After three days of play versus probably the most tougher tournament fields you'll encounter, Nick Maimone held the winner's trophy aloft after taking down the coveted 2016 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure $25,000 High Roller. Following two lengthy days, the last day went quickly, and after a rapid heads-up duel Maimone was still moving fast, readying for a visit to the cashier's desk and his winner photos.
He paused briefly, however. His wife had a Polaroid (not a phone, however the classic camera) and as he posed she snapped a shot, preserving the instant following his biggest live cash for just shy of 7 figures -- $996,480, to be precise, following a heads-up deal. Soon after that, they were both posing.
An early photo following the win
As he explained to us afterwards, three days ago Maimone played a $2,700 satellite on his 29th birthday, winning himself the prevailing of a High Roller seat. Coming in fourth of nine within the counts to begin Day 3, he slipped a bit of before earning a large three-way pot early on, and things continued to head well for him from there.
"I won some races, won some flips, and had some good spots," said Maimone, additionally noting the toughness of the contest at this stacked final table.
A combination of timely cards and well-chosen moves helped Maimone knock out all but considered one of his opponents in this fast final day of play, putting the trophy in his hands by mid-evening on a balmy night within the Bahamas. Here's the tale of ways that moment came to be.
Maimone is the one
It was a given from a gaggle as talented and decorated because the 225-entry one making up the sphere for this year's installment of the PCA $25K High Roller that there'd be zero soft spots among those making it to the overall day. Irrespective of how the tournament turned out, all nine who'd made it through Days 1 and a pair of had brought impressive poker résumés to the festival.
The day began with Josh Beckley the chip leader by a narrow margin, and it will take an hour-and-a-half before anyone from the general nine lost his stack. Anton Astapau of Belarus found himself short enough to need to commit his chips with pocket tens, and additionally was uncomfortably sandwiched between the pocket nines of Dario Sammartino and pocket jacks of Maimone.
"I was at the button and that i told myself if I'VE queens, kings, or aces I'm obviously calling, but when I'VE jacks it's close," said Maimone of the placement. "AND THAT I look down at jacks. It is a critical point. It worked out beautifully."
Indeed, the most efficient pocket pair held, and Astapau left in ninth, a finish worth $116,640 and ok to push his lifetime tournament earnings up over $1.4 million.
Aston Astapau - 9th place
Maimone used those chips and more won from subsequent pots eventually to wrestle the chip lead from Beckley, then added a couple of more when his ace-eight outdrew the pocket sevens of the UK's Ben Heath. Both an ace and an eight came some of the community cards, meaning Heath was knocked out by the dead man's hand.
A Sunday Million champion, Heath's eighth-place finish helps kick the year off strong following a WSOP final table and EPT11 Malta side event win in 2015.
Ben Heath - 8th place
As Maimone continued to thrive, Chance Kornuth -- third-place finisher within the PCA Main Event here only a year ago -- found himself the fast all and sundry in versus both Maimone and Brian Yoon. The Colorado player's ace-nine was drawing thin against Yoon's ace-jack and Maimone's pocket fours before the flop, by the turn Yoon had made a straight, and one card later Kornuth was done in sixth.
Kornuth adds nearly another $200K to the $2.5 million in career earnings he had before entering this one, and left with a signature smile after another successful sojourn within the Bahamas.
Chance Kornuth - 7th place
The Russian Andrey Zaichenko had similarly amassed about $2.35 million in live scores before this week, with a win within the EPT11 Prague High Roller representing his best previous live score. And he's won millions more online, including a WCOOP, a SCOOP, and a Sunday Million on PokerStars as "Kroko-dill."
Zaichenko began Day 3 below the average, and remained short-stacked until shoving with ace-seven and running into Maimone's ace-jack. No help came from the board, and Zaichenko went out in sixth as a 3rd victim in four of Maimone.
Andrey Zaichenko - 6th place
Maimone would score the following knockout as well, although not before Sean Winter began rising within the counts to take excessive spot. Yoon will be the next to fall in fifth when his pocket fives couldn't hold versus Maimone's king-queen.
