Sam Trickett went to work yesterday at the Aussie Millions $100k Challenge and dusted off the six-figure buy-in in just seven levels.

And despite losing in a day what it takes the average full-time worker in the UK more than two years to earn, Trickett was most disappointed about missing the Aussie Open finals playing out at nearby Melbourne Park.

That Trickett has over $17 million in live tournament earnings might have something to do with it.

2) Brits Shut Out at NBC Heads-UP

The 2013 NBC Heads-Up Championship is over and British players completely bricked the event.

But it was always a long-shot given just two of the 64 invitations were sent to players from the UK.

Chris “moorman1” Moorman, and Team PokerStars Pro Liv Boeree both made the trip to Las Vegas. They both paid the $25,000 buy-in. And they both busted short of the money.

Moorman beat former world champion Carlos Mortensen but lost in the second round to Dan “Jungleman12” Cates, while Boeree went broke in the first round against France's Gaelle Baumann.

Played my ass of yesterday against @o_rly but couldn't win the flips at the end. good luck to her in round 2 though, she's an awesome lady.

— Liv Boeree (@Liv_Boeree) January 25, 2013

1/2 Well that was quick. Open ajc @junglemandan 3b I call akq fd board and I call down three streets on blank runout v qq. Tournament was so

— Chris Moorman (@Moorman1) January 25, 2013

2/2 much fun though and exceptionally well run. I hope I get the chance to come back in the future and give it another shot #NBCHU

— Chris Moorman (@Moorman1) January 25, 2013

3) Rochdale Unemployed, Still Gambling

Rochdale: home of songbird Lisa Stansfield, WSOP-bracelet winning bezzie friends Matt Perrins and Jake Cody and some of the poorest people in the UK.

The Falinge Estate has recently been named as the poorest area in the UK, for the fifth year running, with an impressive 72% unemployment rate.

But government statistics can be so misleading.

Don’t they realise that 72% could very well be earning their bread and butter playing online poker?

How else could the poorest area in the UK find enough capital to spend £72 million per year on betting machines?

Or is that just out of the pocket of Perrins and Cody?



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Robl Posts Stunning Comeback to Win $100k Challenge

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Robl, who was one of the original members of the Ship it Holla Ballas crew, beat high roller Igor Kurganov head-up to claim his first major title. 

Known in the past for his fast-paced lifestyle, Robl was remarkably calm after winning the tournament.

“I’m gonna have a glass of wine,” he said.

“Maybe after that I’ll go out for a few drinks. Nothing too exciting. If I would have won a poker tournament when I was 20 it would have been a different story. It would have been four straight days at the nightclub or the strip club. Just four days of debauchery basically.”

Dan Shak Falls Short of Repeating as Champion

Despite having a short stack, Robl trumped a final table that included the aforementioned Kurganov, Tobias Reinkemeier, Vanessa Selbst, Niklas Heinecker, Dan Shak and Masa Kagawa.

IMG1957
Andrew Robl and girlfriend after winning $100k Challenge.
 

Heinecker, who was the last player to register for the tournament, had the misfortune of going out on the bubble when Kagawa busted him in fifth place with ace-queen over ten-nine.

Shak, who actually won this tournament in 2010, was the first player to bust in the money as he fell in fourth place to Robl to win $237,000.

Somewhat surprisingly it was Kagawa who busted next. Kagawa got unlucky to bust to Robl in third place after spending much of the tournament as the chip leader. The Japanese businessman picked up $320,000 for his efforts.

The tournament was a strange journey for Robl who busted to Shak on Day 1. Robl got it in good with top-pair on a 9 3 3 flop while Shak only had A K for ace-high.

An ace hit on the turn, however, and that was enough to bust Robl. Fortunately the young pro opted to re-buy.

“I was pretty tilted when I busted,” he said. “I called my buddy, I told him the hand and he told me that it sounded like I was playing good. He said I should give it another shot.”

Here are the complete final table results:

1. Andrew Robl - $1,000,000 2. Igor Kurganov - $610,000 3. Masa Kagawa - $320,000 4. Dan Shak - $237,000 5. Niklas Heniecker - $0 6. Vanessa Selbst - $0 7. Tobias Reinkemeier - $0

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Mercier, Channing Chip Up on Day 1b of Aussie Millions ME

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Mercier ultimately finished with 93,000 while Channing ended with 80,000. Both are chasing Francis Rusnak who took the overall chip lead with 165,100.

Day 1b drew about 196 runners with Lee Markholt, Neil Channing, Kenny Tran, Van Marcus, Fabian Quoss, Annette Obrestad and Phillip Gruissem amongst the many players who took to the felt.

When combined with Day 1a that brings the overall field size in this year's Aussie Millions up to 353, which is 13 more than last year over the first two starting days.

2010 Aussie Millions winner Tyron Krost also played Day 1b. Krost won the Aussie Millions Tournament of Champions last year, which gave him free Main Event seats at the Aussie Millions for life.

Krost put his first free entry to good use as he finished with about 40,000 chips.

Tough Transition for High Rollers to Main Event

Annette Obrestad
Annette Obrestad survived Day 1b
 

The field also received a late boost from Niklas Heinecker, Tobias Reinkemeier and Vanessa Selbst, who all registered after busting from the $100k Challenge final table just short of the money.

Unfortunately for Reinkemeier, Heinecker and Selbst they wouldn’t see any money in the Main Event either as they all busted in fairly short order. Runner-up finisher Igor Kurganov also played the Main Event but finished with a paltry 13,600.

