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The 5 biggest prizes in eSports history

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Is poker an eSport? Whatever your opinion, there’s no denying the huge crossover between poker and the world of online gaming.

Both poker and eSports are hugely competitive. Hundreds of thousands (if not millions) play these online tournaments around the world, with eSports competitions held throughout the year.

But how much prize money is awarded in the biggest of these events?

The Spring Championship of Online Poker (SCOOP) currently underway, with a massive $115M in tournament guarantees. We thought we’d examine the biggest prize pools in eSports history.

Here they are in descending order.

5. HALO 5: GUARDIANS

The fifth game on the list of esports with the largest ever prize pools is Halo 5: Guardians, a first-person shooter game.

In 2016, 64 of the world’s best players (assembled into 16 teams) gathered in Hollywood, California for the Halo World Championship.

The teams were battling for a $2.5M prize pool. The lion’s share of which was won by the Counter Logic Gaming team, made up by three American players (Frosty, Lethul, SnakeBite) and one Canadian (Royal 2). They banked $1M for their victory.

4. SMITE

A year earlier, the SMITE World Championship 2015 in Atlanta, had seen a $2.61M prize pool created.

SMITE is a third-person multiplayer online battle arena game. In 2015 it was the USA’s Cognitive Prime team (featuring players Andinster, JeffHindla, Omegatron, BaRRaCCuDDa, and MLCst3alth) who took the no.1 spot. And $1. 3M in prize money.

The tournament had eight teams in total, with five players on each team.

3. FORTNITE

The average person on the street might assume Fortnite was the world’s most popular online game right now. But the player-vs-player battle royale game has yet to create the same levels of prize money others have.

The 2018 Fortnite Fall Skirmish Series puts the game in the third spot for total esports prize money with $4M in the prize pool.

However, the series was based on club performances over multiple weekly trials (with clubs consisting of 100 players). That means the $1.5M won by the Dusty Dogs landed each player only $15,000.

Watch this space though. The Fortnite World Cup is currently in the qualifying stages, and that tournament promises a massive $3M for the eventual champ.

2. LEAGUE OF LEGENDS

Each year the League of Legends World Championship brings out the big guns in terms of prize pools. Last year was no exception. There was $6.45M up for grabs at the 2018 championships in South Korea.

League of Legends is a multiplayer online battle arena game, first released in 2009.

In 2018 the winning team was Invictus Gaming, made up of three South Korean players (Duke, Rookie, TheShy) and three Chinese players (Baolan, JackeyLove, Ning).

They took down $2.41M for their efforts, landing each player $403,000.

1. DOTA 2

No true esports game has handed out more in prize money than Dota 2, a multiplayer online battle arena game (which is very popular with the likes of Lex Veldhuis and Spraggy).

In fact, the annual International tournament boasts the top five spots in the list of the largest overall prize pools in eSports history. And 12 of the top 20 spots.

Prize money in Dota 2 has grown year on year. From $10.9M in 2014 to $25.5M in 2018.

Last year’s championships in Vancouver, Canada saw winning team OG (made up of Finland’s JerAx and Topson, Austria’s NOtail, France’s 7ckngMad, and Australia’s ana) win $11.2M total. That meant $2.24M for each player.

Not too shabby, eh?

If you want to be in with a shot of winning the big bucks, the SCOOP 2019 runs on PokerStars until Monday 27 May.

The $11.5M SCOOP Main Events, with $109, $1,050 and $10,300 buy-in levels, begin on Sunday 26 May at 1pm ET.


It's HORSE Day. Or should that be HEROS day?

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It’s unofficial H.O.R.S.E. day in SCOOP 2019.

So-called (unofficially) because there are three H.O.R.S.E. tournaments on the schedule today. Buy-ins for Event 44 start at $11 (trot), then reach $109 (canter) before peaking at $1,050 (gallop).

Like 8-Game, which featured yesterday, H.O.R.S.E. is one of those games that immediately bestows a kind of super power onto those that play it.

It’s a tough one. It requires skill in all five games, and the ability to adapt to ever new situation.

But while that might be enough to put off the uninitiated, there’s a lot about it that should tempt you into the saddle.

For one thing, it has three fewer variants than 8-Game. Statistically speaking that makes it three-eighths less scary.

There’s also that badge of honour.

Those letters… H O R S E. They don’t just stand for Hold’em, Omaha, Razz, Stud and Eight of Better. They bestow subliminal hero status on those taking the game by the horns… make that reins.

Which is why for today only, and for no other reason than you can’t do this to a Progressive KO, we’re rearranging the unofficial H.O.R.S.E. Day into H.E.R.O.S Day (we’re ignoring the missing E).

There will be no celebrations. No giveaways or bunting. They wouldn’t want that. Instead, it will be a gentle nudge to those who might never have tried an event like this, to give it a go.

If you want to join in on H.E.R.O.S. day, and let some of that status rub off on you, you can.

There’s an $11 tournament starting now on PokerStars with a $25,000 guarantee.

It’s just started but late registration is open for three hours.

Now go to it. You magnificent thing.

SCOOP 2019: All the news on Day 11

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There were 15 champions named overnight in the Spring Championship of Online Poker (SCOOP) and a large number have been here before. Find out more…

TODAY’S HEADLINES

  • Benny “RunGodlike” Glaser does it again in 8-Game High
  • SCOOP Main Event champion “Tankanza” back among winners
  • Rui “RuiNF” Ferreira prevails in Limit event; “Malaka$tyle” in shootout
  • Busy day for “raidalot”, cashes seven times

BEHIND THE HEADLINES

He is one of the greatest mixed games players in the world. He has three World Series of Poker bracelets, a WCOOP title and three SCOOP titles, and last night Benny “RunGodlike” Glaser did it again, winning SCOOP 41-H 8-Game for another $45,840. That’s his second title of this festival and to win it he beat a final table that included Noah “Exclusive” Boeken, Mike “goleafsgoeh” Leah and Konstantin “krakukra” Maslak. God was last night known to be changing his username to “RunBennylike”.

Benny Glaser: Another SCOOP title

A very familiar figure rose to the top of SCOOP 40-M last night when “Tankanza” won the Mini Super Tuesday for more than $80K. The Austria-based player last won the SCOOP High Main Event for $1.13 million, not long after winning the WCOOP version of the Super Tuesday, for $230K.

Another former WCOOP champion, “Grafftekkel”, from the Netherlands, won the High version of the event, and picked up the day’s biggest prize of $203,215, after a chop with “dartazzz” of Lithuania. “Graftekkel” previously won the three-max, but prevailed from a regular nine-max field this time.

Konstantin “krakukra” Maslak earned another handful of leader board points, even if he was denied a second SCOOP title, when he finished second in SCOOP 39-L. Read all about our leader board leader.

Rui “RuiNF” Ferreira has shaken things up at the top of the leader board by winning SCOOP 39-H, the fixed limit event. Terrence “Unassigned” Chan had to make do with fifth.

Rui “RuiNF” Ferreira: Shakes up the leader board

The UK’s “Malaka$tyle” was another former SCOOP champion who did it again, beating a stacked final table in the $1,050 Shootout event. “Malaka$tyle” previously won a 6-Max Ultra Deep event, and beat former Sunday Warm-Up winner “AnyTw0_Card$” into second, with Talal “raidalot” Shakerchi in third. More about “raidalot” further down.


MORE ABOUT SCOOP 2019
OFFICIAL SITE & SCHEDULE | RESULTS | LEADER BOARD


Cafe owner from Hesp's hometown wins SCOOP title

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Remember the time Charlie Carrel took down the 2017 WCOOP Main Event playing from a cafe? Well Richard “Girlyjack” Preston might have one-upped him.

Preston took down his Spring Championship of Online Poker title — Event #30-L: $11 Sunday Kickoff for $11,760 by outlasting a massive 14,345 players — on Sunday, whilst also playing at a cafe.

His own cafe. And he won it whilst working a shift.

Preston lives in Bridlington, home of 2017 World Series of Poker breakout star John Hesp (who Preston knows personally), on the UK’s Yorkshire coast, where he runs Richie’s Cafe-Bar on the South Beach. We caught up with the SCOOP champion to find out how his title came to be, how he juggles life between work and poker, and more.


PokerStars Blog: Congratulations on your SCOOP victory Richard. How does it feel to win a SCOOP title?

Richard Preston: Pretty amazing to be fair. I played Day 1 at home but my wife and I own and run Richie’s Cafe-Bar on Bridlington’s South Beach and I was covering at work, so I had to play Day 2 on a tablet whilst sat at the bar. There was a lot of interest with people wishing me well whilst they received updates as the game went on.

It sounds like an exciting run. The field was enormous. At what point did you start to think you were in a with a good shot?

I started to do well in the latter part of Day 1 but I was in two games. I came ninth in the $44 Bounty Builder that night, so I was concentrating on both games and not on where I was in the grand scheme of things. At the end of Day 1 I was 20th of 48 and I was fairly confident of a final table finish at that stage.

Day 2 started but I had been at work in the kitchen until five mins before so I hadn’t even got settled and lost 1M in chips, but I was fine once I started to feel comfortable. I hit the final table second bottom in chips I think, but soon ran 10M up to 40M with running hands that hit or held up. I knocked a couple of people out and found myself in the chip lead with 80M while “SV(nmgn)EV” had 79M.

I raised with pocket aces and was re-raised by SV. My instant thought was: “Please have pocket kings!” and I threw it all in. He tanked a bit and I started to question my play. It’s only really going to work if he has pocket kings or pocket queens, and then he called with pocket kings. The second card was a king and the third card was an ace. It didn’t give me time for a heart-stopping moment. I was the chip leader with four left and I had nearly two-thirds of the chips in play. Needless to say, I was a little bit confident after that.

Are there any other key hands that you remember on your way to the win?

I was supremely lucky towards the end of Day 1 when I called an all in with pocket tens and they flipped over pocket queens. I’m not sure where the ten hit the board, but destiny supplied it!

(Left to right) Jackie Preston, John Hesp and Richard Preston at Hesp’s Charity event at Scarborough Opera House Casino

Is this the biggest win of your poker career? If not, what was? 

My biggest win was $15,000 when I came fifth in the Sunday Warm-Up two years ago. I’ve had several wins over $5,000 but because I’m still a Cafe-Bar proprietor I’ve not had the time to pursue poker as a career. I would love to head off to Vegas with John Hesp and co from Bridlington for the WSOP Main Event, but it’s a long way to go for it not to go well and I would still have to be in touch with everyone at work to make sure that all is well there too. It’s a busy time of the year for us.

What does this win mean for you going forward?

I play all kinds of events online, but I’m always squeezing them in with work. Walking away from the computer at 7am and getting ready for work for 8am isn’t helpful to either venture. I generally play up to $215 event online but will play larger ones live.

How did you discover poker?

When I was younger, my friends and I used to play cards, Gin Rummy, 3 Card Brag, Blackjack and straight poker. When poker started being shown on the TV it perked up my interest. I had been reading about online poker but I hadn’t given much thought to it. It was before the Moneymaker effect when I first started dipping my toe in online poker.

It took about two months to get my first win. It was a £2 MTT and probably paid £200. A month or two later I won my first £1,000, and then I won a few £50 tournaments for £3,000. I then started to look at PokerStars. I prefer MTTs to STTs and the PokerStars games looked awesome. My first big win on Stars was in the $11 rebuy about ten years ago. I think I won $11,000 or thereabouts. I was now a PokerStars player.

Do you think you would ever make the leap to becoming a poker professional?

I would love to take this up professionally and I am placing more responsibility on my staff now to help me achieve this. We employ a lot of people so any decision must be the right decision for everyone.

I live in Bridlington with my wife Jackie (she plays poker too), and my Daughter Bryoni lives just outside Pontefract. She is getting married in two weeks and they have a son, my Grandson, who is one year old in October. I’m in the middle of a very proud 12 months as I turn 50 this year.

Up to 2019 I have generally worked 12-16 hour days, seven days a week for eight months of the year, and have done so for the past 20 years. I am currently trying to step back from these hours, easing myself away from the day-to-day running of the business and letting others take control for me.

What do you like to do outside of work at the cafe and poker?

We have a house in Tenerife and when we want to relax and get away from everything this is where we run to.

As for today, I’ve opted for the late shift. It’s Bank Holiday Weekend coming up and I have my other job to do.

Best wishes from Bridlington’s South Beach. Be lucky everyone!

Back to work for SCOOP champion Richard Preston


Want to become a SCOOP champion too? Opening a PokerStars account is easy. Click here to get an account in minutes.


