Qiang Fu Poker
2021年2月26日Register here: http://gg.gg/ogf7r
Jonathan Karamilikis used all of his I.Q, E.Q and luck to scramble back from a seemingly impossible heads-up position to defeat Ryan Otto in the AUD 20,000 No-Limit Hold’em High Roller at the World Series of Poker Circuit (WSOPC) at The Star Sydney.
*Qiang Fu Poker Rules
*Qiang Fu Poker Game
*Qiang Fu Poker Games
*Qiang Fu Poker Play
The event pulled in 53-entrants, and at the end of Day 1, nine signed media contracts without looking at them.
Qiang Fu exits in a brutal fashion After a slight lull, the action picked right back up with the elimination of Qiang Fu. It was Roger Teska the man to light the fuse in the hand that would blow Fu out of the tournament, though it was Jonathan Karamalikis the man to send him to the rail in what would prove to be a brutal bust out. Qiang Fu’s poker tournament results and rankings. Players: 643,664 Screened events: 266,786 Latest Weekly Update: 30 Sep, 2020 Next update in 6 days. Full details of the Asia Player of the Year Leaderboard, which tracks players over PokerStars LIVE Manila, APPT and other live poker tournaments.
Four players stood out.
Karamalikis was the most experienced of the final table incumbents, with $4.3m in live tournament earnings, and 12 wins under his belt, including beating a 422-entrant field in an AUD 2,500 No-Limit Hold’em event at the Victorian Poker Championships for AUD 198,970 in October.
Michael Egan won an 89-entrant WPT Cambodia High Roller for $64,870 at the end of November, and Roger Teska won the 373-entrant WPT Gardens Festival Main Event in July for $368,475. He also won the 394-entrant $25,500 MILLIONS World in 2018 for $2m.
Let’s check out the action.Final Table Seat Draw
Seat 1: Julien Sitbon – 110,000Seat 2: Bernie Stang – 142,000Seat 3: Qiang Fu – 366,000Seat 4: Jonathan Karamalikis – 128,000Seat 5: Mladen Vukovic – 360,000Seat 6: Tom Rafferty – 258,000Seat 7: Ryan Otto – 630,000Seat 8: Michael Egan – 204,000Seat 9: Roger Teska – 461,000The Nutshell Action
If you remove the ’n’ from Bernie Stang’s name, you get Stag, but Bernie didn’t have the opportunity to stick his antlers into anyone before Ryan Otto had his head on his wall.
Otto opened to 12,000 from the hijack, and Stang made the call from the big blind. The dealer laid the Kh7h6s onto the flop, Stang led for 15,000, Otto raised to 40,000, and Stang moved all-in quicker than an electric chair convulsion. Stang showed Ah3h for the nut flush draw, and Otto was ahead with AcKs for top pair. The 3s and 2s concluded the action, and Stang hit the rail.
Then we lost Tom Rafferty.
Rafferty limped into the pot from the small blind, and Otto checked his option in the next seat. The dealer stuck the innocuous-looking 9h3s2d onto the flop, Rafferty bet 10,000, Otto re-raised to 30,000, Rafferty raised to 85,000, and Otto called. The dealer placed the 4d onto the turn, and Rafferty moved all-in holding pocket jacks, and Otto called with 3h2h for a flopped two-pair hand. The 5h hit the river, and Rafferty missed the money by two spots.
The final six players made a profit after Julien Sitbon visited the cemetery that is the bubble position. The Frenchman got it in holding KhQc, and Roger Teska called and beat him with As8c.
Michael Egan was the first to leave the blockbuster with a few Aussie bucks in his back pocket when he exited in the sixth position. Ryan Otto was once again the Dr Manhattan of this one when his KhQc beat the Kh9c of Egan in a blind on blind battle.
Otto continued to be a one-person wrecking crew by removing Mladen Vukovic from the picture. Vukovic made it 18,000 to play from the cutoff and called when Otto three-bet to 60,000 from the button. The dealer placed 3h3c2s onto the flop, and Vukovic check-called a 30,000 Otto c-bet. The Td fell on the turn, and the same action ensued for 90,000. The final card was the 4s, Vukovic checked, Otto moved all-in, and the call came. Otto showed Ac5c for the straight, and Vukovic showed AsTs for a pair of tens, and that’s the last act he made before leaving his seat.
