October 26 2011, Donnie Peters
The final table was set on Wednesday night for the 2011 PokerStars.it European Poker Tour San Remo, Italy. It was another short day as the field of 24 players got down to eight in very little time.
At the end of the day, Australian Daniel Neilson led the way with 6.7 million in chips. He quietly chipped up throughout the day before ending the night by sending Team PokerStars Pro Johnny Lodden home in ninth place. Neilson has been on a nice run in Europe recently. A few weeks ago, he placed 45th in the EPT London Main Event for £13,000 and is now set to make a lot more cash as he eyes the “800,000 top prize.
When the day began, Chris McClung had the lead with 3.148 million. Instead of writing about how he ran over the field, all we can do is wonder where all his chips went. McClung, with his ultra-aggressive style, had his foot on the gas all day. In fact, it seemed like he never slowed down from the start of play on Day 1. On Wednesday, that style seemed to get the best of him. It allowed him to grant numerous double-ups to his opponents before he was eliminated in 14th place.
One of the players McClung doubled was Kevin MacPhee. MacPhee was all-in before the flop for 1.742 million, and he was tangling with McClung. MacPhee showed and McClung turned over
.
The flop reversed the outs for the two men, and now McClung was looking for one of MacPhee’s kings to make Broadway. The turn
was a blank, though, and the river
was even blanker.
Although that hand described above did give MacPhee the lead, he went on to lose a big one against Dimitar Danchev. MacPhee raised to 110,000 from under the gun with the blinds at 25K/50K/5K and Danchev called from the cutoff seat to see the flop come down . MacPhee stayed on the gas and bet 125,000. Danchev called.
The landed on the turn, but MacPhee didn’t slow down. He fired a bet of 275,000. Danchev stuck right with him and made the call. The river paired the board with the
and MacPhee bet 460,000 rather quickly. Danchev double-handed a raise to 1.2 million. Only a few seconds passed before MacPhee announced a call.
Danchev tabled for a full house, queens full of aces. MacPhee sprung from his chair and slammed over the
for a straight that was no longer good, losing about half of his chips in the hand.
MacPhee will enter the final table with 1.115 million in chips and has a shot at becoming the first two-time EPT champion. In 2010, MacPhee won EPT Berlin. His work will be cut out for him on Thursday, however, after he finished the day dead last in chips.
Fourteen other players fell short of this final table besides Lodden and McClung. Team Pro Lex Veldhuis hit the rail in 15th place, former EPT champion Mike McDonald went out in 18th and 2011 World Series of Poker Europe Main Event champion Elio Fox fell in 23rd.
Final Table Seating Assignments
1 | Andrey Pateychuk | 3,105,000 |
2 | Kevin MacPhee | 1,115,000 |
3 | Barny Boatman | 2,490,000 |
4 | Daniel Neilson | 6,700,000 |
5 | Rocco Palumbo | 1,160,000 |
6 | Yorane Kerignard | 2,145,000 |
7 | Dimitar Danchev | 4,435,000 |
8 | Jan Bendik | 3,980,000 |
Everyone left has locked up at least “63,694, but there’s still plenty more to play for. The title and first-place prize of “800,000 still hangs in the balance, so be sure to stay tuned to PokerNews for all of the live coverage starting Thursday at 1400 CET (0500 PDT).
Don’t forget to tune into the Live Reporting page on Wednesday to follow along with the action. And speaking of following things, our Twitter stream is the best place for up-to-the-minute poker news right in your timeline.
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April 13 2011, Donnie Peters
The 2011 PokerStars.net North American Poker Tour Mohegan Sun $5,000 Main Event wrapped up Wednesday night in Uncasville, Connecticut, after an exciting final table took place. Team PokerStars Pro Vanessa Selbst was able to successfully defend her 2010 NAPT Mohegan Sun title and taste victory once again. Selbst became the first-ever player to win back-to-back titles at the same stop of a PokerStars-sponsored tour in subsequent seasons. For her win, Selbst collected a first-place prize of $450,000 and added yet another major title to her stout tournament résumé.
Selbst joined seven others who outlasted an elite 387-player field to find themselves seated at Wednesday’s final table. With over $1.23 million still up for grabs for the final table participants, the pressure was on everyone to shine under the bright lights of the television cameras.