How playing Omaha today could change your life

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As strictly a hold’em player, it’s easy to feel down on a day like this. You’re limited to $5.50 SCOOP-Low events, but today there are no hold’em tournaments on the schedule for less than $22.

But it’s time to sit up, put your shoulders back, and lift yourself out of this funk.

You want to play some cards, so gird yourself. Because it’s going to have to be Omaha.

Let others click away, seeking safety in their kitten videos and lifestyle blogs. You’re sticking around to take the leap.

You didn’t realise it, but this is your big day.

This could be the day you finally break into a game you’ve previously been afraid of.

All that head-spinning detail about four cards, and having to play two of them in combination with the flop, turn and river… in a few hours from now it will seem second nature.

Because today you face that fear. Today you level up as a poker player, and all for just $5.50.

Not only will playing SCOOP 48-L make you a wiser player, you’ll have better stories to tell.

You’ll take yourself more seriously as a player.

People will gravitate towards you without knowing why.

You’ll ooze self-confidence and call your parents more.

Neighbourhood kids will call you “mister”. Your blood pressure with come down and you’ll fit into your trousers without a fight.

You’ll spend your evenings reading more inspirational poker stories, and watching fewer repeats of situation comedies.

You’ll stand up for yourself at work, and push back when Biff from accounts hogs the photocopier.

You’ll start jogging in the morning. You’ll iron things and stop calling Monster Munch “dinner.”

This could happen almost immediately.

And all because you decided today was the day your $5.50 poker budget would be spent… nay invested, in Pot-Limit Omaha.

You might be thinking this is an exaggeration. But who would be wrong if all this became true?

Get yourself over to the PokerStars tournament lobby.

Select the SCOOP tab and scroll down to SCOOP 48-L. It starts at 16:45 UK (11:45 ET) so you don’t have long to wait (less time to change your mind), but late registration is open for 3 hours 05 minutes.

One last thing which we didn’t tell you earlier. Try not to freak out.

It’s PLO8. That means pot limit Omaha with a Hi and a Lo hand to win.

You can get a briefing on how to play PLO8 here. We would also recommend spending the time looking at yourself in the mirror chanting affirmations.

Either way the story you tell about this day will be enhanced, and even embellished, by the cavalier spirit you’re now demonstrating.

Tell your loved ones to expect a new you tomorrow morning.

You know who you are. Now go to it.

Thanks for everything, Daniel Negreanu

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So, farewell then, Daniel Negreanu, without peer as the finest poker ambassador of the entire era where such a thing was even possible.

When Negreanu started playing poker, the thought of it being on TV was so far fetched as to be ridiculous, and the thought of it being played on the internet was simply nonsensical. The game existed only in a handful of casinos and the kind of underground clubs in which he cut his teeth. Playing it on the computer had not yet even been dreamt up.

Fans pack the Rio rail to watch Negreanu

But as poker landed on the small screen, and then became the online sensation we all still know, Negreanu was always the brightest star. He brought the game to people who might never have discovered it: they saw him, a regular, approachable guy, chit-chatting, laughing and smiling, even as he won (and sometimes lost) hundreds of thousands of dollars.

But come what may, Negreanu would be back the next day, smiling and joking again. He would meet triumph and disaster and treat those two imposters just the same–always ready to stop on the halls and pose to photos with fans, always fielding the same dumb reporters’ questions with fairness, honesty and patience. He was that guy who everyone knew, and knew they liked, even if they didn’t know poker at all. He was, in a word, ambassadorial.

We need not overstate it. Poker and PokerStars would have succeeded without Negreanu. The game is too compelling and the company too well organised for it to have been any other way. But there is no doubt Negreanu was the most valuable asset PokerStars could ever have asked for, and a catalyst for great and positive change.

Kid Poker when he was still a kid

He was a perfect fit for the most successful online poker operator, and he will leave a huge hole on the Team Pro roster. PokerStars owes the Canadian superstar an enormous debt of gratitude, and so does the game as a whole.

This is not an obituary, of course. He remains arguably more full of life now than at any other time, looking forward to married and then family life, just with a spade-shaped gap on his sleeve. He is a Poker Hall of Famer, a six-time WSOP bracelet winner, and is still second on the all-time tournament money list.

He will remain the game’s most recognisable face and its most sought after character, and we wish him all the very best for the future from PokerStars Blog.

THE BEST OF NEGREANU ON POKERSTARS BLOG

How Daniel Negreanu Plays a Short Stack
They were six deep on the rail at the 2016 WSOP and Daniel Negreanu made sure no one went home disappointed.

WSOP: Then and Now
KidPoker recalls his first experience of playing the WSOP, and compares it to how it is these days.

Negreanu’s November Nine Near Miss
A heart-breaking moment, captured by Joe Giron’s award-winning photograph and Brad Willis’s report, when Negreanu missed out on the November Nine by the narrowest margin.

Missing the WSOP final table

On How TV Changed Poker
He was the first and the brightest TV poker star, and here Negreanu opens up on how the small screen changed the game, and how the game changed the small screen.

Negreanu Wins Bracelet No. 6 a WSOP POY
Here’s the thing about Daniel Negreanu: he wasn’t just a TV star. He was, and still is, among the very best poker players in the world, and shows no sign of letting up.

SCOOP 2019: All the news on Day 12

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Only a few days ago, the prospect of winning two titles at the Spring Championship of Online Poker (SCOOP) was thought to be hard. Now everyone is at it. Read on…

TODAY’S HEADLINES

  • Three more double SCOOP 2019 champions
  • Lex Veldhuis streams all the way to third
  • Mike “goleafsgoeh” Leah wins customary title
  • First $2 million-plus prize pool in $25K High Roller
  • Prize pool totals now past $65 million

BEHIND THE HEADLINES

Tomas “luckymo32” Geleziunas

Ireland only had one SCOOP title this year before yesterday, but it now has two — even though they’re both sitting on the virtual mantlepiece of the same player. Tomas “luckymo32” Geleziunas is originally from Lithuania but has made the Emerald Isle his home for the past few years. And last night he won SCOOP 45-M $530 NLHE for $156,093, following up his victory in SCOOP 21-M NLHE. Not only that, he did it after winning his seat via a $55 satellite, booking an ROI of 283,807 percent!

Brazil’s “felipebeltra” is another player into the two-time winner enclosure having followed up his limit hold’em title with victory in SCOOP 44-H HORSE. His second victory earns him $25,663, secured after a heads-up chop with Sweden’s ShipitFTW911″.

Rui “RuiNF” Ferreira is making a late charge up the SCOOP leader boards and last night he too claimed a second major title, adding NLHE High Roller glory to his limit hold’em crown from earlier this week. Ferreira’s victory was this time worth $224,007.51, the fourth biggest so far awarded this SCOOP.

Mike “goleafsgoeh” Leah

He already has two SCOOP titles from 2016, a WCOOP win from 2015 and even a TCOOP trophy from 2017. Now Mike “goleafsgoeh” Leah has won his customary tournament this year, crowned champion in SCOOP 44-M $109 HORSE. He also finished 10th in the High buy-in at the same time.

Hungary’s Laszlo Bujtas calls himself “omaha4rollz” online, and true to his roots he took down last night’s big Omaha comp, banking $83,041 in the $530+rebuys PLO event. The former WSOP-E runner up, fresh from the EPT High Roller final table in Monaco, won one of two titles for Hungary in SCOOP last night.

One of the late additions to the SCOOP calendar played out last night: a $2,100 Turbo that was all done and dusted in four hours 22 minutes. That was all it took for Canada’s “OLD TIME GIN”, a highly decorated tournament player on PokerStars to beat a field of 246 and win nearly $95,000. That’s an hourly rate of around $2,100.


MORE ABOUT SCOOP 2019
OFFICIAL SITE & SCHEDULE | RESULTS | LEADER BOARD


TODAY’S RESULTS

44-L: HORSE $11 3,109 $30,468 M0N0Chrome Canada $3,955.06*
44-M: HORSE $109 676 $67,600 goleafsgoeh Canada $12,675.00
44-H: HORSE $1,050 133 $133,000 felipebeltra Brazil $25,663.65*
45-L: NLHE $55 9,618 $480,900 fmrsmurilo Brazil $61,086.19*
45-M: NLHE $530 2,259 $1,129,500 luckymo32 Ireland $156,093.64*
45-H: High Roller $5,200 245 $1,225,000 RuiNF Netherlands $224,007.51*
46-L: Rebuys $5.50 3,356 $53,454 kendy_doyle Hungary $5,661.03*
46-M: Rebuys $55 979 $177,746 _TheJds_ Finland $29,045.71
46-H: Rebuys $530 216 $423,190 omaha4rollz Hungary $83,041.80
47-L: Progressive KO $11 12,854 $125,969 PositivusLV Latvia $12,614.25†
47-M: Progressive KO $109 4,488 $448,800 fAArid88 Brazil $44,157.05†
47-H: Progressive KO $1,050 609 $609,000 IDOLLS UK $99,291.01†
71-L NLHE Turbo $22 8,429 $168,580 KeepTheBeat Malta $23,670.43
71-M NLHE Turbo $215 1,714 $342,800 Fabahaba Finland $51,993.21
71-H NLHE Turbo $2,100 246 $492,000 OLD TIME GIN Canada $94,605.32

STAT TRACKER

Tournaments completed: 147
Tournaments ongoing: 15
Entries so far: 695,343
Prize pool so far: $65,069,872
First-place prizes awarded: $8,660,083.37


TWITCH WATCH

Where would we be without Lex Veldhuis? Actually, let’s rephrase that: Where would 16,641 people be without Lex Veldhuis? That’s the number of people who last night watched the Team PokerStars Ambassador stream his way to third place in the $55+R PLO for $14K, as well as 13th in the $5,200 NLHE 8-Max for $17,546.77.

His SCOOP adventure will continue all the way, especially after he opened a special envelope from the PokerStars mods yesterday with a very special prize inside:


READ! READ! READ!

This SCOOP festival has already brought us hundreds of superb stories about derring do at the tables, and fascinating back-stories off of them. Here’s the latest, and it’s a cracker: Read how Richard “Girlyjack” Preston won the Event #30-L: $11 Sunday Kickoff from a cafe. His own cafe. While he was working.


CASH KINGS

Rui “RuiNF” Ferreira is still looking upward at Konstantin “krakukra” Maslak in the overall SCOOP leader board, however he has now pulled ahead in another significant standing.

RuiNF’s latest big score last night put him ahead of krakukra in terms of money grossed this SCOOP. The top five are as follows:

Name Country Entries Cashes Gross
Rui “RuiNF” Ferreira Netherlands 171 28 $291,037.63
Konstantin “krakukra” Maslak Rusia 180 46 $271,475.32
Joao “Naza114” Vieira Netherlands 127 19 $212,307.98
Andrei “Premove” Skvortsov Russia 129 25 $170,028.24
Benny “RunGodlike” Glaser UK 100 19 $127,248.61

ONGOING TOURNAMENTS

SCOOP 48 — PL Omaha H/L
Buy-ins: $5.50, $55, $530
A fine showing overnight from Yuri “TheNERDguy” Martins, who bagged seventh most in the $530 buy-in version of this one, and sixth most in the medium. Meanwhile it’s a welcome return for Vladimir “vovtroy” Troyanovsky, who is second in chips in the high.

SCOOP 49 — NLHE Progressive KO
Buy-ins: $109, $1,050, $10,300
Two million dollar prize pools up for grabs in the Thursday Thrill special edition, and big names including “josef_shvejk”, “ROFLshove”, Ivan “Negriin” Luca, Andrey “ThePateychuk” Pateychuk, Joris “BillLewinsky” Ruijs, Wiktor “limitless” Malinowski, Jason “jakoon1985” Koon and Chris “Big Huni” Hunichen are still alive in the high buy-in event.

SCOOP 50 — Limit Razz
Buy-ins: $22, $215, $2,100
Razz is the ultimate specialist’s game, and two of the best in the world are British. Sure enough Adam “adamyid” Owen and Benny “RunGodlike” Glaser lead the field in the medium and high buy-in respectively, with Owen alive still in both. Joao “Naza114” Vieira is also battling on both fronts, standing fourth in the medium buy-in and ninth in the high buy-in.

SCOOP 51 — NLHE Heads Up
Buy-ins: $22, $215, $2,100
They’re already five rounds in in the medium buy-in event, with 16 players still standing. They include former EPT champion Nicolas “niccc” Chouity and Belgian former Team Pro Matthias “mattidm_uk” De Meulder. Still at least three rounds left until any buy-in level names a champion.