Ryan Otto – 1,300,000Roger Teska – 594,000 Jonathan Karamalikis – 415,000 Qiang Fu – 316,000
Qiang Fu finished third in this event last year, and he had to make do with fourth in this one. Fu got it in pre-flop holding pocket kings against the AcKc of Jonathan Karamalikis, and an ace on the turn turned into an FU for Fu.
We reached heads-up when Otto eliminated Teska. The pair got it in pre-flop with Otto’s pocket four racing against Teska’s AcQd, and the fours held. Heads-Up Tale of the Tape
Ryan Otto – 2,127,000Jonathan Karamalikis – 537,000
Karamalikis began with a 4:1 chip deficit but clawed his way into the lead by the end of the first level. Karamalikis then looked the likelier to win until a cooler saw Otto retake the lead with pocket queens besting pocket jacks.Qiang Fu Poker Rules
Karamalikis doubled back into the lead, and never let it go. The final hand saw his Qc8s beat the Ah5s of Otto when all-in pre-flop earning Karamalikis the first WSOPC gold ring of his career. ITM Results
*Jonathan Karamalikis – $257,640
*Ryan Otto – $159,395
*Roger Teska – $104,430
*Qiang Fu – $72,140
*Mladen Vukovic – $52,900
*Michael Egan – $40,535
Five champions have been crowned so far during the 2017 Aussie Millions being held at the Crown Entertainment Complex in Melbourne. Several of the events have seen record entries and millions of dollars have already been awarded, with over 200 players collecting payouts. With another 21 events yet to be completed, culminating with the highly anticipated $250,000 Challenge on January 30, and of course the Main Event that finishes a day earlier, much excitement is expected across the remaining schedule.
Event 1 – $1,150 NLHE, Entrants: 1565, Prize pool: $1,604,125
An impressive first prize of over $320,000 would go to the eventual champion, Robert Raymond (pictured) of Melbourne, in the opening event. A record field of 1565 across four day 1 flights would see 153 players cash in the event, the minimum cash being $2,885. In 2016 there were 1320 entrants, so it was a great way to start the 2017 Aussie Millions campaign.
Flight 1 saw 254 players enter (no re-entries), flight 2 was locked out at 240, flight 3 had an impressive 405 players, and flight 4 a massive 666 players.
The final day got underway with 16 players remaining. The first player eliminated was Espen Solaas from Norway. As players continued to hit the rail, Sam Higgs, fresh off his 2nd place finish at the APPT Melbourne event in October, busted in 8th, leaving the final seven to battle it out for the remaining prizemoney. Tournament veteran Sam Khouis from Sydney would add to his over 140 career cashes to bust in 7th place for $35,290.Qiang Fu Poker Game
With play four-handed, the odds seemed stacked against the eventual winner. Raymond only had 1.64 million in chips, leaving him as the short stack against Qiang Fu with 3.7 million, Alex Lynskey with 4.95 million, and chip-leader at the time, Michael Addamo, with 5.4 million. The two shortest stacks however, didn’t surrender and ended up facing off against one another, as Lynskey and Addamo would bust out. Raymond would outlast Fu for the lion’s share of the prize pool and claim his own coveted Aussie Millions championship.
Top 16 payouts:1st$320,830Robert RaymondMelbourneAustralia2nd$198,115Qiang FuAucklandNew Zealand3rd$117,910Michael AddamoMelbourneAustralia4th$85,180Alexander LynskeyMelbourneAustralia5th$57,750Manis LoeserBrightonEngland6th$41,705Jack EfaraimoWellingtonNew Zealand7th$35,290Sam KhoueisSydneyAustralia8th$30,480Sam HiggsMelbourneAustralia9th$25,665Hoong Ping YongMalaysia10th$21,665Sandro ZellweggerLosoneSwiterland11th$17,645Slade R FisherBluffNew Zealand12th$17,645Denis JankovicBrisbaneAustralia13th$14,435John R BransPerthAustralia14th$14,435Samuel KormanMelbourneAustralia15th$14,435Oliver ClassenFreiburgGermany16th$11,230Espen SolaasNorway
Event 2 – $2,500 H.O.R.S.E., Entrants: 49, Prize pool: $110,250
On the third day of the 2017 Aussie Millions Poker Championship, Taiwan’s James Chen has claimed the first championship ring of the series, taking down the $2,500 H.O.R.S.E. event and walking away with the top prize of $39,700 for his efforts. The tournament attracted 49 players, another increase from the 39 entrants that played this event last year.