Fabian Quoss, Philipp Gruissem and Sherrie Krampel were also among the players to bust on Day 1b.

About 105 players made it through the day including Chris "Genius28" Lee, Annette Obrestad, Kenny Tran and Per Linde and will return on Wednesday for Day 2.

Meanwhile Day 1c of the 2013 Aussie Millions Main Event is generally the biggest of all the starting flights so tomorrow should be particularly interesting.

There are plenty of big names expected tomorrow including statistician Nate Silver.

Day 1c, the final starting day of the 2013 Aussie Millions, begins at 12:30 p.m. local time tomorrow.



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Nate Silver Q&A: "Poker is a Good Skill To Have in Life"

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In that time Silver and the team behind his blog FiveThirtyEight.com successfully predicted the winner in all 50 states during the U.S. Presidential Election, he released the best-selling The Signal and The Noise and become a bona fide geek god to the mainstream media in North America.

Silver is also a poker fan. A big one, in fact. He actually made a living playing online poker in the mid-2000s and played the WSOP Main Event in 2011.

The 35 year old has actually been itching to get back into poker and so when Crown Casino asked if he’d be interested in playing the 2013 Aussie Millions he jumped at the opportunity.

Aussie Millions 2013
The 2013 Aussie Millions
 

We sat down with Silver before he played Day 1c of the 2013 Aussie Millions Main Event to get his thoughts on playing $10,000 buy-in tournaments, his election success, poker ranking systems and more.

PokerListings.com: Why did you decide to play the 2013 Aussie Millions?

Nate Silver: It was a combination of things. I get a lot of things in my inbox – especially after the election. I heard from Crown and they were like “You should come play in this tournament. You can go to the Aussie Open, vacation in Australia.”

It didn’t sound so bad considering it was the middle of January and like 20 degrees in New York. It wasn’t too tough a sell.

That said, poker was very instrumental in my life for a couple years. I kind of left it unfinished. I stopped playing during a pretty bad losing streak. I went on to do things that turned out very well but at some point I’d like to get some closure by making a deep run in a poker tournament or something.

PL: Do you actually play any poker when you’re at home?

NS: I play a $20 buy-in home game [laughs]. I was telling some high roller friends the other day that I play a $20 home game and they were like “Oh you mean $20,000?”

It’s still fun though. You can learn things. The players aren’t necessarily that good but there is this weird quality that because you’re under no allusion that they are all that good you kind of learn how certain players think. I think one mistake poker players make is to assume everyone else plays the same way that you do.

Nate Silver
Nate Silver playing in the 2011 WSOP ME.
 

You can develop this masturbatory playing style where you’re really just playing against yourself almost. You’re trying to optimize playing against yourself instead of taking advantage of players who don't understand stack size and others who call everything.

Other than the home game, New York really isn’t a great place to play poker. Atlantic City and Foxwoods are all three-hour trips so you don’t make it out there that often.

I wish we had a poker room somewhere in the city.

PL: You’ve played a couple major tournaments now. Do you feel comfortable playing a $10,000 buy-in tournament?

NS: I think so. I’m trying to figure out what makes me feel comfortable. The couple times I’ve played the Main Event I would literally fly in the night before and I think that’s probably a mistake. There are fatigue and jet-lag factors.

I’m also in a place where I’m more financially comfortable after the election so I can focus more on just trying to play really well. I think it’s an advantage I might have.

Also surviving the pressure of the 2012 election, which in some ways felt like being at a final table or something, could also help my game.

PL: You’ve gotten a ton of mainstream attention since the election. What’s that been like for you?

NS: I enjoy it for the most part. It kind of comes with the territory. You can’t say “Oh I’m really glad my book is selling but I don’t want anyone to recognize me on the street.”

Nate Silver
Nate Silver on the Colbert Report.
 

You can’t pick and choose that. It just kind of happens to you. The only time it’s annoying is if I’m running late for the airport and someone will be like “Hey aren’t you Nate Silver?”

It makes it difficult to steal their cab [laughs].

I’ll put it this way: I think it’s good that people are recognizing someone that is into the numbers and stats and kind of a self-professed geek. I think sometimes I get attention that should really be applied more to ideas than to people.

Some of it is undeserved in that sense. You become a symbol, which is a bit strange.

PL: What do you think the American public misunderstands about poker as a skill game?

Daniel Negreanu and J.P. Kelly
Poker pros good. Full Tilt scandal bad.
 

NS: In some ways I think the American understanding of the game is actually more advanced than some places. I did a radio interview with Australian media this morning where the host expressed a very negative view of poker. It was sort of this sinful, gambling activity.

I think because it became so popular and so mainstream in the U.S. that people are maybe better versed in how they view it.

You still encounter people who get Blackjack and poker confused. They ask me if I can count cards.

It’s been really good having pros who are ambassadors for the game though. Obviously things like the Full Tilt scandal don’t help.

Hopefully by playing in these events I can say, “Look, poker is something that is a good skill to have in life. Or rather it teaches other good skills.”

It’s a really great way to develop your quantitative sensibilities and apply game theory and practice. You can also develop your estimation and people-reading skills.

I don’t think people realize how rich the game can be.

PL: You famously created a system to forecast Major League Baseball player performance. Do you ever look at poker and wonder if something similar could be done?

online poker
Nate Silver didn't utilize data-mining software when he played online.
 