SCOOP 70 — NLHE High Roller
Buy-ins: $215, $2,100, $25,000
Another late addition, but two enormous prize pools in this High Roller. Canada’s “newguy89” leads the medium buy-in, where there’s $1m in the pool, from Nicolas “niccc” Chouity and Luc “Bit2Easy” Reeves. Meanwhile there’s $2.035 million in the prize pool for the high roller and Oliver “sk2ll_m0dR” Weis leading Mikita “fish2013” Badziakouski, with Michael “mczhang” Zhang, Joao “Naza114” Vieira, Juan “Malaka$tyle” Pardo and Mike “SirWatts” Watson rounding out the top six.


STARTING TODAY

SCOOP 72 — NLHE Progressive KO 6-Max
Buy-ins: $11, $109, $1,050
Plenty of time to pick up as many bounties as you can.

SCOOP 52 — NLHE
Buy-ins: $22, $215, $2,100
There’s a $1 million guarantee on the high buy-in version. You don’t see those every day. (Just every other day.)

SCOOP 53 — NL Omaha H/L Six Max
Buy-ins: $11, $109, $1,050
Another chance for the Omaha stylists to have their fun. Remember: don’t draw to only half the pot!

SCOOP 54 — NLHE Zoom
Buy-ins: $5.50, $55, $530
Don’t like your hand? Ditch it, move on to the next. Still the greatest format in the game.

SCOOP 73 — 6+ Hold’em
Buy-ins: $55, $530, $5,200
Playing a little higher than before, this 6+ tournament, also known as short-deck, is as close as SCOOP comes to the massive events played by the highest high rollers.


PREVIOUS SCOOP COVERAGE:

DAY 1 | DAY 2 | DAY 3 | DAY 4 | DAY 5 | DAY 6 | DAY 7 | DAY 8 | DAY 9 | DAY 10 | DAY 11

Pros and Cons: the poker markup controversy

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“Markup” has produced one of the most heated debates in the poker world these past few weeks, and it’s particularly relevant leading up to the 2019 World Series of Poker (WSOP), for which many professional players will be selling large tournament packages.

If you’re looking to buy a sweat this summer, how can you make sure you’re making a good investment and not being conned? With the help of Maria Konnikova, author of the New York Times bestseller The Confidence Game: Why We Fall For It…Every Time, we tried to find out.


By his own admission, Johnnie Moreno — better known as Johnnie Vibes — is not a tournament poker player.

Moreno is a long-time Las Vegas cash-game grinder who began posting poker vlogs on his YouTube channel about a year ago. Those vlogs have built him a loyal following, consisting of all sorts of people—poker players and otherwise—who like to live vicariously through his card-room endeavours.

Moreno calls poker his main profession and considers the vlogging element of his career to be just for fun. By April 2019 he’d managed to build a supportive online community of vlog watchers, and decided that this year, for the 2019 WSOP, he would post a $40K tournament package and sell 30 percent of his action across the series. He posted the package in a private Facebook group…at 1.38 markup.

That’s where all the controversy started.

GOOD VIBES / BAD VIBES

Markup, for those unfamiliar with the poker staking game, is the term given to the additional fee added to “pieces” of a tournament player’s action, based on their perceived return on investment (ROI). Without markup, you might buy 10 percent of a $1,000 buy-in for $100, meaning that you pay the player $100 and then receive 10 percent of any profit they make in the tournament. But a great poker player, with a proven record in cashing $1K tournaments, might decide that they’re a favourite in the field, and will then charge a little more for packages — a markup. If the markup is 1.1, a 10 percent piece costs $110. At 1.2, the backers get 10 percent for $120, and so on. The markup is essentially guaranteed profit for the player. You might call it their fee for playing in the event on someone else’s behalf.

However, little did Moreno realise the markup minefield he was now entering.

Moreno thought his 1.38 markup was fair, and if it wasn’t he figured it wouldn’t sell.

“I was bringing my markup to a place that I thought was a reasonable value of what my time is worth to take me away from cash games,” he told Joey Ingram on the Poker Life Podcast. “It was my first time playing poker tournaments, and I posted it in a private Facebook group at 1.38 markup, thinking the market will let me know if it’s too high.”


Joey Ingram (left) and Johnnie “Vibes” Moreno on Ingram’s Poker Life Podcast


The package sold out in just a couple of hours, and on the face of it, everyone was happy. Here was an experienced cash-game pro taking a shot at this year’s WSOP, and if any of his fans wanted to buy a piece, they could get $400 worth for $552. It seemed to be a price they were happy to pay.

Later in the day, however, Moreno went on Twitter to find he was now being labelled a scammer. Many experienced tournament pros felt that the 1.38 markup he had posted for himself was wildly overpriced. Shaun Deeb, the self-professed “markup police” said: “When selling a package that after almost 1.4 markup equals lifetime cashes you’re scamming people.” Isaac Haxton said: “I want to be clear, I don’t know anything about Johnnie so this is in no way about him personally or his skill. I just think there are very few people who can beat 1.38.”

Moreno was shocked.

“This whole situation definitely caught me by surprise,” Moreno told PokerStars Blog this week. “Never in a million years did I think anyone would have a problem with my price. A price I settled on after browsing packages online and reflecting on my value. After I listed the package on Facebook it sold out in an instant. People were so excited to have a sweat and I was excited to go to work.”

A chastened Moreno admitted he learned a lot from the experience.

“I had some great logical interactions with people on Twitter,” he told Ingram. “Ike Haxton chimed in, Scott Seiver, Bill Perkins, Daniel Negreanu, Mike Matusow. Some people pointed out some things, and I learned a few things. I learned that this number [meaning his 1.38 markup] is in reference to my return on investment (ROI). I didn’t know that. I thought it was a free-market where people decided how much they wanted to pay for people.”

Despite what was said about him, it seems pretty clear that Moreno did not mean to scam or con anyone. PokerStars Caribbean Adventure 2017 Main Event winner Christian Harder agreed, tweeting: “I think Johnnie Vibes getting dragged on Twitter for his package was a little much for me. It doesn’t cross the line to ‘scamming’ to me.”

Shaun Deeb now goes by the Twitter handle “Markup Police”

With less than a week to go before the WSOP kicks off, we asked Moreno how he feels now that dust had settled.

“Once the ‘Markup Police’ decided to publicly attack my price, my character, and my poker prowess, everything blew up,” Moreno said. “But now that the dust has settled, despite becoming a scapegoat, I’m actually grateful for the whole experience.”

He continued: “Aside from the misinformation, and personal attacks, it seems that a healthy discussion around the standard practice of selling at markup needed to take place. Personally, I learned a lot about how I handle adversity, and how to better handle it in the future. I also learned a thing or two about markup. For instance, if I ever sell in the future, rather than set a price for a WSOP package for my 11 events, I would break down the price for each event. This allows for the most transparent breakdown of cost. This also would have prevented the speculation and misinformation surrounding the details of my package.

“Lastly, I’m grateful for the support of my investors. Their messages of encouragement throughout the mob-like onslaught meant the world to me. I understand how irrational the mob mentality can be, so not losing a single investor was humbling.”

Backing and staking for poker tournaments has never been more common than it is now, leading up to the WSOP and its six-week non-stop tournament schedule. Even mainstream media outlets like CNBC have picked up on the story.



But this summer, when you’re looking to purchase action of poker players for the WSOP, you might come across some players with less than good intentions. Who better, then, to talk about the psychology of potential poker con artists than psychology PhD and author, Maria Konnikova?

CALCULATING MARKUP

To explain how poker players come up with their markup numbers, we’ll turn to a recent video Daniel Negreanu made about his WSOP packages.



Later in this video, Negreanu explains that he is giving his fans a chance to buy a piece of his action at this year’s WSOP. He is dividing his tournament schedule into three tiers: the low buy-in events ($1,500 and under), the middle buy-in events ($1,501 – $10,000), and the high buy-in events ($10,000+).

“My value in the low buy-in events is much, much higher,” Negreanu says, citing his experience and skill level versus the average competency of the field. “So my markup there is probably in the neighbourhood of 2.5 to 3x the buy-in. The mid-stakes buy-ins are a little tougher with smaller fields, so for that one, I’d say my markup is probably in the neighbourhood of 1.25 to 1.3. For the high buy-in events, I’m probably about 1.15.”

Essentially, Negreanu is pricing himself at what he believes his ROI will be versus the fields at these different buy-in levels. However, the big reveal in the video is that he won’t actually be charging any markup at all.

Of course, not all players have the bankrolls of Negreanu, and selling at markup is essential for many professional poker players, for a variety of reasons.

One is that selling a percentage of themselves reduces their variance and personal risk. Two is that, if they are a well-respected player with experience and results behind them, they can justify selling at markup. And three is that this markup provides money in the player’s pocket for expenses (food and drink etc) while they’re playing.

An issue arises when players either don’t understand why they’re charging what they’re charging as they haven’t done the research, or they know they’re not worth the price and are selling too high intentionally. In those cases, the seller becomes a con artist.

“If people are wondering if a person is a con artist or not–and I get asked that question a lot from a lot of different people–I always say it’s a question of intent,” says Konnikova, who spent plenty of time examining the behaviour of con artists for her New York Times bestseller The Confidence Game: Why We Fall For It…Every Time.

Konnikova did not pass comment on any of the specific cases in the latest markup debate, but said she generally defines a con artist as someone who knowingly takes advantage of other people’s confidence for their own personal gain.

“You can’t get inside someone’s head and know what their intention was, and I think that that’s what translates to all of these markup controversies,” she says. “Does the person know that they’re not actually worth that much, and they’re just trying to get it? In which case I’m very much opposed to it. I just don’t think it’s ethical. Or is the person just deluded? In which case it’s a bad investment for you because you don’t want to invest in a deluded poker player.”


Maria Konnikova at the 2019 EPT Monte Carlo


While there have been whispers surrounding certain poker players overselling themselves in tournaments (even going so far as to sell more than 100 percent of themselves, prompting them to bust the tournament intentionally so that they can keep the markup as profit), the truth behind a player’s motives are known only by him or her.

“There are two sides to this argument,” said Doug Polk, in another Poker Life Podcast. “The free market side, which I can respect, and the unethical side, which I lean more towards. Here’s the thing: If you want to sell action, you are legally allowed to sell at whatever markup you want.”

Even one of the biggest names in poker, Phil Hellmuth, came under fire last year for selling at 1.8 markup for a $10,000 Super Turbo Bounty No Limit Hold’em tournament. Hellmuth sold out his 30 percent package with ease, but fellow pros like Matt Berkey (“bordering on thievery”) and Seiver (“he is literally defrauding people out of their money”) were outspoken against it.

Doug Polk

Hellmuth has a world-leading 14 WSOP bracelets, though, and claims to have “the best ROI in history”. Is he not entitled to sell at such a markup? Polk, not referring to Hellmuth specifically, gave his opinion to Ingram.

“I could tell people I want to sell for a tournament at 10x markup, and if I can get buyers, that’s completely legal. Nothing wrong has happened here,” he said. “But there’s a difference between legal and ethical. My approach has always been to not exploit people for gain.

“If I’m selling something I want it to be something valuable to [people], something which could help them and make them money. I don’t scam. If you’re OK doing that that’s fine, as long as you’re all right with the ethics of that. But I think it’s unethical. It’s important for us to have this discussion as a community because it helps protect people from making uninformed decisions that they think are making them money.”


PROTECTING YOURSELF

Whether you’re a poker player looking to sell at markup, or a potential investor looking to buy a piece of someone, it’s important to do your research. This will protect you from public scrutiny in the former, and protect you from losing money in the latter.

“If I were to post a package for the WSOP online at 2.0 markup, and I truly believed I had 2.0 markup (which I obviously don’t, but let’s just imagine that in some world I did), then I’d probably get called out by players who are much better than me saying: ‘Hey Maria, this is insane,’” Konnikova said. “If I’m the type of person that I would want to invest in, I would say: ‘Oh, oops! I didn’t realise. What am I meant to mark it as? 1.1? Ok, sorry, I didn’t know. I thought I was 2.0’.

“I would change it, and if I didn’t I would expect people to see me as someone who was truly deluded, in which case they shouldn’t invest in me. That’s a horrible quality in a poker player. You want somebody who is capable of taking external feedback. If they don’t, they’re scamming, they know it, and they don’t care.”

When we spoke to Konnikova at EPT Monte Carlo, she told us she was yet to charge any markup, and had never sold on an open market. “It’s a way of hedging, and it’s for the full range of my action,” she says. “I think I’m +EV in some fields and not +EV in others. It balances out. People have told me I should, and maybe I will one day, but right now I don’t feel comfortable. I totally understand why people want to charge markup. But I do feel it’s really important to go through a rigorous process to find out what you’re actually worth and to ask for external feedback.”