The Californian already won one title at this year's PCA in Event #32, a $2,200 NLHE 8-handed "Win the Button" Turbo, another piece of hardware to head with his two WSOP bracelets. And with today's cash he adds nearly $350K to his career total, now up around $2.75M.
Brian Yoon - 5th place
The final four played a little while longer, then went for an early dinner break with Winter leading, Maimone not far behind, and Sammartino and Beckley the fast stacks. On their first hand back came a stunner of a hand wherein Maimone rivered a straight flush to best Beckley's turned ace-high flush, and when Beckley shoved the river Maimone called to assemble more chips and another knockout.
Josh Beckley - 4th place
Before the tournament, Beckley -- runner-up within the 2015 WSOP Main Event for a groovy $4.47M -- had tweeted this may be his first-ever high roller event after winning a seat in a satellite, and he did quite fine for himself cashing for just about $440K.
That made Sammertino the fast stack, and along with his friend and fellow high roller Mustapha Kanit railing him he battled gamely before falling in a hand to Maimone. The Italian's king-ten couldn't outdraw Maimone's pocket sevens, and he was out in third.
After final-tabling both the EPT11 Grand Final €100,000 Super High Roller and the EPT11 Grand Final €25K High Roller, Sammertino adds another deep HR run to hold his career earnings up over $3 million.
Dario Sammartino - 3rd place
That arrange heads-up between two worthy adversaries, with Maimone owning the threshold with 6.495 million to Winter's 4.855 million to begin their duel.
Winter, a Floridian, was on something of a high rolling hot streak of late, finishing third in a $25K event on the Seminole Hard Rock Poker Open in August, winning a $25K event on the ARIA in October, then taking fourth within the $100K WPT Alpha8 Las Vegas last month, all helping boost his career tourney winnings over $2.4 million.
Maimone could also be from the eastern U.S., hailing from Charlotte, North Carolina. He has less in live earnings that Winter -- the majority of which came from a 15th-place finish within the 2009 WSOP Main Event -- but has won millions online including on PokerStars where as "FU 15" (standing for Furman University, not whatever else you were thinking) he regularly goes deep in Super Tuesdays, Sunday majors, and other big events.
Before beginning, they left for some deal talk, and after a lengthy discussion agreed to terms leaving $30K and the trophy to play for while guaranteeing $966,480 for Maimone and $914,580 for Winter.
Deal talk
The pace of play was lightning quick between the pair, with a call made early directly to reduce the degrees to a half-hour, although because it happened that call didn't matter an excessive amount of. Soon once they began, Maimone won a chain of pots to knock Winter down under 3 million, and when he committed all of it with king-ten versus Maimone's ace-king, the latter handheld and it was far and wide in a flash.
Sean Winter - 2nd place
Maimone greater than doubles his live tourney totals. And with many more pictures taken, he's got quite a lot of photos chronicling the moments following his biggest live win.
Nick Maimone - 2016 PCA $25K High Roller Champion
2016 PCA $25,000 High Roller final table resultsEntries: 225Places paid: 31Prize pool: $5,400,000
1. Nick Maimone (USA) $996,480*2. Sean Winter (USA) $914,580*3. Dario Sammertino (Italy) $542,1604. Josh Beckley (USA) $439,5605. Brian Yoon (USA) $347,7606. Andrey Zaichenko (Russia) $264,0607. Chance Kornuth (USA) $192,7808. Ben Heath (UK) $140,940* = denotes a two-way deal leaving $30,000 for the winner
* Click here for the live updates archive from Day 3 of the $25K High Roller* Click here for a whole list of $25,000 High Roller payouts
Thanks to Carlos Monti and Joe Giron for his or her excellent photos from the $25K High Roller. And thanks to boot to you for following our coverage of the $25K High Roller and the remainder of this year's 2015 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure. It is not over yet! The primary Event remains to be ongoing -- head over to the primary Event live updates page to follow that one to its exciting finish.
Want to be here next year? Join PokerStars and begin your journey. Click here to get an account. Martin Harris is Freelance Contributor to the PokerStars Blog.Read More... [Source: PokerStarsBlog.com :: PokerStars Caribbean Adventure]
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