NS: I’m reading that book Kill Everyone where they’ll develop models that come up with equilibrium solutions in certain situations. They are limited situations, like pre-flop and push or fold type of stuff. You could do a little bit with it I think.

One thing I regret is that when I played regularly online is that I didn’t look at the data. I wonder if you could do more fun, data-mining stuff.

Like for instance, if someone pauses before they raise. You could get really specific tendencies. I maybe should have done more of that.

In theory I also think that’s slightly evil.

I’ve been spending a lot of time thinking about how I can play my hand in such a way that I’m unexploitable, which is not easy to figure out to begin with but to actually apply that in a tournament setting, where you have incentive to preserve chips, is a very challenging problem.

PL: Let’s talk baseball for a minute. Is there a particular baseball prediction that you are most proud of?

NS: Probably the time we had the White Sox to go 72-90 in 2007. I kind of like the White Sox, so it was nothing personal, but the local media interviewed Scott Podsednik and he was like, “Who are these Baseball Prospectus guys and what the hell do they know?”

Then they finished 72-90.

It’s fun when people hate on you and then turn out to be wrong. That’s why the election was, in the end, fun.

nate silver south by southwest
Nate Silver at SXSWI. Photo: Randy Stewart.
 

In poker you’ve got guys who are always on your case or hating on you and sometimes you bust them and it’s satisfying, right?

That’s not always the case though. Quite often they’ll bust you or you never really have a climatic encounter.

The election is a very rare circumstance in politics where people were very dug in but then you got the satisfaction of having this certain outcome.

I think that’s why it resonated with a lot of people. It’s because in a lot of fields there are people who just kind of bullshit and end up being wrong forever and never have to be held accountable for it.

PL: There were a number of poker players who made money betting on your election predictions? Does that kind of thing ever make you nervous? 

NS: I try to differentiate on the blog when I think a prediction is more solid. We do things where we pick the Oscar or the NCAA tournament pool. Those are varying in sophistication but it’s hard to beat betting markets in general.

I really do think with the politics stuff we were more sophisticated than the markets. I don’t say that lightly.

Phil Hellmuth
TV pros win millions but how much do they spend on buy-ins?
 

I don’t mind if people take my advice on that stuff. I worry about other stuff where people go on ESPN wondering who is going to win the Super Bowl and I’m like, “I dunno, the Patriots probably. They have Tom Brady.” I hope people don’t bet on that kind of thing.

It’s just kind of finger in the wind stuff.

PL: Do you have any thoughts on the way poker rankings work? There are obviously some flaws with going entirely by tournament results.

NS: I’ve seen some attempts where people are kind of doing the Bayesian poker rankings but the problem is that you don’t have a sense for how many tournaments people enter.

If you talk to enough pros, you’ll learn that other pros, who have maybe won $2 million in a year also spent over $2 million in buy-ins.

If you don’t have that denominator for how many tournaments players are entering it becomes very tricky.

Maybe that data collection will improve but realistically you have 700 people entering at the last minute, it’s hard to collect everyone’s name. It is difficult to judge that, especially in tournaments where there is a huge amount of luck involved.

PL: Are there any other major tournaments you’d like to play?

NS: There are plenty of times during an election year when I can’t play but over the next year I’m going to have a little more free time. I’m going to play here and in the WSOP in Las Vegas in the summer and maybe Europe in the fall.

It would be fun to play a couple major events a year. At some point I’m going to have to make a run in one of them or it will just become pathetic. If I bust out early every time I’m sure I’ll get frustrated.

I feel like I have a deep run in me at some point. I’m not sure if I’m hugely +EV but I don’t’ think I’m –EV either so I’m breaking even and having a lot of fun.

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Ivey, Antonius, Obst Take Over Aussie Millions Day 2

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Obst finished as the overall chip leader on Day 2 with 1.06 million chips after a frenetic day of action. You can learn more about the Australian MTT master in an interview we did with Obst earlier in the day.

Meanwhile Ivey finished with 390,500 chips and Antonius finished with 332,000. Both players are in the top 20 chip counts.

Australian railbirds got a serious treat when the two IveyPoker.com teammates were seated at the same table for much of the day. Ivey and Antonius had no problems going right at each other but neither player found the knockout blow.

Day 2 began with 312 players but after seven levels of action the field had been cut down to a much more reasonable 69 players.

Some of the other notable players through to Day 3 include Jay Tan, Lee Markholt, Brandon Adams, Dan Shak, Celina Lin and Tyron Krost.

$1.6 Million First-Place Prize Up for Grabs

Nate Silver
Nate Silver busted with KK to AA.
 

Payouts were finally announced on Day 2 and with 629 entrants the prizepool hit AUD$6.2 million.

Despite getting 30 less players this year, Crown found a way to still award the same $1.6 million to first place. In fact this year the first-place winner will also receive a Chrysler 300C and a $40k Aussie Millions bracelet.

Super statistician Nate Silver’s impressive run at the 2013 Aussie Millions finally came to an end on Day 2 in a sick cooler. Silver, who was amongst the chip leaders for much of the day, got all in with pocket kings only to have Gary Benson call him down with pocket aces.

The aces held and Silver was sent packing. It was a disappointing finish for what was a strong showing from the New York Times blogger.