On May 15, Konnikova announced on Twitter that she would be selling a WSOP package at 1.36 markup. She told us: “At one point I was actually considering it, and I asked a few people what they thought my markup would be in certain events, and they gave me some numbers. So, basically when you see me selling, just know I’ve gone through a very rigorous validation process!”

Her package, like Moreno’s, sold out in just a couple of days.


TIME FOR THE WSOP

For Moreno, the lead up to the WSOP is a chance to study tournaments like he never has before, even reaching out to leading training sites for help. He’s going at this hard. He’s certainly not in for the “markup” money.

“It’s all about the value I see for myself,” he told Ingram. “I’m not going to go negative value and play tournaments. I’m not in it for the glory. I have to put food on the table. This is my life. I’m not making money from YouTube. I’m not an affiliate. I’m not [sponsored] by online poker sites. My way of making money is by playing poker, and if I’m going to make money in tournaments it has to be in high-value situations. The high-value situations that I see are at the WSOP, where I don’t have to pay for travel or lodging.”

Ingram, who openly admits he “doesn’t know about markup”, pointed out that when you win a tournament and momentum is on your side, that seems like as good a reason as any to bump up your markup. But then comes the hard part: proving you’re worth it.

“It’s a big deal to take other people’s money,” Konnikova says. “I’d want to be really careful and I’d want to really respect it. I don’t want to screw anyone. I feel a responsibility to people who believe in me to try to prove their faith in me, and the best way to do that is to play my best.”

Good luck to everyone this summer, both players and backers alike. We’ll leave the last word to Konnikova.

“You need to do your research. And for those selling, be an ethical human being. Be a good person. Don’t take advantage of people.”


How much would you need to win to play all night?

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Here’s your chance to take part in some vaguely scientific poker research, and earn a $1.10 ticket in the process.

It’s about prize money, and how much of it you need.

Because there’s no other way to say this. Playing a SCOOP event can take some time.

Whether a tournament starts in your morning, or your evening, you’re likely to be up a while. Especially if you go deep. Even more so if you win it.

Unless you’re on the east coast of Canada, which is a kind of time zone sweet spot for anyone with dinner plans.

But for everyone else, it can be enough to think twice before buying-in. Or at the very least, ask yourself: Where do I need to be tomorrow?

Players with jobs for instance.

Which lead us to another question.

How much would you need to win to make staying up all night worth it?

How much prize money would make your shift tomorrow, on no sleep, tolerable? *

How much to take the edge off a day of meetings in the office?

How much to put a smile on your face even during the toughest of sleepless rush hour commutes?

In short, what’s your price?

Because if you can’t plan your SCOOP schedule forwards, maybe you can work it out backwards?

Which events offer you enough prize money to make no sleep worth it?

We expect the answers to vary quite a bit.

If, like an Eighties supermodel, you don’t get out of bed for less than a $500,000 guarantee, let us know.

If it only takes a min-cash to have you whistling to work, we want to hear about it.

Or, if it would take millions for you to skip your beauty sleep, speak now.

What’s your number?

Be honest. Don’t sell yourself short. But if your answer is in the billions perhaps think it over some more.

When we get all the answers, we’ll average them all out to determine the exact scientifically calculated amount. That’s the exact figure it takes, on average, to put aside fears of an all-nighter.

And while you’re at it, tell us the exact time you’d like your ideal tournament to start. Do that down to the minute as well.

To help with the thinking process we’re giving away $1.10 tickets to anyone who sends us their number, and time.

That’s enough for a satellite ticket to an event like the Sunday Million. That has a $1 million guarantee, which we’re guessing beats whatever number you have in mind right now.

To take part and earn a ticket, here’s what to do:

Figure out your number, down to the dollar. We only want the amount that would get you playing all night to win.

Then tell us exactly what time your ideal tournament would start. Down to the minute.

Then tweet your number and time to us at @PokerStarsBlog with your [Stars ID] and the #TimeIsMoney hashtag before Sunday 23:59 ET. We’ll credit the ticket to your account on Monday.

One entry only please. Entering twice would make you seem a bit indecisive.

Terms and conditions apply (which you can read here), with the tickets available only to dot com players.

*If your job involves operating heavy machinery, driving something, or performing surgery on people, please do not try this.

 

Conor McGregor insists he'll stay retired. Unless...

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Through a combination of swagger and skill, Conor McGregor turned the combat sports world on its head. He became one of the biggest fight stars in the world in a period of roughly two years, during which time he debuted in the UFC, moved up the ranks while dropping memorable quotes and eventually captured UFC gold.

The good times were good for McGregor, but they haven’t all been good times recently for the Irishman.

Fans have been left wondering if McGregor, who announced his retirement in March, is actually done as a fighter.

The first stumble

After rattling off 15 consecutive wins — seven in the UFC Octagon — McGregor was UFC featherweight champ, and set to step up from 145 pounds to 155 for a lightweight title shot against Rafael dos Anjos at UFC 196.

Dos Anjos, however, suffered an injury and had to pull out of the bout. That left the UFC scrambling for an opponent to face McGregor.

Former rival Jose Aldo and potentially his best opponent Frankie Edgar were unavailable, so the promotion settled on Nate Diaz. That meant an additional 15 pounds, and the fight taking place at the 170-pound welterweight limit.

The war of words between Diaz and McGregor was sure to be a joy for fans (and it was, as evidenced by the press conference video). The fight itself was expected to be less competitive. Odds for the fight closed with McGregor as high as a -585 favorite.

 

But fights aren’t fought on paper or at betting windows. Diaz doesn’t know how to roll over either, going blow-for-blow with McGregor in the first round before taking over the fight in the second. He then finished McGregor with a rear-naked choke.

The result was a shock and McGregor had tasted defeat for the first time in the UFC. But he was still featherweight champ and his starpower hadn’t diminished.

Rather than shrink from competition, McGregor would rematch Diaz at UFC 202. He won that very competitive bout before moving to lightweight. There he defeated Eddie Alvarez to win the lightweight champion and coin the term “champ champ” for his status as a multi-division champion.

The Alvarez bout was the last time McGregor would score a professional victory.

Boxing and the incidents

Rather than establishing his mixed martial arts legacy, McGregor sought instead to build his overall legacy — and bank account — by switching to boxing. His plan was to take on the top boxer alive, Floyd Mayweather Jr. on August 26, 2017.

After the kind of build-up one might expect from the two men, including McGregor making comments that often drifted toward racism, the fight that played out was predictable.

Mayweather slow-played the early rounds, seeing what his competitor had to offer. Then flipped the switch and dominated with better technique, developed through a lifetime focused on boxing. The fight ended with Mayweather scoring a TKO in Round 10.

In a recent interview, McGregor insisted he’d win a rematch should the two ever meet again. “I believe I would win,” McGregor said. “Actually, there I go again with the fake humbleness — I know I would win.”

McGregor put up a fine effort in the Mayweather fight, but things went off the rails soon thereafter.

First, McGregor attended a November 2017 event held by MMA promotion Bellator to watch a teammate fight. When it appeared his teammate had won, McGregor jumped into the cage to celebrate, only to end up attacking the referee who had not yet declared the fight over. He also slapped a member of the athletic commission as commission members attempted to curtail his antics.

 

On April 5, 2018, McGregor threw an equipment dolly through the window of a bus. It was carrying several UFC fighters who had attended the media day ahead of UFC 223. The attack was the result of McGregor’s friend Artem Lobov’s altercation with undefeated lightweight Khabib Nurmagomedov days before.

Ray Borg and Michael Chiesa sustained injuries from the broken glass, and were forced off their bouts. Chiesa has since filed a lawsuit against McGregor. Charged, McGregor pleaded no contest to disorderly conduct.

It continues

McGregor would have his showdown with Nurmagomedov. It would come in the Octagon on October 6, 2018 at UFC 229.

Nurmagomedov was now lightweight champion. McGregor was returning after almost two years without a UFC fight, with eyes on his former crown.

The fight was a lopsided affair. Nurmagomedov dominated before scoring a submission in the fourth round to retain his belt.

Nurmagomedov and his contingent of Dagistani teammates don’t treat trash talk the same way as McGregor. They viewed matters in a much more serious light.

Following his win, Nurmagomedov ran from the cage and leapt through the air, attempting to kick McGregor teammate Dillon Danis.

McGregor attempted to exit the cage only to end up in a brawl with Nurmagomedov’s friends and family. The entire post-fight scene briefly looked like a riot would break out, but was contained to a set of brief scuffles.

McGregor has tried several times to reframe the fight into one he was largely winning. He has insisted he “won” because he landed the final blow of the night when he struck one of Nurmagomedov’s posse.

But he would go on to attack Nurmagomedov on social media this March, including insulting his wife, before deleting the tweet after backlash and insisting he’d see the champ in the octagon.

Later in the month, he was arrested for strong-armed robbery and criminal mischief after he took a man’s phone and broke it on the ground. The charges were eventually dropped after the victim said he was “made whole” by McGregor.

Then, on March 26, McGregor said he was retired.

And that’s it … except

In a recent interview with self-help guru Tony Robbins, the “retired” McGregor said of a potential rematch with Nurmagomedov, “They’re running away, I’m here for the fight.”

He then said he’s “pretty much” retired unless the UFC comes through with the rematch.

Nurmagomedov got the heftier suspension following the post-fight melee, and could get back in the Octagon come July. Interim champ Dustin Poirier, who won the belt against Max Holloway at UFC 236, seems like the obvious choice for a return opponent.

Then again, fighting has always been about money over merit. And there may be no bigger money fight in the UFC than Conor McGregor vs. Khabib Nurmagomedov 2.

Retirements don’t stick for fighters anyway.

SCOOP 2019: All the news from Day 13

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It’s all getting very serious as we enter Main Event weekend at the Spring Championship of Online Poker (SCOOP). Big prizes and some of the biggest names in the game. Read all about it…

TODAY’S HEADLINES

  • Juan “malaka$tyle” Pardo wins $500K and his second title
  • Two biggest first prizes of this year’s SCOOP awarded
  • “ROFLShove” and “MUSTAFABET” back among the winners
  • Koon, Foxen, Watson, Drinan and Chouity also champions
  • Three titles in a night for Irish players
  • First prizes of more than $10m now awarded

BEHIND THE HEADLINES

The two biggest first prizes so far of this year’s SCOOP went to known tournament bosses overnight. London-based Juan “Malaka$tyle” Pardo banked $549,421.48 for victory in the $25,000 High Roller, shortly after Kahle “ROFLShove” Burns had netted $125,587.08 plus another $186,484.37 in bounties, totalling $312,071.45, in SCOOP 49-H PKO. That’s Pardo’s second title of SCOOP 2019, but by far the biggest, outstripping the $47,520 he won in the shootout event. Remarkably, however, that’s not even close to ROFLShove’s biggest SCOOP score: in 2017, the Mexico-based player won $787,000 with his Main Event title.

Juan “malaka$tyle” Pardo

Our list of double champions added another name overnight when Matthew “MUSTAFABET” Ashton, a former challenger for WSOP Player of the Year, won the high buy-in version of SCOOP 50 Razz. MUSTAFABET previously won the Limit Stud H/L, and has another SCOOP title from 2016 as well as WCOOP victories from 2009 among heaps of other accolades.

Few people in world poker have been playing as much 6+ (or short-deck) poker over the past few years as Jason “jakoon1985” Koon, and the man who tops the all time money list for short deck last night won one of the first SCOOP titles in the discipline, earning $28,913.68 in SCOOP 73-M. That’s barely a buy-in in the games he usually plays, but underlines his abilities in this format.

Jason Koon, back among the SCOOP winners

Former PCA winner Mike “SirWatts” Watson picked up the title in the high buy-in 6+ event, proving that he was a decent person for PokerStars Blog to learn the game from, when we put 6+ under the spotlight a few months ago. Watson has also been putting the hours in in live 6+, and this was his reward: a near $95,000 payday, pushing “OLD TIME GIN” into second and denying him his second SCOOP title in as many days.

Adam “Adamyid” Owen came close to pulling off one of SCOOP’s rarest feats: winning two titles at different buy-ins in the same event. Owen finished sixth in the SCOOP 50-H at the same time that he was also on the final table of SCOOP 50-M, finishing third. Terrence “Unassigned” Chan once won two at the same time, in limit hold’em, but Owen narrowly missed out on joining him.

COOP titles for Nicolas “niccc” Chouity are hardly rarities. The former EPT Grand Final champion has wins in WCOOP from 2011 and three SCOOP titles from 2015 (two) and 2012. And this time he won SCOOP 51-M Heads-Up. He defeated “lbtrading” in the final for a $18,567.27 result. He also cashed in seventh in SCOOP 70-M at the same time.