As play reached a final table of seven on Day 2, the decision was made to play though the bubble to the money. The final six remaining players would return the following day to crown a winner.
Australia’s Dylan Honeyman, who entered the final day in fourth place, was the first to exit the tournament on Day 3. Honeyman added to his over $600,000 in live tournament cashes, having recorded his biggest win of his career during the 2016 Aussie Millions Main Event, finishing 5th for $340,000.
Fellow Aussie Jarrett Bullock would benefit from Honeyman’s early exit, as he entered the day with the short stack. However, Bullock was unable to hang on, bowing out in 5th place for $8,825, his largest live poker tournament cash.
Melbournian Jarryd Godena was next to bust, leaving Rainer Quel the lone Aussie left in the event. Quel would outlast the most experienced player, England’s Richard Ashby, who would finish 3rd. Ashby has over $2.3 million in tournament winnings, including a World Series of Poker triumph in 2010 when he won a gold bracelet in the WSOP $1,500 Seven Card Stud event.
Payouts:1st$39,700James ChenTaipeiTaiwan2nd$25,355Rainer QuelMelbourneAustralia3rd$16,535Richard AshbyGreat Britain4th$12,125Jarryd GodenaNSWAustralia5th$8,825Jarrett BullockMelbourneAustralia6th$7,710Dylan HoneymanWAAustralia
Event 3 – $1,150 NLHE Shot Clock Shootout, Entrants: 153, Prizepool: $156,825
Leading Austrian poker professional Thomas Muhlocker has taken down the third event of the series for $40,125. The event featured a fun, fast-paced shootout format on day 1, which instituted a shot clock to keep the game moving.Qiang Fu Poker Games
The event began with 153 runners and 17 shootout tables, up from the 126 players who played the same event in 2016. Each of the table winners of the shootout format would min-cash for $2,075, and return on day 2 for a standard multi-table tournament.
Among those to win their shootout tables and move to the final day were 2007 Aussie Millions Main Event 4th place finisher Julius Colman, and 2016 Aussie Millions Main Event champion Ari Engel. Neither Colman nor reigning champ Engel would add this Aussie Millions title to their list of accomplishments though, finishing 12th and 7th respectively.
When the dust settled on the final day’s play, it would be Muhlocker to claim victory, leaving Crown Poker regular Henry Szmelcer with $26,775 for his runner-up finish.
Payouts:Qiang Fu Poker Play1st$40,125Thomas R. MuhlockerViennaAustria2nd$26,775Henry SzmelcerMelbourneAustralia3rd$17,365Dejan V. BoskovicNSWAustralia4th$13,445Shoshiro KaritaMelbourneAustralia5th$11,090Preben StokkanHarstadNorway6th$9,130Ryan Van SanfordFloridaUSA7th$7,565Alan Ryan EngelTorontoCanada8th$5,995Thomas BoivinWalcourtBelgium9th$4,425Gary TomesNew Zealand10th$3,645Tolly SakellariouNSWAustralia11th$2,860Jamie CrawleyMelbourneAustralia12th$2,860Julius ColmanMelbourneAustralia13th$2,465Tatjana ZizicNelsonNew Zealand14th$2,465Stefan JedlickaViennaAustria15th$2,465Ryuichiro YamakawaTokyoJapan16th$2,075Sam PaineBrisbaneAustralia17th$2,075Timothy HickSydneyAustralia
Event 4 – $1,150 Pot Limit Omaha, Entrants: 237, Prizepool: $242,925
Australia’s Serge Osalanhas become the second local player to be crowned a champion in this year’s poker series after taking down the fourth event for $58,315. Osalan not only recorded his first win in an Aussie Millions event, but it was his first tournament win overall and his first cash in any Aussie Millions tournament.
The event began with 237 runners, up from the 217 players who played the same event in 2016. Day 2 would see 16 players advance through, all in the money, with 27 players in the tournament min-cashing for $1,945.