Some of the other famous faces to hit the rail on Day 2 included Annette Obrestad, Eoghan O’Dea, Neil Channing, Jackie Glazier, Mike Watson, Tony Bloom, Joe Hachem, Sam Holden, Toby Lewis, Jason Mercier and Kenny Tran.

Day 3 of the 2013 Aussie Millions Main Event begins at 12:30 p.m. local time tomorrow. The massive $250k Super High Roller also starts tomorrow at 4:30 p.m., which is a day earlier than originally scheduled.



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Daily 3-Bet: Obst Owns, Degrassi Theory, Shaun the Player

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Any suggestions for a future 3-Bet, feel free to drop a note in the comments.

Today in the 3-Bet we find Australia’s own James Obst dominating as the Aussie Millions main event winds closer to its final table, a new poker series taking some serious cues from the Degrassi school of melodrama and world-renowned WSOP favorite Shaun the Dealer setting his sights on a bigger goal.

1) Obst Leads Ivey, Antonius as Aussie Millions Field Shrinks

Phil Ivey
Can Ivey track down Obst?
 

Adelaide's James "andy McLEOD" Obst has been playing poker since he was 14 years old.

Now in his early 20s, he's going on a decade in poker that's made him one of the most respected - and richest - online poker players in Australia.

He's still missing his first major live title though -- something that could change quickly if he can hold the course in the ongoing Aussie Millions main event.

With just 69 players left and over 1 million in chips, Obst has double that of everyone in field save four players.

Can he hold on and take home the $1.6 million first-place prize and elusive major title as he considers the end of his poker-playing days? Will poker icons Phil Ivey and Patrik Antonius - both still in the game and withing striking distance with around 300k - rein him in?

Tune in to our news coverage tonight to see how it plays out. Read our full interview with Obst from the floow of the Aussie Millions today here.

2) Game Theory Gives Poker Degrassi Treatment

There's a lot to like about the new web series Game Theory. First, what it is:

"A dramatic web series following the life of a rounder after the federal crackdown of online poker. Struggling to make ends meet, he is forced to move back home and start from scratch.

"Seen as a failure by his father, he is determined to succeed. He turns to live cash games to build a bankroll, but with no money and max stress, the stakes are high as he puts his skills to the test."

The subject matter's obv. pretty relevant. And the poker isn't royal-flush-beats-quads-beats-full-house styles. It's better than that.

Where's not to like? Well, the overwritten dialogue isn't doing it any favors. And the abusive-janitor dad is only one of the Degrassi High factors going on.

Still, we wish any poker undertaking success. Two episodes are in the can with Ep. 3 in the works. Check the pilot and Ep. 1 below; donate to the cause here.

3) Shaun the Dealer Aims Higher

Shaun Harris and Jack
Shaun the Player?
 

If you've followed the live World Series of Poker coverage in the last few years you've likely come across the name Shaun the Dealer.

In a sea of often new-and-struggling dealers, Shaun Harris is a player fav. Deadly accurate and blazing fast, when players sit down at his table they notice the difference immediately. And they almost always say something about it.

At the top of his game and in the dealing rotation for the most prestigious final table in the world, there's not much further Shaun can go in dealing.

Thankfully, he has other plans. In a great piece on the PokerStars blog, Harris reveals he's been doing more than just slinging cards all these years.

He's been picking up tips from the greatest players in the world and he may be ready to jump to the other side of the felt for good.

"There are times when we have down time that I ask a simple question because I'm curious," Harris says."I get information that people would actually pay top dollar for. I get it for free, and I want to do something with it."

Read the full post here.



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Hong Kong's Jay Tan Killing It at First Aussie Millions

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Tan, who made the decision to play poker full time roughly a year ago, has been a dominant force on Day 3 of the tournament with over half a million chips for much of the day.

The field isn't exactly soft, either, with Phil Ivey and Patrik Antonius featuring prominently in the chip counts.

“I’m really excited,” said Tan. “This is an amazing tournament. I can’t believe how well run it is.

"I’ve heard good things about Melbourne being the poker capital of Australia and how great the Crown is. You can really feel it once you’re here.”

Tan’s biggest previous score was a fifth-place finish in a Macau Poker Cup event for $40k.

The Bodog-sponsored player has already locked up at least AUD$15,000 as the money bubble burst earlier today. Tan has her sights on the final 36, though, where action will switch to 6-handed. It’s her favorite game.

Tan Goes From Banking in Hong Kong to Poker

Tan came to the poker world with outstanding pedigree from the business world.

Jay Tan
Jay Tan at the 2013 Aussie Millions
 

She has her Masters Degree in business and pursued a banking career with Goldman Sachs in Hong Kong.

One night she stumbled upon poker on late night TV and fell in love with the game.

Despite having a successful and potentially lucrative career, Tan was thinking about poker during business hours and eventually had to make a change.

“I just figured I needed to give what I truly loved a shot and just see how far I can take it,” she said.

Fortunately Tan said that some of the skills she learned from getting her Masters Degree were transferable to poker. She also speaks Mandarin, Cantonese and English.

“I’ve studied for so many years of life I would like to think it helps my poker game.”

Tan: 'People Are Passionate About Poker in Hong Kong'

Jay Tan
Jay Tan
 

Being a full-time poker player in Hong Kong is not without it’s quirks and Tan generally has to take the ferry to Macau when she wants to play live.

“There was once a poker house in Hong Kong,” she said. “It was unfortunately shut down. It wasn’t exactly illegal but they just decided to shut it down anyways.