Connor “blanconegro” Drinan brought his career online cashes close to $7.5 million when he took down SCOOP 70-M for $167,574.54 after a chop with “Grisha813. Drinan is another multiple COOP champion, with two WCOOP victories from 2017 and one from 2016.

Alex “bigfox86” Foxen started the day on the final table of the $25,000 buy-in High Roller event, and though he busted that in eighth, he still finished the Friday grind with a SCOOP title, finishing first in SCOOP 54-H Zoom. Foxen appeared to have come from nowhere over the past two years to be a fixture on the global high roller circuit, and the No 1 ranked player on the GPI. But SCOOP watchers have seen him before: in 2015 he won his first SCOOP title and had a conversation with Stephen Bartley about cup-cakes.

Alex “bigfox86” Foxen

Until yesterday, the only SCOOP 2019 titles won by Ireland were both by the same person, “luckymo32”. But three more Irish players joined the party overnight as “Druidden“, “DanielT999” and “UIDuffer” all won.


STAT TRACKER

Tournaments completed: 171
Tournaments ongoing: 6
Entries so far: 764,245
Prize pool so far: $69,863,658
First-place prizes awarded: $10,522,298.21


TODAY’S RESULTS

48-L: PLO H/L $5.50 4,122 $20,197 Druidden Ireland $2,887.68
48-M: PLO H/L $55 1,103 $55,150 The TJS UK $8,862.02
48-H: PLO H/L $530 312 $156,000 Perrymejsen Sweden $29,347.79
49-L: Progressive KO Mini Thursday Thrill $109 6,588 $658,800 FKAXM Brazil $66,966.51†
49-M: Progressive KO Thursday Thrill $1,050 1,191 $1,191,000 GamadGADOL Malta $161,282.91†
49-H: Progressive KO High Roller $10,300 109 $1,090,000 ROFLShove Mexico $312,071.45†
50-L: Limit Razz $22 1,763 $35,260 vlaviusz Romania $5,731.68*
50-M: Limit Razz $215 380 $76,000 serkku21 Finland $14,440.00
50-H: Limit Razz $2,100 73 $150,000 MUSTAFABET UK $40,875.00
51-L: Heads-Up $22 2,048 $40,960 Harley7900 Germany $5,170.47
51-M: Heads-Up $215 512 $102,400 niccc Lebanon $18,567.27
51-H: Heads-Up $2,100 108 $256,000 J0hn Mcclean UK $76,800.00
70-L: 8-Max High Roller $215 2,946 $589,200 Godfatti Netherlands $85,100.33
70-M 8-Max High Roller $2,100 498 $1,000,000 blanconegro Mexico $167,574.54*
70-H: 8-Max High Roller $25,000 83 $2,035,575 Malaka$tyle UK $549,421.48
53-L: Progressive KO $22 6,286 $61,603 mnammnam Czech Republic $6,794.07†
53-M: Progressive KO $215 1,451 $145,100 DanielT999 Ireland $17,208.03†
53-H: Progressive KO $2,100 283 $283,000 UIDuffer Ireland $48,061.13†*
54-L: Zoom $11 12,855 $62,990 tonyraad Brazil $7,994.68
54-M: Zoom $109 4,702 $235,100 passie100 Germany $30,594.64*
54-H: Zoom $1,050 820 $410,000 bigfox86 Canada $68,904.03
73-L: 6+ Hold’em $55 1,775 $100,000 NiekJans Netherlands $13,730.05*
73-M: 6+ Hold’em $530 243 $150,000 jakoon1985 Canada $28,913.68
73-H: 6+ Hold’em $5,200 54 $270,000 SirWatts Canada $94,915.40

ONGOING TOURNAMENTS

SCOOP 72 — NLHE Progressive KO 6-Max
Buy-ins: $11, $109, $1,050
Benjamin “Spraggy” Spragg edged into the cash in the medium buy-in evening, finishing 653rd for $96.16, plus another $62.50 in bounties.

SCOOP 52 — NLHE
Buy-ins: $22, $215, $2,100
“Graftekkel” leads the way in the high buy-in version of this one, seeking his second SCOOP title and close to $180K. There are some other real sharks in the 41 remaining, including Wiktor “limitless” Malinowski, in second, Kahle “ROFLshove” Burns in fourth and OLD TIME GIN in ninth. Oh, and there’s Juan “Malaka$tyle” Pardo in 17th too.


STARTING TODAY

SCOOP 55 — NLHE Deep Stacks
Buy-ins: $11, $109, $1,050
When an ordinary stack is just too darn shallow.

SCOOP 56 — 8-Game
Buy-ins: $22, $215, $2,100
Your last chance during this SCOOP to go through all the games: Limit 2-7 Triple Draw, Limit Hold’em, Limit Omaha Hi-Lo, Limit Razz, Limit Seven Card Stud, Limit Stud Hi-Lo, No-Limit Hold’em, Pot-Limit Omaha.

SCOOP 57 — NLHE Progressive KO
Buy-ins: $5.50, $55, $530
One of the most popular formats, with a low buy-in of only $5.50.

SCOOP 58 — Pot Limit 5-Card Omaha
Buy-ins: $11, $109, $1,050
Learn how to play first, then if you’re looking for some more information, PokerStars School have got you covered.

SCOOP 59 — NLHE
Buy-ins: $22, $215, $2,100
Nothing fancy, but still the best way to round off a full day.


PREVIOUS SCOOP COVERAGE:

DAY 1 | DAY 2 | DAY 3 | DAY 4 | DAY 5 | DAY 6 | DAY 7 | DAY 8 | DAY 9 | DAY 10 | DAY 11 | DAY 12

SCOOP 2019: All the news from Day 14

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It’s Sunday. It’s the Spring Championship of Online Poker (SCOOP). It’s Main Event time! But before that…

TODAY’S HEADLINES

  • Another huge win for Kahle “ROFLShove” Burns
  • Two more double champions, 12 in all
  • 30 titles for Brazil; first for Peru
  • 30,671 entries to SCOOP 57, most so far
  • “kepik” turns $11 satellite into $50K title
  • Main Event starts today!

BEHIND THE HEADLINES

What did you do on Friday and Saturday night? I hope you had a good time. It seems pretty obvious that Kahle “ROFLShove” Burns did: the Australian, now based in Mexico, followed up his victory in SCOOP 49-H PKO, which grossed him $312,071.45 (inc. bounties) with victory in SCOOP 52-H, for another $178.498. That’s the best part of $500K in two nights, after doing battle yesterday with Ole “wizowizo” Schemion (second), Steve “Mr. Tim Caum” O’Dwyer (fourth) and Juan “Malaka$tyle” Pardo (fifth).

Belgium’s “merla888” has also become a double champion of SCOOP 2019, adding victory in the $2,100 8-Game to his $2,100 NLHE triumph in SCOOP 14-H last week. This one earned him $56,035.24 to add to the $109,181.43 of last time. By my reckoning, he is now the 12th double-champion of this year’s SCOOP. (See below.)


MORE ABOUT SCOOP 2019
OFFICIAL SITE & SCHEDULE | RESULTS | LEADER BOARD


Add another to the list of spin-up kings. Polish player “kepik” won his/her seat into SCOOP 59-M: $215 NLHE Turbo in an $11 satellite, and late on Saturday night was the last player standing, winning $50,698.82. That’s a tidy 461,000 percent ROI, and the ninth satellite winner to go all the way in this year’s SCOOP.

When “allan sheik” won the $215 SCOOP 52-M on Saturday, he became Brazil’s 30th tournament winner of this series, nearly double the total of any other country. Russia and the UK have 17 apiece, but it’s nowhere near Brazil’s. Meanwhile, somewhere a little west of “allan sheik”, “KevinGueAC21” was winning Peru’s first SCOOP title this year.

The Main Event starts today! The Main Event starts today! This is not a drill! With buy-ins at $109, $1,050 and $10,500 and guarantees at $2.5 million, $4 million and $5 million, this is the online poker event of the year. The kick-off is 18:00 WET, with two re-entries possible through a five-hour 25 minutes late registration period (low buy-in reg period is 4 hours 45 minutes). Heaps of satellites running through the day. Get an account and join in!


TODAY’S RESULTS

Name Buy-in Entries Prize-pool Winner Country Prize
52-L: NLHE $22 13,231 $264,620 BarchWarHead Russia $31,303.93*
52-M: NLHE $215 2,642 $528,400 allan sheik Brazil $77,227.86
52-H: NLHE $2,100 469 $1,000,000 ROFLShove Mexico $178,498.00
72-L NLHE PKO $11 18,681 $183,073 Cashine94 Germany $14,648.74†
72-M NLHE PHO $109 4,789 $478,900 MPLBRUTUS Belgium $47,017.65†
72-H NLHE PKO $1,050 621 $621,000 aggro_F Cyprus $95,307.7†
56-H: 8 Game $2,100 119 $238,000 merla888 Belgium $56,035.24*
59-L: NLHE $22 7,416 $148,320 KevinGueAC21 Peru $21,036.65
59-M: NLHE $215 1,668 $333,600 kepik Poland $50,698.82
59-H: NLHE $2,100 215 $430,000 0Human0 Romania $79,735.37*

DOUBLES AT THE DOUBLE

It was only a couple of weeks ago that Jason Kirk was asking a very pertinent question: will SCOOP 2019 yield a double champion and, if so, how long would it take? Kirk determined that the first part of the question was essentially a no-brainer. There’s been at least one double-champion in every SCOOP since records began. He also wasn’t far off in predicting the date: Joao “Naza114” Vieira became this series’ first double winner on the fifth day of competition, just outside Kirk’s suggestion that it would happen through event 18-22.

Matthew “MUSTAFABET” Ashton, one of 12 SCOOP double champions

But here’s something that no one could have expected: the sheer number of double champions. At time of writing, there are still 35 events to be completed in this year’s SCOOP, and we have already had 12 double champions. That’s more than ever before, and raises the very serious prospect of a third winner. Here’s who has done the double already:

Joao “Naza114” Vieira (Netherlands)
Benny “RunGodlike” Glaser (UK)
“merla888” (Belgium)
Matthew “MUSTAFABET” Ashton (UK)
Tomas “luckymo32” Geleziunas (Ireland)
“Bagrovui” (Romania)
“guilherme12” (Brazil)
“felipebeltra” (Brazil)
Rui “RuiNF” Ferreira
Juan “Malaka$tyle” Pardo (Spain)
Kahle “ROFLShove” Burns (Mexico)
“Secret_M0d3” (Austria)


STAT TRACKER

Tournaments completed: 181
Tournaments ongoing: 11
Entries so far: 844,617
Prize pool so far: $74,358,477
First-place prizes awarded: $11,173,808.21


LEADER BOARD(S) UPDATE

Konstantin “krakukra” Maslak still dominating SCOOP leader board

As SCOOP reaches its business end, the Player of the Series leader boards make for very interesting reading, particularly for three men: the Portuguese duo of Joao “Naza114” Vieira and Rui “RuiNF” Ferreira (both based in the Netherlands) and Konstantin “krakukra” Maslak, of Russia.

With prizes available for the top three at all levels, it’s safe to assume that all three of them will be banking some additional cash from this series. But who will actually come out on top remains open to debate, particularly in the High buy-in category. “krakukra”‘s better results in the low buy-in events could end up being decisive in the overall leader board, where there’s $25K for the winner.

Here’s the top of the four leader boards. Full details are on the official SCOOP pages.

Low ($5,000 for winner):
405 points — Konstantin “krakukra” Maslak (Russia)
350 — FONBET_RULIT (Russia)
345 — DaGenesis (UK)

Medium ($7,500 for winner):
400 — TruthBeTold7 (Canada)
380 — ImluckNuts (Russia)
330 — zilbeee (Brazil)

High ($10,000 for winner):
555 — Joao “Naza114” Vieira (Netherlands)
540 — Konstantin “krakukra” Maslak (Russia)
455 — Rui “RuiNF” Ferreira (Netherlands)

Overall ($25,000 for winner)
1,240 — Konstantin “krakukra” Maslak (Russia)
955 — Joao “Naza114” Vieira (Netherlands)
885 — Rui “RuiNF” Ferreira (Netherlands)


ONGOING TOURNAMENTS

SCOOP 55 — NLHE Deep Stacks
Buy-ins: $11, $109, $1,050
It’s pretty surprising that Ole “wizowizo” Schemion hasn’t won a title so far in this year’s SCOOP, but he’s sitting pretty as the chip-leader in the $109 buy-in in this event, with 70 (of 3,095) left. The star attraction in the $1,050 buy-in is that man Lex Veldhuis, who is eighth of 18 coming back ovenight. There’s $70K up top.