Top 10 Payouts:1st$58,315Serg OsalianMelbourneAustralia2nd$37,655Nikolas SolomosMelbourneAustralia3rd$24,280William J ZavosGold CoastAustralia4th$19,435Andre MoracchiniNoumeaNew Caledonia5th$15,305Bridges RoeMelbourneAustralia6th$12,145Nilolay MarkovSofiaBulgaria7th$9,715Kevin KelsallAdelaideAustralia8th$7,895Alfred ClearWellingtonNew Zealand9th$6,075Jan SuchanekNelsonNew Zealand10th$4,860Felix StephensenOsloNorway
Event 5 – $1,150 NLHE – Mix Max, Entrants: 230, Prizepool: $235,750
After two days of intense action in the Mix Max event, Niall Murray has triumphed over fellow Brit Jack Salter, for $61,300. It was his first championship ring, first Aussie Millions cash, and he now has more than $200,000 in live tournament winnings.
The Mix Max event was locked at 230 entries with play continuing on Day 1 through the money bubble to end with 23 players, all min-cashing for $2705. The format saw everyone initially seated at full ring tables before switching to six-handed tables with only 36 players remaining. When the final eight players were left they locked horns in a series of heads-up battles to crown a champion.
The Aussies didn’t fare too well though; with only one top seven finish, that being Nelson Smith from Adelaide. The final heads-up battle was an all-British affair with Murray facing Salter for the title. Salter, an Aussie Millions champion in 2014 when he won the $5,000 no-limit hold’em Six-Max event, was to narrowly miss out on winning a second ring when he finished runner-up to Scott Davies in the 2014 Aussie Millions Main Event. Unfortunately for Salter he would again finish in 2nd place, with Murray triumphing.
Top 10 Payouts:1st$61,300Niall MurrayLondonEngland2nd$40,085Jack SalterLondonEngland3rd$21,405Linh TranHo Chi MinVietnam4th$21,405William A MolsonMontrealCanada5th$9,145Elliot K SmithVancouverCanada6th$9,145Nelson K SmithAdelaideAustralia7th$9,145Colin Morris-DenbyRongoteaNew Zealand8th$9,145Brian M PayneMelbourneAustralia9th$5,660Michael J EganMelbourneAustralia10th$5,660Geoffrey L MooneySydneyAustralia
Register here: http://gg.gg/ogf7r
https://diarynote.indered.space
Jonathan Karamilikis used all of his I.Q, E.Q and luck to scramble back from a seemingly impossible heads-up position to defeat Ryan Otto in the AUD 20,000 No-Limit Hold’em High Roller at the World Series of Poker Circuit (WSOPC) at The Star Sydney.
*Qiang Fu Poker Rules
*Qiang Fu Poker Game
*Qiang Fu Poker Games
*Qiang Fu Poker Play
The event pulled in 53-entrants, and at the end of Day 1, nine signed media contracts without looking at them.
Qiang Fu exits in a brutal fashion After a slight lull, the action picked right back up with the elimination of Qiang Fu. It was Roger Teska the man to light the fuse in the hand that would blow Fu out of the tournament, though it was Jonathan Karamalikis the man to send him to the rail in what would prove to be a brutal bust out. Qiang Fu’s poker tournament results and rankings. Players: 643,664 Screened events: 266,786 Latest Weekly Update: 30 Sep, 2020 Next update in 6 days. Full details of the Asia Player of the Year Leaderboard, which tracks players over PokerStars LIVE Manila, APPT and other live poker tournaments.
Four players stood out.
Karamalikis was the most experienced of the final table incumbents, with $4.3m in live tournament earnings, and 12 wins under his belt, including beating a 422-entrant field in an AUD 2,500 No-Limit Hold’em event at the Victorian Poker Championships for AUD 198,970 in October.
Michael Egan won an 89-entrant WPT Cambodia High Roller for $64,870 at the end of November, and Roger Teska won the 373-entrant WPT Gardens Festival Main Event in July for $368,475. He also won the 394-entrant $25,500 MILLIONS World in 2018 for $2m.
Let’s check out the action.Final Table Seat Draw
Seat 1: Julien Sitbon – 110,000Seat 2: Bernie Stang – 142,000Seat 3: Qiang Fu – 366,000Seat 4: Jonathan Karamalikis – 128,000Seat 5: Mladen Vukovic – 360,000Seat 6: Tom Rafferty – 258,000Seat 7: Ryan Otto – 630,000Seat 8: Michael Egan – 204,000Seat 9: Roger Teska – 461,000The Nutshell Action
If you remove the ’n’ from Bernie Stang’s name, you get Stag, but Bernie didn’t have the opportunity to stick his antlers into anyone before Ryan Otto had his head on his wall.