"There aren’t really any games in Hong Kong, probably some private ones but I don’t play those."

Generally regarded as one of the biggest untapped online poker markets in the world, Tan says the poker-playing community has expanded over the last few years.

“It’s still growing but people are starting to get really passionate about poker in Hong Kong,” she said. “It’s booming in Macau.”

While still several days out from the final table, Tan admitted a win in a tournament like the Aussie Millions would change her life.

“I feel I’ve been working very hard at my poker career,” she said. “Winning a tournament like this would definitely give me more confidence to continue on in this profession.”

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Robl: ‘Everything in Ship it Holla Ballas Book is True’

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Robl is one of the central figures in Ship it Holla Ballas! How a Bunch of 19-Year-Old College Dropouts Used the Internet to Become Poker’s Loudest, Craziest and Richest Crew by Jonathan Grotenstein and Storms Reback. 

Despite the author only using Robl’s online handle "Good2cu," it’s clearly about the young high-stakes pro.

“I’ve read the book,” he said. “I found it very entertaining. Everything in it is true.”

Robl and fellow poker players Phil Galfond, Peter “Apathy” Jetten and David “Raptor” Benefield were known for crushing online poker in the mid-2000s as well as living a fast-paced party lifestyle.

“When I look back at some of that stuff I just have to shake my head,” he admitted.

The book didn’t come as a tremendous shock to Robl as he’d done several interviews with the author. Much of the material Robl actually published himself on his blog back in the day.

Robl Still Winning Millions, Partying Less

Andrew Robl
Andrew Robl heads-up in the $100k Challenge
 

Much has changed for Robl since his younger years and earlier this week he was calm and collected as he won $1 million in the $100k Challenge at the Aussie Millions.

Robl said that in his younger years he would have partied for days after winning but he’s calmed down considerably since that period of his life.

“When I first got into poker I was insecure,” he said.

“I had a chip on my shoulder. I’ve matured since then. I used to feel like I had something to prove.”

Now a veteran of the poker world, Robl has one piece of advice for potential up-and-coming Ballas.

“If you do stupid things, don’t write about it on the Internet,” he laughed. “That’s a lesson I’ve learned.”



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Final Table in Sight for Antonius, Ivey After Aussie Millions Day 3

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The two world-renowned poker players put in another strong effort on Day 3 of the tournament.

Antonius finished with a second-best 957,000 chips while Ivey is in the middle of the pack with 399,000.

Australian Raymond Ellis leads the final 36 players with 1,044,000 chips.

Fast and Furious

Day 3 proved to be a rapid-fire affair taking just over five hours to go from 68 players to 36.

The final 36 is an intriguing mix of established pros and local recreational players.

James Obst, one of the best players in the history of Australian online poker, had a less-than-ideal day but still managed to finish in the top 10 with 660,000.

Some of the other pros still in contention are Dan Shak, Lee Markholt, Brandon Adams and Jan Collado.

Interestingly there are still four female players in the field with Jay Tan, Celina Lin, Kitty Kuo and Sam Cohen gunning for a seat at the final table.

Here are the top 10 chip counts at the end of Day 3:

1. Ray Ellis – 1,044,000 2. Patrik Antonius – 957,000 3. Mervin Chan – 943,000 4. Ang Pangleng – 928,000 5. Jan Collado – 908,000 6. Brandon Adams – 739,000 7. David Yan – 696,000 8. James Obst – 660,000 9. Damian Baldi – 624,000 10. Shoshiro Karita – 608,000

Ivey Busts Gary Benson to Burst Money Bubble

Phil Ivey
Phil Ivey
 

The money bubble was popped by none other than Phil Ivey in a rollercoaster of a hand.

Ivey had short-stack Gary Benson all-in with a dominating J J over Benson’s T T.

The rail was buzzing as the dealer put out a K-Q-T flop, which actually gave Benson the lead with the set of tens. Benson appeared destined for a double up but the poker gods had other ideas.

The turn was a meaningless 4 but the river came 9 to the delight of Phil Ivey and the crowd of poker fans. The rivered straight gave Ivey the checkmark and meant the remaining 64 players were in the money.

Craig McCorkell, Adam Schmidt, Tony Da Costa Silva, Daniel Neilson and Wei Low were among the players to bust in the money.

Former Aussie Millions winner Tyron Krost, who is freerolling the Aussie Millions Main Event for life, picked up $20,000 for busting in 41st place.

Action in the Aussie Millions Main Event is set to resume tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. local time with Antonius and Ivey both looking to secure a spot at the final table.

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Serock Continues Heater at WPT Borgata Day 3

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Serock finished in sixth position, trailing players like Taylor Paur and Ryan Paluf on the charge to tomorrow's final table.

Leading the pack, and the only player to eclipse the 3 million mark, is Houston, Texas poker player Yung Hwang.

Hwang will more than triple his lifetime live tournament earnings should he take down this title and the $730k first-place prize.

Other players of note to make it through to Day 4 include WSOP bracelet winner Chris Reslock (594,000) and WPT champion champion Matt Salsberg (567,000).

The money bubble took two hours to break at Borgata with big-name players like Jason Koon, Mohsin Charania and Christian Harder coming up short of the cash.

Making it into the money but falling short of the final 28 were Ana Marquez (34th), Matt Glantz (36th), Bryn Kenney (38th) and Keven Stammen (54th).