SCOOP 56 — 8-Game
Buy-ins: $22, $215, $2,100
Although the high buy-in event got wrapped up in a single day, the low and medium buy-in tournaments are at their midpoint pause. Mike “goleafsgoeh” Leah sits in second place in the $215, with Robin “robinho” Ylitalo just behind him and Vladimir “vovtroy” Troyanovsky lurking. Former SCOOP champion “Zelja22” leads the way.

SCOOP 57 — NLHE Progressive KO
Buy-ins: $5.50, $55, $530
With 30,671 entries (inc. 9,648 re-entries) into the $5.50 buy-in event, this becomes the most popular of SCOOP so far. There’s $7,363 on offer to whoever can battle through this enormous field. The 21,023 uniques is the most of SCOOP too.

SCOOP 58 — Pot Limit 5-Card Omaha
Buy-ins: $11, $109, $1,050
There’s an OLD TIME SCOOP FAVOURITE leading the way in the $109 buy-in of this event, with Canada’s “OLD TIME GIN” heading the 37 remaining overnight. Meanwhile Jorryt “TheCleaner11” Van Hoof is part of a Dutch 1-2 at the top of the high buy-in event, with 35 left.


STARTING TODAY

It’s almost entirely no limit hold’em as the very biggest events of the series get under way. They are:

SCOOP 60 — NLHE Sunday Kickoff
Buy-ins: $5.50, $55, $530

SCOOP 61 — NLHE Sunday Warm-Up inc. High Roller
Buy-ins: $22, $215, $2,100

SCOOP 62 — NLHE MAIN EVENT!
Buy-ins: $109, $1,050, $10,300
The guarantees are enormous: $2.5 million for the low buy-in, $4 million for the medium and $5m for the high.

SCOOP 1 — Phase 2
Buy-ins: $2.20, $22, $215
Multiple phase 1s have been running all week, but here’s where it gets serious. Guarantees of $1 million and $2 million for the medium and high buy-in events respectively.

SCOOP 63 — Pot limit Omaha Six Max
Buy-ins: $109, $1,050, $10,300
You simply don’t get PLO tournaments online that are bigger or richer than this.

SCOOP 64 — NLHE Progressive KO TURBO
Buy-ins: $11, $109, $1,050
Wind down from a hectic Sunday with this gentle PKO Turbo event. (Read: Potential trip-saver.)


PREVIOUS SCOOP COVERAGE:

DAY 1 | DAY 2 | DAY 3 | DAY 4 | DAY 5 | DAY 6 | DAY 7 | DAY 8 | DAY 9 | DAY 10 | DAY 11 | DAY 12 | DAY 13

Save the Date: Lex Live 2 confirmed for London

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After the huge success of the first Lex Live event in Namur earlier this year, Lex Veldhuis has announced the first details of Lex Live 2 later this year.

This time he’ll be in London, from 27 September to 6 October.

Lex Veldhuis will be hosting another community event in London later this year

As a PokerStars Ambassador, Lex will be hosting this community poker event at Aspers Casino in Stratford. That’s a tube journey away from the centre of London, as well as the site of the Olympic Games in 2012.

For this second event, you can expect a few extras.

They’ll be more days to enjoy at Lex Live 2, as well as more tournaments and more activities for the Lex community.

The highlight will be the Main Event, with a buy-in of £230. But you can expect multiple tournament every day, and with various buy-ins.

The details of what will be a fantastic ten days of poker will be available soon.

For now, clear those dates in your diary and get ready to head to London.

Lex will be expecting you.

SCOOP 2019: All the news from Day 15

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Wipe the tears away. There may be only one day left of the 2019 Spring Championship of Online Poker (SCOOP), but what a day it will be. Let’s catch up…

TODAY’S HEADLINES

  • Main Event smashes guarantees; more than $1m for winner
  • Prize pools for SCOOP 2019 surpass $100 million
  • Defending champ, and runner-up, still alive
  • “zilbee” becomes 13th double champion
  • Final table for Team Pro’s Moreira de Melo
  • Last day of SCOOP action!

BEHIND THE HEADLINES

Guarantees have been smashed in all of the SCOOP Main Event tournaments, with prize pools totalling $15.49 million across the three buy-in levels in play. At time of writing, tournaments are at their mid-way break, but they’ll play to a champion later today (Monday), when the winner of the $10,300 High Main Event will claim $1.127 million.

SCOOP Main Event stats:

Low ($109)
Entries: 33,987
Prize pool: $3.4 million
1st: $334K

Medium ($1,050)
Entries: 5,474
Prize pool: $5.475 million
1st: $778K

High ($10,300)
Entries: 662
Prize pool: $6.62 million
1st: $1.127 million

Uruguay’s Francisco “Tomatee” Benítez leads the way in the $10,300 event, but the top 20 is astonishingly brilliant. Roman “Romeopro” Romanovsky, the recent world No 1, is in second, followed by Sami “Lrslzk” Kelopuro and then, most notably of all, the defending champion “Tankanza” and last year’s runner-up “nailuj90“, who is eighth. Nick “caecilius” Petrangelo is in sixth and Adrian “Amadi_017” Mateos is in ninth. There are 31 left and one brilliant day of play left.

The 13th double champion of this year’s SCOOP rose to the top of the podium again yesterday, when Brazil’s “zilbeee” followed up victory in SCOOP 20-M 7-Card Stud Hi/Lo with a win in SCOOP 58-M 5-Card Omaha. This former $109+R champ on PokerStars wins two of the toughest non-hold’em events of the festival.


MORE ABOUT SCOOP 2019
OFFICIAL SITE & SCHEDULE | RESULTS | LEADER BOARD


More Brazilian SCOOP domination

The medium buy-in PKO proved to be a microcosm of SCOOP 2019 as a whole, with a smashed guarantee and then five of the last seven places belonging to Brazilian players. “rogerdox” won it, but the yellow and green flag occupied third, fifth, sixth and seventh place too.

There was a second COOP title for Norway’s “Tinas21“, who has previously won a Mix Max title in the Turbo version of all this: TCOOP.

Team PokerStars Pro has had a fairly barren SCOOP this year, but Fatima Moreira de Melo enjoyed her Sunday, making it to fifth, from a field of 1,054, in the $1,050 PKO SCOOP 64-H. That banked the Dutch star $27,066, including bounties, for the biggest result of any Team Pro this SCOOP.

Fatima Moreira De Melo: A strike for the Red Spade

With 195 tournaments now completed and another 12 under way, SCOOP 2019 hit a major milestone overnight when the total prize-pools swelled past $100 million. There are nine tournaments still to play and a very real chance that entries top 1 million too. At time of writing, it’s at 955,673 for the series.


STAT TRACKER

Tournaments completed: 195
Tournaments ongoing: 12
Entries so far: 955,673
Prize pool so far: $101,275,835
First-place prizes awarded: $11,840,653.25


TODAY’S RESULTS

Name Buy-in Entries Prize-pool Winner Country Prize
55-L: Deep Stacks $11 12,971 $127,116 CrAzY_sTeFaN Romania $16,020.12
55-M: Deep Stacks $109 3,095 $309,500 tekelson221 Austria $33,665.10*
55-H: Deep Stacks Daily Warm-Up $1,050 379 $379,000 Radogoszcz Poland $69,042.38
56-L: 8 Game $22 2,374 $50,000 naspirkataa Bulgaria $7,875.00
56-M: 8 Game $215 455 $100,000 Zelja22 Croatia $17,500.00
57-L: Progressive KO $5.50 30,671 $150,288 KMFBDDE Greece $9,850.30†
57-M: Progressive KO $55 12,941 $647,050 thehushpuppy UK $59,425.03†
57-H: Progressive KO $530 2,255 $1,127,500 tigerphil1 Austria $139,313.36†
58-L: PL 5 Card Omaha $11 4,270 $41,846 xBAPBAPx Russia $5,976.28
58-M: PL 5 Card Omaha $109 1,256 $125,600 zilbeee Brazil $19,626.96
58-H: PL 5 Card Omaha $1,050 287 $287,000 Tinas21 Norway $50,670.64
64-L: Progressive KO $11 13,964 $136,847 mahdigras UK $13,177.04†
64-M: Progressive KO Sunday Cooldown $109 6,303 $630,300 rogerdox Brazil $67,705.07†
64-H: Progressive KO Sunday Cooldown $1,050 1,054 $1,054,000 NationalPPP Malta $156,997.76†

LEADER BOARD LATEST

When “zilbeee” won a second title last night in SCOOP 58-M 5-Card Omaha, it not only banked him or her an immediate $19,626.96, it also had potentially lucrative repercussions on the leader board race, specifically at the Medium buy-in level. “zilbeee”‘s win draws the Brazilian equal first, on 440 points, with Russia’s “ImluckNuts”. There’s $7,500 for the winner of that leader board and $5,000 for second, with prizes all the way down to 10th. That was a potentially big moment.

SCOOP Medium Leader Board

1= ImluckNuts (Russia) – 440 points
1= zilbeee (Brazil) – 440
3 TruthBeTold7 (Canada) – 420
4 theNERDguy (Brazil) – 340
5 wiziwizo (Austria) – 330

Like everything else about SCOOP 2019, these leader board races will be decided tonight.


ONGOING TOURNAMENTS

SCOOP 60 — NLHE Sunday Kickoff
Buy-ins: $5.50, $55, $530
Still a long way to go in all of these events, with 37 (of 1,168) still left in the high buy-in, led by the UK’s “hoodie333”; 94 (of 5,797) left in the medium, with Norway’s “jokkee_apart” out front; and 47 (of 11,943) looking up at Russia’s “Mr.Doomguy”.

SCOOP 61 — NLHE Sunday Warm-Up inc. High Roller
Buy-ins: $22, $215, $2,100
Ben “jenbizzle” Jones, Dietrich “2pacnrw16” Fast and Joao “joaovbarb” Barbosa are all in the top 12 of 20 left in the high buy-in Sunday Warm-Up. There’s a $1.18 million prize pool in that one.

SCOOP 62 — NLHE MAIN EVENT!
Buy-ins: $109, $1,050, $10,300
See above.

SCOOP 1 — Phase 2
Buy-ins: $2.20, $22, $215
SCOOP 1, the phased tournament, will also finish today after the vast majority of Phase 2 played on Sunday. AA DOCTOR, from Austria, leads in the $215 high buy-in level, with Ivan “Negriin” Luca and Rui “RuiNF” Ferreira well placed. There are 18 left in that tournament, which has a $2.3 million prize pool, 36 in the medium ($1.31 million) and 36 ($285,000) in the low.

SCOOP 63 — Pot limit Omaha Six Max Main Event
Buy-ins: $109, $1,050, $10,300
Macau’s “neesam1405”, who won the Sunday Cooldown for $83K this time last week, is leading the way in the $109 low buy-in PLO event. COOP crusher Shaun “shaundeeb” Deeb is ahead of the last 52 in the medium buy-in, with Jens “Jeans89” Kyllonen leading the 19 left in the high buy-in. Russia’s “krakukra” has all but sealed the overall leader board by also making the money in that one.


STARTING TODAY

The cleaners are in and vacuuming the floor. All of these events are going to play start to finish today.

SCOOP 65 — NLHE Progressive KO
Buy-ins: $11, $109, $1,050

SCOOP 66 — PLO Antes
Buy-ins: $5.50, $55, $530

SCOOP 67 — NLHE Turbo
Buy-ins: $5.50, $55, $530


PREVIOUS SCOOP COVERAGE:

DAY 1 | DAY 2 | DAY 3 | DAY 4 | DAY 5 | DAY 6 | DAY 7 | DAY 8 | DAY 9 | DAY 10 | DAY 11 | DAY 12 | DAY 13 | DAY 14

SCOOP 2019: All the news from Day 16

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There have been some wonder stories in poker through the years, but the final day of the 2019 Spring Championship of Online Poker (SCOOP) may have matched them all. Read on…

TODAY’S HEADLINES

  • Gianluca “Tankanza” Speranza defends SCOOP High Main Event title
  • Outlasts 662-strong field to win again, taking $1.03 million
  • Last year’s runner-up “nailuj90” also makes final
  • Brazil’s “felipebeltra” top 10 in medium and high events
  • Second SCOOP 2019 win for Mike “goleafsgoeh” Leah
  • More than 1m entries; Prize pools > $105m across series

BEHIND THE HEADLINES

 

The undefeated Gianluca “Tankanza” Speranza

Last year there were 654 entries. This year there were 662. But despite all of those players putting up $10,300 and bringing their A-game to one of online poker’s most prestigious tournaments, no one has been able to beat Gianluca “Tankanza” Speranza in the SCOOP High Main Event. Last night, the Austria-based Italian won his second, back-to-back version of this tournament, earning $1.03 million and successfully defending the title he won this time last year. It’s an unprecedented achievement, arguably the most unlikely online poker result ever documented.

