2011 January 28, Barry Carter
Register a Poker770 account via PokerNews to qualify for five exclusive freerolls with $4,000-$7,500 prize pools over the next two months.
We are tired of tiny freerolls, which is why PokerNews have come together with Poker770 to bring you a freeroll series where the name says it all – the $34,000 Monster Pot Series..
Club PokerNews members already know what great value Poker770 bring, having hosted a year long $2,770 series in 2010. Now they are really upping the ante with a $4,000 freeroll in January and four $7,500 freerolls in February and March.
$4,000 Freeroll
January 29, 20:00GMT
$7,500 Freerolls
February 12, February 26, March 5, March 19 starting at 20:00 GMT.
You start with 3,500 chips and 15 minute blinds. Although it is a freeroll you also have optional $3 rebuys, which could boost the prize pools up considerably.
How to Qualify
Existing PokerNews referred Poker770 players are also eligible providing they have deposited a minimum $20 lifetime and met the points target.
20 points is incredibly low for a freeroll series of this size, it works out to roughly $1.5 in rake per tournament so you could qualify in a few orbits of a cash table or just one SNG. The fields for our Poker770 freerolls have been historically small, between 300-400 players, which means you wont be playing until the early hours and the final table prizes will be big.
The truly great thing about this promotion is that there is no fixed timeframe to earn those 20 points, so it could take you a month to earn them or you could accrue the required points for all the freerolls in one night. If you are an existing PokerNews referred player and you already have 20 points spare you can just use those to register.
This really is one of the biggest regular freerolls you are likely to find anywhere in online poker, probably one of the cheapest to qualify for and don’t forget you will be eligible for all our future freerolls with Poker770 from here on in. So what are you waiting for? Download Poker770 today, deposit $20 and generate 20 points to get started in what will no doubt be another very lucrative year courtesy of PokerNews and Poker770.
2011 January 27, Elaine Chaivarlis, Matthew Parvis
Thursday at the 2011 Aussie Millions in Melbourne, Australia, was action packed, as the Main Event drew closer to a final table, the world’s biggest buy-in tournament soared past expectations, and more.
The Main Event saw 76 players come back for play on Thursday, and all but four made the money. The bubble burst with the simultaneous elimination of Carter Phillips and Julius Colman, meaning they would spilt a min-cash of AUD$15,000. After the bubble burst, the action flowed freely at the tables and by the dinner break, there were 36 players left, and Randy Dorfman, chip leader at the start of the day, had been overtaken by Team Full Tilt’s Patrik Antonius. Antonius didn’t hold on to the chip lead the whole night, and will go into play on Friday in seventh place on the chip leaderboard with 958,000.
At the top spot is Chris Moorman, with 1,643,000. Just behind him is Mark Vos with 1,200,000. Dorfman still looms, and sits in the fourth spot. One player who is no stranger to this event is Sorel Mizzi, he final tabled this very event last year, finishing third. Mizzi is taking 965,000 into Friday’s play.
Play begins at 12:30 local time inside the Crown Poker Room, so if you’re in the Melbourne area, stop by and rail the action, and if you’re not, you can rail the action on the PokerNews Live Reporting Blog.
$250,000 Super High Roller
Will it or won’t it? There were rumblings at the beginning of the 2011 Aussie Millions that a $250,000 Super High Roller tournament would happen, but nothing was for sure. The format changed a number of times and just a day before the event, just four players were confirmed. On Thursday, those four were multiplied – five times. Yes, 20 players ponied up $250,000 to buy into this historic tournament. Among those were Phil Ivey, Tom Dwan, Chris Ferguson, John Juanda, Daniel Cates, the three Chinese businessmen who took part in the Million Dollar Cash Game, Paul Phua, Richard Yong and Wang Qiang, and $100,000 Challenge winner, Sam Trickett.
One by one the field thinned, thanks in part to a super fast structure meant to ensure the trio of Phua, Yong and Qiang would be able to catch a flight Thursday night, but also thanks to the amazing run-good and skill Trickett.
After what felt like a final table massacre, thanks to the handy work of Trickett, only poker’s newest hall of fame inductee, Erik Seidel and the young Trickett were remaining. Trickett held a sizable chip lead, and it looked like he would go back-to-back in two of the biggest tournaments in poker history. Seidel, however would not relent finding one timely double up after another. Soon, the players were even, yet Seidel had all the momentum, chipping away one pot at a time at Trickett who was clearly getting frustrated.
After about 45 minutes of heads-up play, the stacks were firmly swapped, with Seidel holding the chip lead. Trickett picked his spot, attempting to double, but unfortunately for him, Seidel was firmly in front with top-pair, and was able to hold, eliminating Trickett in second place, and earning Seidel the $2.5 million first prize.
If you want to check out all the action from the $250,000 Super High Roller, head on over to the PokerNews Live Reporting Blog. Lynn Gilmartin caught up with Seidel shortly after his win, and you can watch that interview below.
Event #15: $10,500 8-Game Mixed Event
This year is the first time that the $10,500 8-Game Mixed event was added to the schedule at the Aussie Millions. In all, 28 players entered the event, including Jeffrey Lisandro, David Oppenheim, Eli Elezra, Daniel Alaei, David Steicke, Maria Ho, Andy Bloch, and Justin Smith.
After 12 hours of play, a final table was reached, but just five of them made the money, and while a winner was supposed to be crowned on Thursday night, after Mike Watson was eliminated in fifth place, the final four players decided to call it a night at 4:00 a.m. and resume play in Friday afternoon. Headlining the final four is Maria Ho, bagging 187,100 at the end of the night. Just behind her is Andy Bloch with 163,700. Robert Campbell sits in third with 122,000 and Justin Smith rounds out the final four with 87,200.
Play gets under way on at 2:15 local time and you can bet PokerNews will be there covering all the action.
Remember to follow us on Twitter for up-to-the-minute news.
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