Otto opened to 12,000 from the hijack, and Stang made the call from the big blind. The dealer laid the Kh7h6s onto the flop, Stang led for 15,000, Otto raised to 40,000, and Stang moved all-in quicker than an electric chair convulsion. Stang showed Ah3h for the nut flush draw, and Otto was ahead with AcKs for top pair. The 3s and 2s concluded the action, and Stang hit the rail.
Then we lost Tom Rafferty.
Rafferty limped into the pot from the small blind, and Otto checked his option in the next seat. The dealer stuck the innocuous-looking 9h3s2d onto the flop, Rafferty bet 10,000, Otto re-raised to 30,000, Rafferty raised to 85,000, and Otto called. The dealer placed the 4d onto the turn, and Rafferty moved all-in holding pocket jacks, and Otto called with 3h2h for a flopped two-pair hand. The 5h hit the river, and Rafferty missed the money by two spots.
The final six players made a profit after Julien Sitbon visited the cemetery that is the bubble position. The Frenchman got it in holding KhQc, and Roger Teska called and beat him with As8c.
Michael Egan was the first to leave the blockbuster with a few Aussie bucks in his back pocket when he exited in the sixth position. Ryan Otto was once again the Dr Manhattan of this one when his KhQc beat the Kh9c of Egan in a blind on blind battle.
Otto continued to be a one-person wrecking crew by removing Mladen Vukovic from the picture. Vukovic made it 18,000 to play from the cutoff and called when Otto three-bet to 60,000 from the button. The dealer placed 3h3c2s onto the flop, and Vukovic check-called a 30,000 Otto c-bet. The Td fell on the turn, and the same action ensued for 90,000. The final card was the 4s, Vukovic checked, Otto moved all-in, and the call came. Otto showed Ac5c for the straight, and Vukovic showed AsTs for a pair of tens, and that’s the last act he made before leaving his seat.
Ryan Otto – 1,300,000Roger Teska – 594,000 Jonathan Karamalikis – 415,000 Qiang Fu – 316,000
Qiang Fu finished third in this event last year, and he had to make do with fourth in this one. Fu got it in pre-flop holding pocket kings against the AcKc of Jonathan Karamalikis, and an ace on the turn turned into an FU for Fu.
We reached heads-up when Otto eliminated Teska. The pair got it in pre-flop with Otto’s pocket four racing against Teska’s AcQd, and the fours held. Heads-Up Tale of the Tape
Ryan Otto – 2,127,000Jonathan Karamalikis – 537,000
Karamalikis began with a 4:1 chip deficit but clawed his way into the lead by the end of the first level. Karamalikis then looked the likelier to win until a cooler saw Otto retake the lead with pocket queens besting pocket jacks.Qiang Fu Poker Rules
Karamalikis doubled back into the lead, and never let it go. The final hand saw his Qc8s beat the Ah5s of Otto when all-in pre-flop earning Karamalikis the first WSOPC gold ring of his career. ITM Results
*Jonathan Karamalikis – $257,640
*Ryan Otto – $159,395
*Roger Teska – $104,430
*Qiang Fu – $72,140
*Mladen Vukovic – $52,900
*Michael Egan – $40,535
Five champions have been crowned so far during the 2017 Aussie Millions being held at the Crown Entertainment Complex in Melbourne. Several of the events have seen record entries and millions of dollars have already been awarded, with over 200 players collecting payouts. With another 21 events yet to be completed, culminating with the highly anticipated $250,000 Challenge on January 30, and of course the Main Event that finishes a day earlier, much excitement is expected across the remaining schedule.
Event 1 – $1,150 NLHE, Entrants: 1565, Prize pool: $1,604,125
An impressive first prize of over $320,000 would go to the eventual champion, Robert Raymond (pictured) of Melbourne, in the opening event. A record field of 1565 across four day 1 flights would see 153 players cash in the event, the minimum cash being $2,885. In 2016 there were 1320 entrants, so it was a great way to start the 2017 Aussie Millions campaign.