“Tankanza” beat “OMGitshunt” of Belarus heads-up after the pair arranged a near-equal chop and left $100,000 and the trophy to play for. Dinesh “NastyMinder” Alt, who previously won the TCOOP Main Event, came third ahead of overnight leader Francisco “Tomatee” Benítez.

Not only did “Tankanza” go back-to-back, but Austria-based “nailuj90” also made the final table and finished fifth. “nailuj90” was the beaten heads-up opponent in the SCOOP-H Main Event last time. Special mention too to Brazil’s “felipebeltra” who finished tenth in the medium buy-in event and sixth in the high buy-in.

This was “Tankanka”‘s second SCOOP title of the series. He also won SCOOP 40-M: Mini Super Tuesday for $80,589.90. It makes him one of 15 players to win two SCOOP titles this year.

Brazil’s “Jack Wastes” claims low buy-in version, turning $109 buy-in into $316K. Jacobo “jacobgold” Montoya wins medium buy-in after chop with the UK’s “4BETBRICK”.

Main Event top threes:

SCOOP 61-L – Main Event
Buy-in: $109 | Entries: 33,987
Prize pool: $3,398,700

1: Jack Wastes, Brazil – $315,955.11*
2: Silden4filho, Netherlands – 246,669.14*
3: bencb789, Austria – 169,867.70

SCOOP 61-M – Main Event
Buy-in: $1,050 | Entries: 5,475
Prize pool: $5,475,000

1: jakobgold, Mexico – $688,558.42*
2: 4BETBRICK, UK – $636,030.41*
3: Daenarys T, Netherlands – $383,333.22

SCOOP 62-H – Main Event
Buy-in: 10,300 | Entries: 662
Prize pool: $6,620,000

1: Gianluca “Tankanza” Speranza, Austria – $1,028,203.24*
2: OMGitshunt, Belarus – $924,096.07*
3: Dinesh “NastyMinder” Alt, Austria – $604,383.49

In other events:

Ivan “Negriin” Luca

Ivan “Negriin” Luca won SCOOP 1-H, the phased tournament that has been running throughout the series and wrapped on its final night. Luca is a high-roller regular, a former Super Tuesday winner and a champion on the Eureka Poker Tour.

Mike “goleafsgoeh” Leah won another SCOOP title in one of the final day’s turbos. Leah won SCOOP 66-M: PLO Antes for $22K, adding that to his HORSE title last week.

Sweden doubled its tally of SCOOP 2019 titles in a single night, with four titles heading to “ShipitFTW911”, “pkrbt”, “TiltMeBig” and “hajardu”. The Scandinavian country had managed only four title this year prior to that.


TODAY’S RESULTS

Name Buy-in Entries Prize-pool Winner Country Prize
01-L:Phased $2.20 13,848 $285,115 lucascostaf Brazil $21,407.85*
01-M: Phased $22 6,903 $1,318,640 Shansovne415 Russia $95,674.97*
01-H: Phased $215 1,251 $2,297,600 Negriin Argentina $200,005.44
60-L: Mini Sunday Kickoff $5.50 11,943 $58,521 Kamikase1805 Brazil $7,638.60
60-M: Sunday Kickoff SE $55 5,797 $289,850 tonn22 Netherlands $37,557.43*
60-H: NLHE $530 1,168 $584,000 clapjkspit Hungary $84,032.90*
61-L: NLHE $22 12,655 $253,100 Bashov Bulgaria $32,322.35
61-M: Sunday Warm-Up $215 3,954 $790,800 Tralllle Norway $106,801.76*
61-H: Sunday High Roller $2,100 590 $1,180,000 ShipitFTW911 Sweden $197,703.45*
62-L: Main Event $109 33,987 $3,398,700 Jack Wastes Brazil $315,955.11*
62-M: Main Event $1,050 5,475 $5,475,000 jakobgold Mexico $688,558.42*
62-H: Main Event $10,300 662 $6,620,000 Tankanza Austria $1,028,203.24*
63-L: PLO Main Event $109 4,300 $430,000 tvtotallwin Austria $46,501.33*
63-M: PLO Main Event $1,050 900 $900,000 PeiMaiPano93 Finland $148,257.72
63-H: PLO Main Event $10,300 150 $1,500,000 pkrbt Sweden $285,762.77*
64-L: PKO $11 13,964 $136,847 mahdigras UK $13,177.04
64-M: PKO Sunday Cooldown $109 6,303 $630,300 rogerdox Brazil $67,705.07
64-H: PKO Sunday Cooldown $1,050 1,054 $1,054,000 NationalPPP Malta $156,997.76
65-L: PKO $11 $11 28,459 hajardu Sweden $19,682.83†
65-M: PKO $109 $109 9,692 Jokerstar377 Austria $80,225.75†
65-H: PKO $1,050 $1,050 1,395 Neanderthal4 Latvia $177,632.14†
66-L: PLO Antes $6 $5.50 6,251 gytmiyashiro Brazil $4,978.72†
66-M: PLO Antes $55 $55 2,567 goleafsgoeh Canada $21,922.95†*
66-H: PLO Antes $530 $530 589 TiltMeBig Sweden $52,745.88†*
67-L: NLHE $6 $5.50 13,471 Sick’nSocial Germany $8,254.24
67-M: NLHE $55 $55 5,343 seserman01 Romania $37,987.06
67-H: NLHE $530 $530 792 Kkidmoney Canada $67,218.19

†inc. bounties
*after deal


STAT TRACKER

Tournaments completed: 219
Entries: 1,024,232
Prize pool so far: $105,133,091
First-place prizes awarded: $15,586,276.50

The final-day flurry of action took the SCOOP 2019 stats through some significant milestones. The series featured more than 1 million entries and awarded prizes of more than $100 million, with winners banking more than $15 million.

Full SCOOP 2019 results


COUNTRIES LEADER BOARD

Mateus “zilbeee” Zilberknop: Responsible for two Brazil titles

It has been obvious for quite a while, but Brazil triumphed handily in the countries leader board, claiming 36 outright victories.

The UK and Russia tied for second with 19 each.

Remember, these countries represent only where a player is based rather than their nationality of birth, with many Americans living across the world to play online, and many Germans, Italians, Spanish and French also overseas.

36: Brazil
19: UK, Russia
16: Canada
14: Germany
11: Austria
10: Netherlands
8: Romania, Sweden
6: Poland, Finland
5: Malta, Greece, Ireland, Mexico
4: Hungary, Norway
3: Costa Rica, Belgium, Argentina, Latvia
2: Chile, China, Georgia, Lithuania, Ukraine, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Bulgaria
1: Denmark, Estonia, Gibraltar, Indonesia, Macau, Serbia, Switzerland, Lebanon, Peru, Croatia.


PLAYER OF THE SERIES

Konstantin “krakukra” Maslak

Not much changed on the final weekend in the overall Player of the Series leader boards, but that’s only because we already knew who has been the undisputed standout player of this SCOOP.

Take a bow Konstantin “krakukra” Maslak, who won three of the four leader board trophies, in the low, high and overall categories. It’s highly unusual, perhaps unprecedented, for a player to prevail in both the low and high races. Maslak was 14th in the medium standings too.

Russia’s Maxim “ImluckNuts” Pisarenko clinched some late points to seal the medium leader board, despite spirited challenges from Canada’s “TruthBeTold7” and Matheus”zilbee” Zilberknop, who ended up splitting second place.

Read an interview with the dominant “krakukra”.

Low
1 – Konstantin “krakukra” Maslak (Russia) – $5,000 + Trophy
2 – carvenlys (Germany) – $2,000
3 – tvtotaliwin (Austria) – $1,500

Medium
1 – Maxim “ImluckNuts” Pisarenko (Russia) – $7,500 + Trophy
2= – TruthBeTold7 (Canada) – $3,750
2= – zilbeee (Brazil) – $3,750

High
1 – Konstantin “krakukra” Maslak (Russia) – $10,000 + Trophy
2 – Joao “Naza114” Vieira (Netherlands) – $7,500
3 – Rui “RuiNF” Ferreira (Netherlands) – $5,000

Overall
1 – Konstantin “krakukra” Maslak (Russia) – $25,000 + Trophy
2 – Joao “Naza114” Vieira (Netherlands)
3 – Rui “RuiNF” Ferreira (Netherlands)

Note: Standings are subject to final verification from PokerStars


TWEET TWEET

Some of the night’s best performances didn’t go unnoticed:

 

 

 


PREVIOUS SCOOP COVERAGE:

DAY 1 | DAY 2 | DAY 3 | DAY 4 | DAY 5 | DAY 6 | DAY 7 | DAY 8 | DAY 9 | DAY 10 | DAY 11 | DAY 12 | DAY 13 | DAY 14 | DAY 15


105 million reasons why SCOOP 2019 crushed

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That’s all, folks. The Spring Championship of Online Poker (SCOOP) 2019 has come to an end.

While those of you who grinded day in and day out for the past two weeks are no doubt looking forward to a well-earned rest, it’s a sad day for those of us on the rail. What will we do with our mornings now that there are no new SCOOP lobbies for us to scour in search of huge results?

Well, for starters, it gives us time to reflect on what an amazing tournament series the 2019 SCOOP has been.

This was the largest tournament series in the history of online poker. It became the first series to produce an overall prize pool topping nine figures. When play wrapped up yesterday, the total amount awarded in prizes was an astounding $105,133,091.

Final SCOOP numbers

There were 219 tournaments, an incredible 1,024,232 total entries, and more than $15.5M awarded in first-place prizes.

That’s all down to you guys.

No matter the game, the field, the buy-in, PokerStars players turned out in force and produced some incredible events and even more incredible storylines.

Lex Veldhuis was streaming SCOOP start to finish

It’s thanks to Twitch streamers like Lex Veldhuis, Benjamin Spragg, Fintan Hand, Felix Schneiders, and everyone who gave poker fans a glimpse behind the curtains and the hole cards, letting us follow along with some epic tournament journeys.

It’s thanks to the players who used their precious time away from their computers to speak to us and tell us their stories throughout the series. Like Richard “Girlyjack” Preston, the cafe owner from John Hesp’s hometown who won a SCOOP event whilst working a shift. Or Russian beast Konstantin “krakukra” Maslak, who topped the leaderboard in not one, not two, but three categories (low, high, and overall). Or big winners like Kenny “SpaceyFCB” Hallaert and Joris “BillLewinsky” Ruijs, whose interviews we’ll be bringing you this week.

Mateus Zilberknpop helped Brazil to 36 SCOOP titles

It’s thanks to the country of Brazil, whose players topped the country rankings with 36 SCOOP titles won, almost double the 19 won by players in both the UK and Russia.

It’s thanks to the double winners — Joao “Naza114” Vieira, Mike “goleafsgoeh” Leah, Benny “RunGodlike” Glaser, Russia’s “Bagrovui”, Tomas “luckymo32” Geleziunas, Brazil’s “felipebeltra”, Rui “RuiNF” Ferreira, Kahle “ROFLShove” Burns,  Belgium’s “merla888”, Matheus “zilbee” Zilberknop, and Guilherme “guilherme12” Decour (who won two titles in one day) – for showing us that you should never rest on your laurels. You’ve got to get back out there and get after it.

And finally, it’s thanks to Austria-based Italian Gianluca “Tankanza” Speranza. He took down the $10K SCOOP Main Event last year, and this year he won another title in a Super Tuesday Special Edition. But he waited for the final day to truly create headlines.

The undefeated Gianluca “Takanza” Speranza

Speranza successfully defended his $10K Main Event title last night, in what must truly be one of the most astounding accomplishments in online poker history. He’s now $1.03M richer, and something of an online poker legend.

But alas, SCOOP is now over.

Thanks to everyone one who took part in this year’s SCOOP and made it the spectacle we always hoped it would be.

Same again (but bigger) next year?

Get back to the grind with PokerStars School

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With SCOOP 2019 complete, it’s time to get back to the daily grind. Whatever your game of choice, you can make a good start with the help of some new content from PokerStars School.

This week:

How to avoid common MTT mistakes
Hold your own heads-up with aggressive opponents
Learn to play strong poker without the initiative


Avoid these 10 common MTT mistakes

Plenty of poker players exhibit the potential to perform well in multi-table tournaments, yet they never seem to break through and enjoy consistent success. In most of those cases the cause is easy to identify: they’re far too restless when they sit down to play.