On the third hand of the day, Steve O’Dwyer got himself into a sticky spot against Selbst. With the blinds at 15,000/30,000 with a 3,000 ante, O’Dwyer raised to 60,000 and Selbst three-bet to 215,000 from the big blind. O’Dwyer made the call and the flop came down . Both players checked and the dealer added the
on the turn. Selbst fired 220,000 and O’Dwyer made the call. The river completed the board with the
and Selbst moved all in to apply maximum pressure to O‘Dwyer. He tanked for several long minutes, but eventually folded his hand and suffered a big blow to his stack.
Shortly after, O’Dwyer was all in preflop with the to Aaron Overton’s
. The board ran out
and Overton made a flush to cripple O’Dwyer. From there, O’Dwyer only doubled back once, before his
couldn’t beat Vincent Rubianes’
in his final hand. He finished in eighth place for $32,330.
Overton was the next to go. The action folded to him in the small blind and he moved all in for about half a million in chips with . Selbst made the call in the big blind with the
. The flop, turn and river ran out
in Selbst’s favor to end the day for Overton. He finished in seventh place for a $50,000 payday.
Selbst wasn’t the only former NAPT champion to make this final table. She was joined by 2010 NAPT Los Angeles winner Joe Tehan who was also in the hunt for a second NAPT title. That second NAPT trophy would have to wait though, as Tehan was eliminated in sixth place for $70,000. His couldn’t improve against the
for Thomas Hoglund Jr. on his final hand.
Moving forward, Rubianes was left short after he doubled up Selbst. He was eliminated shortly thereafter at the hands of Tyler Kenney, pocketing $90,000 for fifth place. Following him out the door was Hoglund Jr. in fourth place for $120,000. Kenney eliminated him, too.
Heading into the final table, Kenney, a 21-year-old semi-professional poker player from Long Beach, New York, held the chip lead with 3.021 million in chips. He was only able to ride the big stack until three-handed play before bowing out in third place.
After Shak opened to 200,000 from the small blind with the blinds at 40,000/80,000 with a 5,000 ante, Kenney moved all in for 1.625 million from the big blind. Shak made the quick call and rolled over . He was dominating the
of Kenney. After the board ran out
, Kenney was eliminated. He took home $170,000.
The stage was set with heads-up play coming down to Shak and Selbst. When it got down to the final two, Shak had nearly a three-to-one chip lead with 8.685 million in chips to Selbst’s 3.025 million. Those counts would just about swap an hour after the two returned from the dinner break.
On the flop, all of the money went in between Shak and Selbst. Shak held
and Selbst
. The turn brought the
and the river the
, which allowed Selbst to double to 8.73 million. Shak was left with 2.98 million.
From there, Selbst ground Shak down to about 1.2 milion in chips before he was able to find a much-needed double up. He also doubled up a few hands later after flopping the nuts on a board with
before the money went in. Selbst held the
for a sweat, but the
on the turn or the
on the river couldn’t give her the title – just yet that is.
Roughly two-and-a-half hours into heads-up play, the final hand came up. Shak limped the button and Selbst checked her option in the big blind, which brought the two players to the flop. Selbst checked and Shak bet 200,000. Selbst came back with a check-raise to 625,000 and then Shak moved all in for about 2.8 million. Selbst snapped and tabled
for top two pair. Shak held
for a very grim chance at winning the hand. The turn left him drawing dead when the
rolled out and the river completed the board with the
.
For his finish, Shak walked away $254,000. Selbst, the reigning champion of this event, had successfully defended her title en route to claiming a cool $450,000 in prize money. She can now add a second NAPT title to her trophy case and watch as her lifetime tournament earnings climb to $4,115,864. That’s good enough to bump her ahead of Annette Obrestad into third on the Women’s All-Time Money List and right behind Annie Duke. She’ll also move from 102nd to 87th on the All-Time Money List with still so much of her career ahead of her.
Final Table Payouts
1 | Vanessa Selbst | $450,000 |
2 | Dan Shak | $254,000 |
3 | Tyler Kenney | $170,000 |
4 | Thomas Hoglund, Jr. | $120,000 |
5 | Vincent Rubianes | $90,000 |
6 | Joe Tehan | $70,000 |
7 | Aaron Overton | $50,000 |
8 | Steve O’Dwyer | $32,330 |
Congratulations to all of the winners and especially to Selbst on her amazing title-defense performance. There’s still one more event to finish up at the 2011 NAPT Mohegan Sun and that is the $10,000 High Roller Bounty Shootout. The final table for that event takes place on Thursday, so be sure to check out PokerNews’ live reporting of the event starting Thursday afternoon.
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