Taylor Paur
Taylor Paur
 

Here are the top 10 chip counts heading into Day 4 of the 2013 Borgata Winter Poker Open:

Yung Hwang – 3,039,000 Jeremy Druckman – 2,598,000 Sam Taylor – 2,390,000 Taylor Paur – 2,080,000 Ryan Paluf – 1,630,000 Joe Serock – 1,578,000 Mark Wahba – 1,490,000 Russel Crane – 1,477,000 Mike Gogliormella – 1,173,000 Anthony Zinno – 1,012,000

Serock in Striking Distance Again

Joe Serock is getting 2013 started with a bang, having already pocketed $100k for a third-place finish at the NBC Heads-Up Championship and a $46k score at the PCA Main Event.

But despite boasting one of the most consistent records in the game, a major title has so far eluded Serock.

He's finished third at two different WPT main event final tables and has two runner-up finishes in bracelet events at the World Series of Poker.

So far his live tournament earnings total just under $2 million.

Serock has three scored over $300k under his belt but if he should finish first or second in this event he will set a new personal best.

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7 Left, Reinkemeier Leads at Aussie Millions $250k

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Day 1 of this super high-roller event saw 18 players cough up the quarter-million dollar buy-in with four players firing a second $250k bullet.

By day's end just seven players were left, all of whom will return tomorrow to fight for one of the four spots in the money.

Prizes range from $2 million for first down to $500k for fourth.

Commanding a substantial lead heading into that playdown is German Tobias Reinkemeier, the only player to break the one-million mark today.

With over $4.4 million in earnings, much of which came from high-roller events, Reinkemeier is second on Germany's all-time tournament money list.

Joining Reinkemeier at the final table are two other players who have won millions in big buy-in events.

Brit Sam Trickett famously finished runner-up to Antonio Esfandiari in the world's first $1 million buy-in tournament, pocketing over $10 million.

Poker legend Erik Seidel, meanwhile, has over $17 million in live earnings and won this event in 2011 for $2.4 million.

Erik Seidel
Erik Seidel won this event in 2011.
 

Here are the chip counts for the final seven players in the 2013 Aussie Millions $250k Challenge.

Tobias Reinkemeier - 1,237,000 Igor Kurganov - 854,000 Fabian Quoss - 764,000 Richard Yong - 580,000 Sam Trickett - 494,000 Winfred Yu - 387,000 Erik Seidel – 184,000

Two Bullets, Two Misses for Robl, Hansen, Bloom and Phua

Four players decided to take advantage of the re-entry feature in this event, but none of them were able to survive the day even with the help of a second stack.

Andrew Robl, Gus Hansen, Tony Bloom and Paul Phua all spent $500k on this event and walked away empty-handed.

Robl, who won the $100k buy-in event at the Aussie Millions just a few days ago for $1 million, got unlucky in this event in a big preflop all-in with pocket kings against Igor Kurganov's A J.

Robl flopped top set but Kurganov nailed an inside Broadway straight draw on the turn.

Kurganov was also responsible for busting both of Tony Bloom's buy-ins. The second came when the rich British businessman shoved A-8 and was snapped off by the Russian's pocket tens.

Gus Hansen's final elimination was at the hands of Richard Yong. Hansen raised preflop with aces and got all-in after Yong flopped a set with pocket sixes.

PokerListings.com is on location at the 2013 Aussie Millions so keep an eye on our Poker News Section for daily interviews and stories from Melbourne.



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GPI Intros New Fantasy Poker Facebook Game

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Called Fantasy Poker Manager, the new social game allows poker fans to create and manage teams of professional poker players and compete based on how well those pros perform.

The game allows you to compete against players within your own customized league, as well as battle other players on Facebook in one-on-one challenges.

“The Fantasy Poker Manager fills an important spot in the poker community, acting as a bridge between online poker, social poker, and live tournament poker," said CEO Alex Dreyfus.

“It will help promote poker as the sport that it is and will bring the fans and professionals closer together."

Like fantasy-league games based on other professional sports, Fantasy Poker Manager gives you a finite amount of cash and lets you buy players priced relative to their expected performance.

But the app also lets you earn additional credits by making trades, taking their poker quiz, completing the 52 “achievements” or simply purchasing them for real money.

And since the market price of each poker pro is constantly changing with their GPI ranking, you can earn credits simply by buying and selling players.

The game has already gained a few early-adopters including Kevmath,Liv Boeree and Marvin Rettenmaier.

Here are some screenshots:

Fantasy Poker Manager on Facebook Mozilla Firefox 1312013 90844 AMFantasy Poker Manager on Facebook 2Fantasy Poker Manager on Facebook 3Fantasy Poker Manager on Facebook

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Daily 3-Bet: Seidel Scheme, Harman Lament, Antonius v. Cao

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Any suggestions for a future 3-Bet, feel free to drop a note in the comments

Today in the 3-Bet we find the ever-dangerous Erik Seidel lurking again in an Aussie Millions High Roller, Jennifer Harman questioning some of the editing missteps of Sin City Rules and Patrik Antonius stepping up to a $1 million challenge from frenchman Rui Cao.

1) Seidel Lingers, Schemes at $250k Final Table

Erik Seidel might just be the easiest guy to root for in poker.

Sure, he’s already got a gazillion dollars in tournament cashes. But with his lack of pretense, killer sense of humor and great taste in music he’s just the kind of guy you hope sticks around – and wins – in poker for the next 30 years.