If you’re too restless you’ll find yourself taking unnecessary risks — and quite possibly missing on a big win as a result.

“Being a successful MTT player requires the resilience of a cockroach and the patience of a monk,” writes Pete Clarke. “It is like knocking on a hundred doors until one finally opens. As big cashes come around fairly rarely, particularly in events with large fields, it can at times feel a bit like playing the lottery for hours on end. The natural reaction to this is a restless discomfort that causes the player to try to force his way to that massive stack.”

Clarke walks you through nine more of the most common MTT player mistakes, including burnout, fear of not cashing, poor risk selection, and failure to steal often enough. Read the full list, begin avoiding these common errors, and watch your results improve over the long term.


Hold your own against aggressive heads-up opponents

Heads-up poker is always tough against an aggressive opponent. But not all aggressive opponents play the same. Luckily for you, OP Poker’s James Mackenzie is here to help.

OP-Poker James shows you how to handle two different kinds of aggressive heads-up opponent

Over the course of 45 minutes in the two latest videos in his “Heads Up Poker” series, Mackenzie adapts his strategies to his opponents’ approach.

First he plays a $3.50 heads-up sit & go tournament, where he encounters a fast-aggressive opponent. Then he steps up to $7 level, where he says you’ll commonly run into strong amateur players and the occasional semi-pro, and takes on a tight-aggressive opponent. It’s a great chance to learn from watching a strong heads-up player in real-world situations.


Playing strong poker whatever your position

“Let’s face it, when we first start out in poker, it is no fun to play the role of the defender,” writes Pete Clarke. Calling a pre-flop raise or re-raise can make things get uncomfortable fast. Situations like these are known as playing “without the initiative.”

Knowing what to do when you don’t have the initiative can be the difference between winning and losing.

Playing without the initiative doesn’t have to be overly complicated, though. Learning the basics of when to check, when to bet, and when to lie in wait with a check-raise is as easy as clicking through to Clarke’s latest poker strategy article.

It’s always good to see theory put into practice, which makes the latest video from OP Poker’s Nick Walsh a perfect complement to Clarke’s article. When the situation calls for it, a check-raise can be a potent weapon to boost your profits. Walsh delves into the theory of when and why to check-raise in this nine-minute video.

With Clarke’s and Walsh’s advice in mind, you’ll find it a lot easier to know what to do when your opponent has the initiative.


Other new PokerStars School content you might enjoy

• Question of the Week: What is your favorite poker hands and why?
• Strategy: Taking advantage of players that limp pre-flop
• Winners Wall: A Toast to Blair


Open a PokerStars account today and start learning from PokerStars School. Click here to get started, and then click here to register for PokerStars School.

APPT Jeju: Come for poker, nature, and world peace

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What other poker destination in the world offers attributes such as this?

Multiple national parks, three world heritage sites, a 6,400-foot volcano, 8km of Lava Tubes, the Loveland theme park (complete with a nipple fountain), and no small claim to being ground zero in the bid for world peace.

To top it all, Jeju island in South Korea also has an APPT festival on the way, for eight days next month.

APPT Jeju starts June 22

It starts at Landing Casino in Jeju Shinwa World on June 22, finishing on June 29.

The KRW 1,500,000 buy-in Main Event starts on June 24 with a KRW 500,000,000 guarantee. That’s about US$421,000.

Here are some of the other highlights:

  • APPT Super High Roller (Shot Clock): Jun 22 – 24, 2019 – KRW 15,000,000
  • APPT National: Jun 22 – 24, 2019 – KRW 1,500,000
  • APPT Main Event: Jun 24 – 27, 2019 – KRW 2,500,000
  • APPT High Roller (Shot Clock): Jun 27 – 29, 2019 – KRW 6,000,000
  • APPT High Roller (Short Deck): Jun 28 – 29, 2019 – KRW 6,000,000

There will be 25 events during the festival, each with buy-ins full of zeros. They start at about US$170 ($1 = 1187 KRW at the time of writing), but keep going up, making it a worthwhile trip if you want to take on the local players.

Plenty to experience beyond the tournament room

If you need fresh air, fresh culture, or even if you just take a wrong turn on your way to the tournament room, the world outside has equally as much to offer.

Walk along a kilometre of the Manjanggul Lava Tube, or tweet pictures of the erotic sculptures of the Loveland theme park.

Or enjoy the peace. There’s enough to go around. Enjoy a local tangerine while you’re at it.

200 tonnes of them were sent to North Korea late last year as a gesture of goodwill. The North Koreans had sent 200 tonnes of mushrooms to the south.

You can’t get much more peaceful than that. And who ever felt bad after eating a tangerine?

Seat only satellites for as little as $5.50

We expect the field to be made up mostly of Asian players, what with it being a long trip from everywhere else.

But if you like airline food, great poker, and wouldn’t mind exploring part of the world you might otherwise never visit, Jeju is worth inking into your diary.

Satellites start tomorrow on PokerStars, with buy-ins starting at $5.50 (re-buys available). A great way to cut the cost of the trip.

They’re seat only satellites, but those able to make the journey from Europe, Australia and New Zealand, as well as (most of) north and south America, can make the trip visa free (although check what the time limitations are).

Players from most parts of Asia should check their individual visa requirements.

You can learn more about the APPT Jeju schedule on pokerstarsliveasia.com. Alternatively, you can just read more about those tangerines.

Getting started with poker podcasts

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The slow and steady growth of podcasting over the last decade appears to have reached critical mass this year.

Recent years have seen podcasts become a part of everyday life in countries around the world. (Infographic: Statista)

The latest annual Infinite Dial report from Edison Research and Triton Digital shows that more than 144 million Americans have ever listened to a podcast, 90 million of them within the last month. And the global audience for podcasts is growing fast, too. The Reuters Digital News Report in 2018 found significant numbers of people have listened to a podcast in the last month in countries across Europe and Asia.

The upshot of all this growth is that it’s never been easier to find a podcast that fits your interests. Topics as diverse as comedy, current events, true crime, TV shows, and documentary films are magnets for great podcasts. So it comes as no surprise that poker is a ready topic for lots of great listening, too.

Hartigan and Stapes bring the noise on Poker In The Ears

Perhaps the best starting point for getting into poker podcasts is Poker In The Ears.

Whether they’re fresh off announcing a poker tournament or enjoying some time off the road, James Hartigan and Joe Stapleton’s show is the Tonight Show of poker podcasts and a must listen for poker fans. They interview the poker world’s biggest winners and newsmakers, talk TV and movies, and share stories from the road, engaged the whole time in the same kind of banter that you know and love from their EPT broadcasts.

If you’re looking for tips and tactics, you’ll want to check out the Thinking Poker Podcast.

Hosted by Andrew Brokos and Nate Meyvis, this weekly poker podcast features sophisticated strategy discussions that can help you improve your game. The host combine all the card talk with in-depth interviews of famous names from around the poker world, making for a compelling combination that listeners enjoy around the world.

The Grid with Jennifer Shahade is one of the newest entries into the poker podcast market.

One of the newest entries into the poker podcasts scene is The Grid with Jennifer Shahade.

Our own Martin Harris caught up with Shahade recently to discuss her inspiration for the podcast, which she describes as “a 13 x 13 episode journey through every possible no-limit hold’em hand, 169 hands in total, from aces to seven-deuce off-suit.”

“The fun part of it for me is that it’s like a game within a game,” Shahade explained to Harris. “We’re talking about a game — poker — and a specific hand within poker. But then I also am on a kind of scavenger hunt as the host, as I’m not doing any repeats as I try to hunt down all of these combinations. Which of course is easy now, but will become a little more difficult later on as some of the hands will be reserved.”

"Tankanza" on back-to-back $1M+ SCOOP wins

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What Gianluca “Tankanza” Speranza achieved on Monday night will go down in the poker history books as one of the greatest achievements in the game.


Just as it does every year, the $10,300 Spring Championship of Online Poker 2019 Main Event created one of the toughest poker fields imaginable this past Sunday (May 26). The 662 entries came from the many of the best players in the world, but when they were whittled down to a final table on Monday’s Day 2, all eyes were on one player in particular.

Tankanza”.

You see, “Tankanza” – perhaps better known as Austrian-based Italian pro Gianluca Speranza – had won the very same event last year, when he outlasted a 654-player field and overcame a tough final table which included the likes of Chris “Big Huni” Hunichen, Thomas “WushuTM” Muehloecker, and the long-reigning world no.1 Niklas “Lena900” Åstedt. For that victory, Speranza won a massive $1,113,160.

On Monday (May 27), he found himself back at the very same final table—one of the most prestigious final tables on the online poker calendar—for the second year running.

And incredibly, for the second year running, he won it all again for his second SCOOP title of 2019 (yep, Speranza had already taken down the $215 Mini Super Tuesday for $80K).

Speranza navigated his way through another tough final table (which this year included former TCOOP Main Event winner Dinesh “NastyMinder” Alt and last year’s SCOOP-H Main Event runner-up “nailuj90”) to strike a heads-up chop with Belarus’ “OMGitshunt”. Speranza took it down for $1,028,203, in what our Howard Swains described as “an unprecedented achievement, arguably the most unlikely online poker result ever documented.”

We caught up with Speranza yesterday to discuss his incredible achievement, his thoughts on SCOOP, and his plans for the future.


PokerStars Blog: Two years in a row. Wow. Has it sunk in yet?

Gianluca “Tankanza” Speranza: I felt very good when I woke up on Tuesday! I’m still very happy.

The undefeated Gianluca “Takanza” Speranza

You won a SCOOP title earlier in this series too. How do you think that win impacted your performance in the later tournaments?

Well, it certainly didn’t have a negative impact. But actually, I wanted to win more then one SCOOP title anyway. I’ve played at least five final tables in the SCOOP events, and every time I come close to a victory I’m more stimulated to do better the next time. Maybe my earlier win gave me the right push.

Heading in to SCOOP 2019, how excited were you to defend your Main Event title?

I was very excited! And I was very proud of how I had played so far this year.

Were there any interesting spots that you remember in the Main Event run?

I would say that the hand in which I completely doubled up against “nastyminder” with pocket kings was a nice turn at the final table. A double up at that time gave me a big advantage in three-handed play.

At what point did you start to think you might be able to go back to back?

Obviously I was hoping for it from the start, but I’d say I started to be more convinced at the end of Day 1 when I finished fifth in chips. Also a good start on Day 2 made me realise even more that I could reach the final table for the second year running. I asked myself: if I can do it, who should win then?

You’ve been a top pro for several years. Do you think this back-to-back win will change the way anyone thinks about you?

It should not, at least on the part of those who actually really know me, but probably someone’s opinion will change. I can’t assure you that it will be in a more positive light, or that I will have a lot more respect.

Have you made any significant changes in your game these past couple of years that you think has helped you in your recent success?

Nothing in particular, but I do feel that I am still improving day after day.

What is it about SCOOP that you love? Do you look forward to playing it every year?

First of all, I like the idea of being able to play a large number of tournaments, with nice guarantees, for several consecutive weeks.

And then I love everything else. The very playable structures. The high guarantees. The important fields. I’ve always loved to play it and I’m sure I’ll do it again.

Many players travel to a new location for SCOOP. Where do you like to grind?

Honestly, I really like staying at my house in Vienna.

Was anyone with you whilst you were playing? How did you celebrate immediately after the win?

I was completely alone at home. Although I like to have company, when I play online poker I prefer not to have too many distractions around so I can be more focused in what I’m doing.

When I finished playing I was too happy to go to bed! So I went out and I joined my friends who were following me from their home.

What’s next for you?

I’ll probably go to Las Vegas soon and play some World Series of Poker (WSOP) events, and then to Barcelona for the European Poker Tour (EPT) in summer, for sure. After that I guess the World Championship of Online Poker (WCOOP) will be just around the corner!

Speranza’s good friend Mustapha Kanit

Thanks for talking to us, Gianluca. Finally, is there anyone you would like to give a shout out to?

First of all, I would like to thank my father and mother who have always been my best teachers in life and have always been supportive in what I do.

I would also like to thank my good friend Mustapha Kanit. There are many people like him who have always supported me over the years, and encourage me to always do better.

I want to thank my brother and sister and my childhood friends, but also the many nice people I’ve got to know through this world, Italians and otherwise. I would like to thank them all even if there are too many to name and I would surely forget someone! They know that I am thinking of them. I love you all guys.


Has Speranza’s SCOOP achievement inspired you to start playing poker? Click here to open a PokerStars account.


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