February 09 2012, Brett Collson
The penultimate day of the 2012 World Poker Tour Venice Grand Prix began with nine players attempting to reach the televised six-handed final table. The rapid play during the first two days in Venice resulted in the 155-player field being whittled down to 27, and only nine survived a shortened Day 3. Simon Ravnsbaek held a slight chip lead over Alessandro Longobardi and Andrea Dato, and American poker pro Jason Wheeler wasn’t far behind the leaders.
Day 4 began with two short stacks hanging on with less than 20 big blinds. Massimo Mosele entered the day with 163,000 chips, just over 15 big blinds, but his afternoon at the table lasted just two hands. The WPT Live Updates team reported that Mosele’s stack was carved down to just 109,000 before he moved all-in with and was called by Dato, who tabled
. The board came up empty for Mosele, and he exited in ninth place with “13,795.
The other short stack, Rinat Bogdanov, fared much better. After starting the day with 201,000, Bogdanov was able to increase his stack early on and then got involved in preflop battle with Jeremie Sochet. According to the WPT Live Updates team, Bogdanov opened to 27,000 in the cutoff (blinds 6,000/12,000) and Sochet moved all-in for 94,000 more from the small blind. Bogdanov made the call, and the cards went on their backs.
Sochet:
Bogdanov
Sochet was poised for a double up, but the board gave Bogdanov trip kings to send Sochet to the rail in eighth place for “19,055.
That left Wheeler as the short stack on the final table bubble. Despite adding some chips to his stack by moving all-in and putting pressure on the rest of the table, Wheeler’s impressive run ended at the flip of a coin in Level 22. With the blinds increased to 8,000/16,000, Dato raised to 33,000 from the hijack. Andrea Carini three-bet to 85,000 from the cutoff and Wheeler four-bet shoved for 436,000 from the blinds. Dato made the call, which prompted a fold from Carini, and Wheeler’s was left flipping against Dato’s
. The
board brought no help to Wheeler, who made a disappointing walk to the cashier to collect his “25,625 prize for seventh place.
Dato ended the day as the chip leader 1,591,000. What makes his accomplishment most impressive is that it marks his second straight final table at WPT Venice. He took fourth place at the WPT Venice event last December for $56,822, and will seek to improve on that result when the final table commences on Friday. First place in this event is worth “229,800, which includes a seat to the WPT World Championship at Bellagio in May.
Chasing Dato on Friday will be Ravnsbaek, who also reached his second career WPT televised final table – he made the final six at WPT Vienna last year. Ravnsbaek will take 922,000 chips to the final table and, fortunately for him, will have position on the chip leader for the remainder of the tournament.
The final is set to get under way at 1400 CET (0500 PST) on Friday as the final six play down to a champion. Here’s a look at the seat draw when play resumes:
World Poker Tour Venice Grand Prix Final Table Seat Draw
1 | Andrea Dato | 1,591,000 |
2 | Simon Ravnsbaek | 922,000 |
3 | Andrea Carini | 347,000 |
4 | Rinat Bogdanov | 907,000 |
5 | Gianluca Trebbi | 343,000 |
6 | Alessandro Longobardi | 558,000 |
For more on the WPT Venice Grand Prix, be sure to visit the PartyPoker Blog to see what Tony G and Mike Sexton have to say from the Casino Di Venezia.
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*Photo courtesy of the World Poker Tour.
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February 06 2012, Mickey Doft
The 2012 PokerStars.fr European Poker Tour Deauville Main Event concluded on Monday night. Vadzim Kursevich emerged triumphant from a field of 889 players. Kursevich began the final table second in chips and endured a tumultuous journey before finally claiming victory.
Mick Graydon, the short stack to begin the final table, lasted about two hours before he shoved into chip leader Paul Guichard’s
. The board rolled out
to end Graydon’s run in eighth place. Following him to the rail was Team PokerStars Pro Luca Pagano. Unable to gain any consistent traction, Pagano three-bet shoved with
. Vuong Than Trong, the raiser, called with
and held up through the
board.
About three and a half hours later Olivier Rogez was the next to fall, doing so in unusual fashion. His 14 big-blind stack slowly dwindled to less than two big blinds before Rogez called all-in from the big blind with . The pot was three-handed and following a
flop, Paul Guichard isolated with
. Rogez found help from the
turn, but the
river ended his Main Event run in sixth place. Roughly two hours passed before Bruno Jais exited in fifth place. He shoved on a
flop with
, but ran into Vuong Than Trong’s
. The
turn gave Jais two extra outs to win, but the
river was not among them.
The players took a one hour-break and when they returned, the chips started to fly. Than Trong was leading, but lost much of his stack to Kursevich who was in second place. After raising on the button, Than Trong watched as Kursevich three-bet from the small blind. Action folded back to Than Trong and he four-bet shoved with . Kursevivh called all-in immediately with
and won the pot when the board fell
.
With the huge chip lead, Kursevich went to work eliminating the shorter stacks. First, with , he eliminated Yorane Kerignard (who held
) when neither player improved his hand on a
board. A few hands later, Than Trong got it in with
against Kursevich’s
, but once again, the board improved neither player.
Heads-up play began with Kursevich holding just less than a 7:1 chip lead, but Guichard stormed back to make the stacks nearly even before the final hand occurred. The blinds and antes were at the 125,000/250,000/30,000 level when Kursevich min-raised the button to 500,000. A three-bet to 1,250,000 came from Guichard and after Kursevich called, the flop came down .
Guichard bet 625,000, which kept Kursevich in the hand to see the land on the turn. Not slowing down, Guichard bet 1,325,000. After a few moments Kursevich moved all-in, and got an immediate call from Guichard, who tabled
for a set. Kursevich was very live, with straight and flush outs, holding
and sure enough, the
hit the river to give Kursevich a straight and bring the tournament to a close.
Final Table Payouts
1 | Vadzim Kursevich | “875,000 |
2 | Paul Guichard | “557,000 |
3 | Vuong Than Trong | “328,000 |
4 | Yorane Kerignard | “260,000 |
5 | Bruno Jais | “200,000 |
6 | Olivier Rogez | “155,000 |
7 | Luca Pagano | “110,000 |
8 | Mick Graydon | ” 67,200 |
Be sure to check back to our Live Reporting pages because we’ll be at plenty of tournament stops across the globe just about every week.
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