Erik Seidel
Seidel: Will sell you out for deer-antler use.
 

Off to a pretty quiet start in 2013 – and certainly compared to 2011– Seidel busted early (for once) in the NBC Heads-Up event and promptly flew to Australia where he ambled up and plunked down $250k for the High Roller event yesterday.

He’s dead last in chips heading into the final table but given his history at the Aussie Millions and his often-underrated genius, don’t be surprised to see a "Seidel Wins $2m Again” headline tomorrow.

If winning with his play doesn’t work out, he also has a plan B:

I'm in last place going into day 2 of the Aussie 250k. Best hope, I prove the 6 other guys r using dear-antler spray & they're disqualified

— Erik Seidel (@Erik_Seidel) January 31, 2013

See? How can you not love Erik Seidel? Check our news section tomorrow for a full HR recap and follow the best Twitter account in poker here.

2) Harman Post-Mortem on Sin City Rules: Disappointing Editing

Jennifer Harman
Don't cut Harman's jokes.
 

Ask any reality TV show character what he or she thought it would be going in and what the finished product was coming out and you’ll hear the same story over and over. Namely, WTF happened?

Poker pro Jennifer Harman has a similar feeling about her now-axed show on TLC, Sin City Rules. Her main beef, she says in a new post-mortem blog post, is the editing:

"I was very disconcerted by the fact that the show’s focus was mainly on the feud between Lana Fuchs and Alicia Jacobs while the more comical and light-hearted moments ended up on the cutting room floor. Viewers were not given the opportunity to see much beyond the drama and conflict."

Also missing from the final product were any mention of her business ventures and a solid joke about Jacobs not sleeping with her husband. Still, Harman says she has no regrets:

"With all that said (or written), you may ask 'do you regret doing the show?' Absolutely not. I love the new friendships and perspective it’s brought into my life."

Watch the latest episode (6 of 8 total) below:

3) Antonius to Play Rui Cao in $1 Million Online Challenge

Patrik Antonius
I would do that.
 

Finally ... a million-dollar online challenge that will actually happen!

The buzz all over the forums today centers on a new $1m challenge agreed to by poker heavyweight Patrik Antonius and French high-stakes crusher Rui Cao.

Materializing in a chat-room offer from Cao, the stakes will be $1m split between three different games - $350k on Hold’em, $350k on PLO and $300 on 2-7 Triple Draw.

Next Tuesday is the expected date, although with Antonius still going strong in the Aussie Millions Main Event that timetable could change.

Antonius now also has the coolest acceptance of a $1m challenge in the history of poker. From the chat log:

Rui Cao: by the wayRui Cao: wanna play a challenge?*Rui Cao: lets say 1M freeezeout NL PLO and deuce?*Patrik Antonius: it depents what kind ofPatrik Antonius: this would be online?Rui Cao: yesPatrik Antonius: i would do that

God bless you, Patrik Antonius. More details at HSDB.com here.



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Trickett Holds Off German Invasion to Win $2 Million

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Trickett took down AUD $2 million for his efforts.

“I’m over the moon,” he said. “It’s another big pay day. I can’t really believe it.”

The final table featured the aforementioned Germans, Trickett, Erik Seidel and Macau high rollers Richard Yong and Winfred Yu.

Only four spots paid, however, and Yong, Seidel and Yu were left out of the cash by finishing seventh, sixth and fifth respectively.

The odds were in favor of a German winner as Reinkemeier, Quoss, Kurganov, who are all friends, were in the final four. Trickett had other ideas.

Trickett Goes Straight Flush Over Flush to Bust Kurganov Fourth

Tobias Reinkemeier
Runner-up finisher Tobias Reinkemeier.
 

The highlight hand of the final table saw Trickett bust Kurganov in a massive pot with a straight flush over Kurganov’s jack-high flush.

“I was actually a little bit embarrassed to have a straight flush over a flush in that scenario,” said Trickett.

“It already happened to me in One Drop when I had quads against a guy with the nut-flush. It was definitely a fun turn card.”

Quoss busted shortly after the hand, which paved the way for a heads-up battle between Reinkemeier and Trickett. Heads-up only lasted a few hands with Trickett busting Reinkemier with Ace-Five over King-Deuce.

Trickett’s record in high-roller events is mind-boggling. The Englishman is now up nearly $6 million in events $100k and higher since 2011 with two outright victories in $100k events and a previous second place in the $250k.

“I probably play more high rollers than anyone else,” he said. “I feel like it suits my style of poker, putting lots of pressure on people.”

If you include Trickett’s second place in the $1 million buy-in Big Drop then he’s up over $16 million.

“It helps that I choose to run good in these tournaments,” he laughed.

Here are the complete final-table results:

1. Sam Trickett - $2 million 2. Tobias Reinkemeier - $1.25 million 3. Fabian Quoss - $750,000 4. Igor Kurganov - $500,000 5. Winfred Yu - $0 6. Erik Seidel - $0 7. Richard Yong - $0

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Hwang, Salsberg Headline WPT Borgata Final Table

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Hwang, an experienced grinder from Houston, TX with a WSOP Circuit win to his credit, will be the chip leader heading in with 9,550,000. 

Salsberg, meanwhile, has reached his second WPT final table in just a few months.

The former writer and executive producer for Showtime’s Weeds, Salsberg broke through with his first major win at WPT Paris last September and has navigated another massive field at Borgata to make the final six.