Flight 1 saw 254 players enter (no re-entries), flight 2 was locked out at 240, flight 3 had an impressive 405 players, and flight 4 a massive 666 players.
The final day got underway with 16 players remaining. The first player eliminated was Espen Solaas from Norway. As players continued to hit the rail, Sam Higgs, fresh off his 2nd place finish at the APPT Melbourne event in October, busted in 8th, leaving the final seven to battle it out for the remaining prizemoney. Tournament veteran Sam Khouis from Sydney would add to his over 140 career cashes to bust in 7th place for $35,290.Qiang Fu Poker Game
With play four-handed, the odds seemed stacked against the eventual winner. Raymond only had 1.64 million in chips, leaving him as the short stack against Qiang Fu with 3.7 million, Alex Lynskey with 4.95 million, and chip-leader at the time, Michael Addamo, with 5.4 million. The two shortest stacks however, didn’t surrender and ended up facing off against one another, as Lynskey and Addamo would bust out. Raymond would outlast Fu for the lion’s share of the prize pool and claim his own coveted Aussie Millions championship.
Top 16 payouts:1st$320,830Robert RaymondMelbourneAustralia2nd$198,115Qiang FuAucklandNew Zealand3rd$117,910Michael AddamoMelbourneAustralia4th$85,180Alexander LynskeyMelbourneAustralia5th$57,750Manis LoeserBrightonEngland6th$41,705Jack EfaraimoWellingtonNew Zealand7th$35,290Sam KhoueisSydneyAustralia8th$30,480Sam HiggsMelbourneAustralia9th$25,665Hoong Ping YongMalaysia10th$21,665Sandro ZellweggerLosoneSwiterland11th$17,645Slade R FisherBluffNew Zealand12th$17,645Denis JankovicBrisbaneAustralia13th$14,435John R BransPerthAustralia14th$14,435Samuel KormanMelbourneAustralia15th$14,435Oliver ClassenFreiburgGermany16th$11,230Espen SolaasNorway
Event 2 – $2,500 H.O.R.S.E., Entrants: 49, Prize pool: $110,250
On the third day of the 2017 Aussie Millions Poker Championship, Taiwan’s James Chen has claimed the first championship ring of the series, taking down the $2,500 H.O.R.S.E. event and walking away with the top prize of $39,700 for his efforts. The tournament attracted 49 players, another increase from the 39 entrants that played this event last year.
As play reached a final table of seven on Day 2, the decision was made to play though the bubble to the money. The final six remaining players would return the following day to crown a winner.
Australia’s Dylan Honeyman, who entered the final day in fourth place, was the first to exit the tournament on Day 3. Honeyman added to his over $600,000 in live tournament cashes, having recorded his biggest win of his career during the 2016 Aussie Millions Main Event, finishing 5th for $340,000.
Fellow Aussie Jarrett Bullock would benefit from Honeyman’s early exit, as he entered the day with the short stack. However, Bullock was unable to hang on, bowing out in 5th place for $8,825, his largest live poker tournament cash.
Melbournian Jarryd Godena was next to bust, leaving Rainer Quel the lone Aussie left in the event. Quel would outlast the most experienced player, England’s Richard Ashby, who would finish 3rd. Ashby has over $2.3 million in tournament winnings, including a World Series of Poker triumph in 2010 when he won a gold bracelet in the WSOP $1,500 Seven Card Stud event.
Payouts:1st$39,700James ChenTaipeiTaiwan2nd$25,355Rainer QuelMelbourneAustralia3rd$16,535Richard AshbyGreat Britain4th$12,125Jarryd GodenaNSWAustralia5th$8,825Jarrett BullockMelbourneAustralia6th$7,710Dylan HoneymanWAAustralia
Event 3 – $1,150 NLHE Shot Clock Shootout, Entrants: 153, Prizepool: $156,825
Leading Austrian poker professional Thomas Muhlocker has taken down the third event of the series for $40,125. The event featured a fun, fast-paced shootout format on day 1, which instituted a shot clock to keep the game moving.Qiang Fu Poker Games
The event began with 153 runners and 17 shootout tables, up from the 126 players who played the same event in 2016. Each of the table winners of the shootout format would min-cash for $2,075, and return on day 2 for a standard multi-table tournament.
