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Caribbean Poker Adventure - Day 6
Well, the first PokerStars World Cup of Poker is in the record books.
With a huge crowd filling the "Studio B" and the WPT cameras rolling,
all four semi-final teams (U.S. East, Germany, South Africa and
Costa Rica) marched in wearing the uniforms that PokerStars provided
carrying their nation's flag. It was an incredible sight.
The first match was Danny Yaffe from Costa Rica against Roy Flowerday
from South Africa. In a careful and studied match, Danny finally
pulled into a significant lead. With the blinds at 12K and 24K
(both players started with 100K chips), Roy (SA) posted the small
blind of 12K on the button and Danny (CR) the big blind of 24K.
Roy moved all-in and Danny called fairly quickly. Roy was in the
lead with Jd-7d, but Danny had two cards in the middle: 9c-8c. That
made Roy a 5:4 favorite. But the 9-4-3 flop gave Danny a better
than 4:1 edge. The ten on the turn gave Roy three more gutshot
outs, but the deuce on the river ended the match in favor of
Costa Rica.
I should note that whenever both players would get all-in, both
teams would rush to the table side to root for their man. In a
sport known for its mano a mano nature, the "team cheering" scene
was both extaordinary and wonderful. The Costa Ricans were
particularly vocal if it was their man that was drawing, Alex
Brenes would start a chant of the cards they needed "Nine! Eight!
Heart!" At one point one of the South African players
good-naturedly asked the Costa Rican players to stop putting voodoo
on the flop.
In the second match, Manrique Quesada from Costa Rica and Bill
Rothschild fenced back and forth never willing to commit too many
chips too soon. Eventually however, the blinds had risen from
2K-4K, 3K-6K, 4K-8K, 6K-12K, 8K-16k, 12K-24K and had finally reached
20K-40K and precipitious action was inevitable. At that point,
Bill (SA) jammed and Manrique (CR) called. Bill had an A3 and
Manrique a T8. The flop came Q-7-6, giving Manrique six pair outs
and four 9's for a gutshot. The turn was a four, and the Costa
Rican team whooped "Double gutshot!" en espanol. It turned out they
didn't need the other end of the straight draw, because the original
gutshot (a nine) hit the river, ending the match in Costa Rica's
favor.
The third match was Alex Keppie from South Africa against Juan
Aued (a-WED) from Costa Rica. This was another carefully scripted
match with the blind being folded or a call, bet, fold sequence.
Eventually, Keppie pulled to a substantial lead, and when he raised
24K (with blinds of 12K and 24K), Juan understandably made an all-in
stand with his pocket 9's. Alex called like a shot and turned up
ace-king. Instantly, every poker player in the room thought "coin
toss", but the coin toss was quickly biased when the flop had a king
in it. No miracle nine came to save Juan and the match was 2-1 in
Costa Rica's favor.
The fourth match was to the first three as the weaponry of World
War II was to the spears of the Roman Legions. Alex Brenes from
Costa Rica and Garry Hertzberg were clearly there to play fast poker.
Alex waited until only the second hand to start raising. And Garry
was ready to match him raise for raise. Unlike the previous matches,
these two fellows seemed to think, "Let's tossed grenades into each
other's fox holes and see who's left standing." The blinds were
only at 3K-6K, when Garry (SA), on the small blind, lobbed in a
raise up to 24K. Alex tanked briefly, looking sideways at Garry,
and then waved his hands and said "Fondo!" ("I'm all in"). Garry
called quickly with A5 but found himself looking at Alex's pocket
jacks. The flop of K-9-2 changed nothing, but the three on the
turn gave Garry a gutshot draw too. The South African team
screamed "Four!" and the South African supporters in the crowd waved
their South African flags and yelled "Ace!". The dealer burned and
turned a card with four... no, *five* spots. Garry had made a useless
pair, and the match was over - Costa Rica is the first PokerStars
World Cup of Poker champion.
Oh yes - the Costa Ricans will split $50,000 for their win, the
South African team $24,000, the German team $16,000, and the
U.S. East team $10,000.
We had a wonderful prize presentation with Mike, Shana, and Vince,
and all four teams gathered around the incredible glass trophy
filled with $100 bills. After everybody hoisted beers in the
traditional WPT toast, the teams all mingled, shook hands, and
congratulated each other on an extraordinary event.
With warmest regards,
Lee Jones
PokerStars Poker Manager
Day 1 |
Day 2 |
Day 3 |
Day 4 |
Day 5 |
Day 6 |
Day 7
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