Salsberg will enter play as the short stack with 1,920,000 but with 19 big blinds still has some room to make a move.

Jim Anderson, another former WSOP-C regional champion, is second in chips to Hwang with 7.8 million. Matt Haugen, who final tabled the 2010 PCA main event, is fourth.

Matthew Haugen
Matt Haugen
 

The final six and chip counts:

1. Andy Hwang 9,550,000 2. Jim Anderson 7,830,000 3. Jeremy Druckman 6,170,000 4. Matt Haugen 3,235,000 5. Mike Gogliormella 2,255,000 6. Matthew Salsberg 1,920,000

With 1,024 total entries the Borgata Winter Poker Open prize pool hit a massive $3,335,442. Payouts for the final six:

1. $730,053 2. $438,698 3. $265,475 4. $222,336 5. $182,514 6. $147,671

Follow along with the WPT Live Updates or watch the live stream on a 30-minute delay starting at 1:30 pm ET here.



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Antonius Still Owed Huge Debt Thanks to FTP Fallout

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In 2011 Antonius told PokerListings he could potentially lose $5 million thanks to Full Tilt Poker’s problems. 

Antonius’ problems were multiplied by the fact he had money indirectly frozen on Full Tilt and was owed millions by fellow players who made their living on the site.

When asked if the debt had been paid in regards to the players who owed him money, Antonius was brutally honest.

“No it hasn’t,” he said. “It hurt me big time because so many people owed me money.

"Many people who were involved with Full Tilt… they owe me a lot of money. Because they got hurt, I’m not going to see my money for awhile.”

Surprisingly Antonius also went on to say that PokerStars’ recent purchase of Full Tilt didn’t help him with the debts he’s owed.

Antonius Crushing 2013 Aussie Millions Main Event

Patrik Antonius
Patrik Antonius
 

Despite still being owed the money, Antonius is trying not to concentrate on it too much.

“It’s in the past now,” said Antonius.

Antonius has other concerns, like trying to finally close out a big $10k tournament. The Finn was leading the 2013 Aussie Millions Main Event mid-way through Day 4.

Although Antonius rarely travels for tournaments, he has a good record in $10k buy-ins over the last few years with a great performance in the WSOPE Main Event in 2012 and an eighth place finish in the Aussie Millions Main Event in 2011.

“I’ve made quite a few deep runs,” he said.

“One of the most frustrating was the WSOPE Main Event. I think I played the best tournament poker of my life and then I lost one hand and I was out.”

Antonius has a particularly good record at the Aussie Millions. In 2012 he finished second in the Aussie Millions $250k High Roller for $1.2 million.

“I love Australia,” said Antonius. “This is basically my favorite tournament of the year. I’m always happy here, which means I’m playing very good poker. I will always come to Australia for this tournament.”

Check our news section for updates on Antonius’ efforts to make the final table of this year’s contest.

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Antonius Makes Aussie Millions Final Table, Ivey Falls Short

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Phil Ivey and Antonius were far and away the most well-known poker pros who entered Day 4 with a shot of making the final table but it was the Finnish pro who proved to have staying power this time around. 

Antonius bubbled this event in 2011, coming in eighth place, but made no mistake this time around, securing a spot at the final table with one of the bigger stacks with 3.3 million.

Everyone is looking up to businessman/poker player Shak, however, who ended with 3.7 million.

Bodog-sponsored pro Jay Tan also became the fifth woman to make the final table at the Aussie Millions, although she’ll take one of the shortest stacks into battle tomorrow.

Meanwhile Jarrod Glennon and Joe Cabret will represent Melbourne at the final table.

New Zealander David Yan will try to upset the Australian dominance at the Aussie Millions by taking the title back to Auckland.

Finally Malaysian Mervin Chan is a bit of a wild card at the final table but has nearly 3 million chips to work with.

Here’s a look at the final table chip counts:

Dan Shak - 3,775,000 Jarrod Glennon - 3,600,000 Patrik Antonius - 3,345,000 Mervin Chan - 2,910,000 Joseph Cabret - 2,655,000 David Yan - 1,450,000 Jay Tan - 1,220,000

Phil Ivey Train Derailed by James Obst

Phil Ivey
Phil Ivey all in against James Obst.
 

Just one year after finishing 13th in the Aussie Millions Main Event, Phil Ivey was once again in the hunt for the final table.

This year Ivey’s ride came to an end slightly earlier than in 2012, thanks to a surging James Obst.

Ivey’s final hand was weird one. After a series of bets pre-flop, the dealer put out a five-high flop.

Obst bet, which sent Ivey into the tank. Eventually Ivey announced he was all-in but Obst didn’t hear so he waited several minutes before the dealer made it clear Ivey was all-in.

Obst immediately called with pocket sevens, which had Ivey’s pocket fives crushed. There were no surprises on the turn or the river and Ivey was eliminated in 30th.

Despite having a large stack after the hand, Obst didn’t last that much longer than Ivey. The Australian busted to Mervin Chan in 19th place. 

Last year Ivey busted from the Main Event only to enter the $250k buy-in Super High Roller and eventually win it for $2 million. Unfortunately Ivey wasn’t able to attempt that feat again as the $250k conflicted with the Main Event.

It proved to be a long day at the Aussie Millions as it took nearly 15 hours of action to go from 36 players to the final seven.

The final table begins at 2:30 p.m. local time tomorrow.



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