Among those to win their shootout tables and move to the final day were 2007 Aussie Millions Main Event 4th place finisher Julius Colman, and 2016 Aussie Millions Main Event champion Ari Engel. Neither Colman nor reigning champ Engel would add this Aussie Millions title to their list of accomplishments though, finishing 12th and 7th respectively.
When the dust settled on the final day’s play, it would be Muhlocker to claim victory, leaving Crown Poker regular Henry Szmelcer with $26,775 for his runner-up finish.
Payouts:Qiang Fu Poker Play1st$40,125Thomas R. MuhlockerViennaAustria2nd$26,775Henry SzmelcerMelbourneAustralia3rd$17,365Dejan V. BoskovicNSWAustralia4th$13,445Shoshiro KaritaMelbourneAustralia5th$11,090Preben StokkanHarstadNorway6th$9,130Ryan Van SanfordFloridaUSA7th$7,565Alan Ryan EngelTorontoCanada8th$5,995Thomas BoivinWalcourtBelgium9th$4,425Gary TomesNew Zealand10th$3,645Tolly SakellariouNSWAustralia11th$2,860Jamie CrawleyMelbourneAustralia12th$2,860Julius ColmanMelbourneAustralia13th$2,465Tatjana ZizicNelsonNew Zealand14th$2,465Stefan JedlickaViennaAustria15th$2,465Ryuichiro YamakawaTokyoJapan16th$2,075Sam PaineBrisbaneAustralia17th$2,075Timothy HickSydneyAustralia
Event 4 – $1,150 Pot Limit Omaha, Entrants: 237, Prizepool: $242,925
Australia’s Serge Osalanhas become the second local player to be crowned a champion in this year’s poker series after taking down the fourth event for $58,315. Osalan not only recorded his first win in an Aussie Millions event, but it was his first tournament win overall and his first cash in any Aussie Millions tournament.
The event began with 237 runners, up from the 217 players who played the same event in 2016. Day 2 would see 16 players advance through, all in the money, with 27 players in the tournament min-cashing for $1,945.
Top 10 Payouts:1st$58,315Serg OsalianMelbourneAustralia2nd$37,655Nikolas SolomosMelbourneAustralia3rd$24,280William J ZavosGold CoastAustralia4th$19,435Andre MoracchiniNoumeaNew Caledonia5th$15,305Bridges RoeMelbourneAustralia6th$12,145Nilolay MarkovSofiaBulgaria7th$9,715Kevin KelsallAdelaideAustralia8th$7,895Alfred ClearWellingtonNew Zealand9th$6,075Jan SuchanekNelsonNew Zealand10th$4,860Felix StephensenOsloNorway
Event 5 – $1,150 NLHE – Mix Max, Entrants: 230, Prizepool: $235,750
After two days of intense action in the Mix Max event, Niall Murray has triumphed over fellow Brit Jack Salter, for $61,300. It was his first championship ring, first Aussie Millions cash, and he now has more than $200,000 in live tournament winnings.
The Mix Max event was locked at 230 entries with play continuing on Day 1 through the money bubble to end with 23 players, all min-cashing for $2705. The format saw everyone initially seated at full ring tables before switching to six-handed tables with only 36 players remaining. When the final eight players were left they locked horns in a series of heads-up battles to crown a champion.
The Aussies didn’t fare too well though; with only one top seven finish, that being Nelson Smith from Adelaide. The final heads-up battle was an all-British affair with Murray facing Salter for the title. Salter, an Aussie Millions champion in 2014 when he won the $5,000 no-limit hold’em Six-Max event, was to narrowly miss out on winning a second ring when he finished runner-up to Scott Davies in the 2014 Aussie Millions Main Event. Unfortunately for Salter he would again finish in 2nd place, with Murray triumphing.
Top 10 Payouts:1st$61,300Niall MurrayLondonEngland2nd$40,085Jack SalterLondonEngland3rd$21,405Linh TranHo Chi MinVietnam4th$21,405William A MolsonMontrealCanada5th$9,145Elliot K SmithVancouverCanada6th$9,145Nelson K SmithAdelaideAustralia7th$9,145Colin Morris-DenbyRongoteaNew Zealand8th$9,145Brian M PayneMelbourneAustralia9th$5,660Michael J EganMelbourneAustralia10th$5,660Geoffrey L MooneySydneyAustralia
Register here: http://gg.gg/ogf7r
https://diarynote.indered.space
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