Wpt Borgata Poker Open 2017 Results
Guo Liang Chen became the newest member of the World Poker Tour Champions Club after he conquered a field of 1,132 for a first-place prize of $789,058 at WPT Borgata Poker Open Championship. The Borgata regular raised the trophy on Friday night after a long final table for his biggest cash by orders of magnitude — he previously had $40,000 total.
In the process, Chen denied tournament legend and former November Niner Cliff 'JohnnyBax' Josephy his first WPT title, as Josephy fell in fifth after coming into the final table short. It's his strongest finish to date in a WPT Main Event.
Official Final Table Results
Results & Highlights. Borgata Poker Open Results. Event 15 WPT BORGATA POKER OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP September 17-22, 2017 BUY-IN: $3,300 + $200.
Place | Player | Prize |
---|---|---|
1 | Guo Liang Chen | $789,058* |
2 | Gregory Weber | $471,059 |
3 | Jia Liu | $288,071 |
4 | Matt Parry | $240,965 |
5 | Cliff Josephy | $199,294 |
6 | Thomas Paul | $161,247 |
*includes $15,000 Tournament of Champions seat
2017/2018 WPT Borgata Poker Open - $600 No-Limit Hold'em $2 Million GTD - Poker tournament results, including winners and their payouts and winnings. Event 17 Borgata Spring Poker Open Championship NLH RE April 30 - May 4, 2017 BUY-IN: $2,700 + $200 ENTRIES: 670 TOTAL BUY-IN: $1,675,000. 2016/2017 WPT Borgata Winter Poker Open - $3,500 No-Limit Hold'em $3 Million GTD - Poker tournament results, including winners and their payouts and winnings.
Steve Sung, Daniel Strelitz, Maurice Hawkins, WSOP Main Event champ Scott Blumstein, Ben Zamani, Shaun Deeb, Andy Spears and Johanssy Joseph were some of the notable players who made runs into the 110 paid places but fell short of the final table.
After Nick Palma doubled through him once with a three-outer on the river, Chen took another shot at eliminating him by calling a button ship of 12 big blinds with , according to the live updates. Palma showed up with and bubbled the final table when Chen ran a flush.
Stacks heading in were pretty deep, as only Benjamin Morgan and Will Givens sat below 50 big blinds. Consequently, they were the first two to bust.
Morgan shoved 800,000 with over a Chen open at 30,000/60,000/10,000, and Chen put him at risk with . Neither player paired up and Morgan missed a flush draw that he flopped to hit the rail. Givens followed when he lost a race with ace-king to Jia Liu's sixes.
Muarem Kica would then bubble the TV final table after losing most of his stack with queens against Thomas Paul's aces.
Matt Parry held the lead as the only player over 100 big blinds with 9.1 million at 40,000/80,000/10,000 when the final table began. Josephy, meanwhile had the shortest stack with about 3 million but found a double just six hands in when he was dealt aces and Paul picked up .
Paul handed out another double about 30 hands later when he four-bet shoved for 3.5 million with at 60,000/120,000/20,000 and got snapped off by Chen, who had and had three-bet to 860,000. Chen got a sweat as hit the board to give Paul a big combo draw, but the was a safe river.
Left short, Paul got his remaining chips in after flopping top pair of sevens in the big blind with but Chen outdrew him by pairing his on the river.
After sinking down to about 14 big blinds, Josephy called it off with when Gregory Weber shoved from the small blind. Josephy had slightly the best of it against but found himself looking at a board of and needing a heart river. The wasn't enough and Josephy settled for fifth.
Parry's run then ended in fourth. With blinds at 100,000/200,000/25,000, Parry opened button and then shoved 5.2 million when he got three-bet by Weber. Parry's was dominated by , and a king-high flop spelled doom.
It took more than 40 hands of battling for mostly smaller pots before a big development finally happened. Chen had a chance to leap into the lead when he got in a flip with eights against the of Liu for more than half of the chips. Liu flopped aces up to double and leave Chen the shortest with 20 big blinds.
Chen was dealt eights just four hands later, and this time they were the ticket to a double as Liu held sevens. Chen hit quads for good measure. He finished Liu with against just a bit after that to go heads up with Weber down a little under 2-1 in chips.
The key hand that would see Chen turn the tables happened at 200,000/400,000/50,000. Weber made it 1 million and Chen called. Chen check-called another million on . He came out betting with 1.5 million on the turn and Weber called. On the , Chen checked. He called off his final 5,750,000 after some thought when Weber shoved.
Weber could only muster for a bluff and Chen took it with to grab a slight lead.
Seemingly invigorated, Chen won eight of the next nine pots to open up a huge lead. When Weber shoved his last 10 big blinds with , Chen woke up with to finish the job as neither player hit the board.
“I had faith in myself,” he told tournament reporters. “I’m a very gifted player, so I definitely thought I could make it.”
Photo courtesy of WPT
The World Poker Tour got back in action over the weekend as the WPT Borgata Winter Poker Open Main Event saw its two starting days contested on Sunday and Monday. Players are still allowed to register through the first break on Day 2, so we won’t know the official tournament figures for a little while yet, but so far, 1,120 players have signed up.. Leading the 588 Day 1 survivors into Tuesday is Jean “Prince” Gaspard with 216,900 chips.
Gaspard is one of those guys whose record casual fans will look at and say, “Wow, I didn’t realize he was so accomplished.”
According to TheHendonMob.com, Gaspard has over $2.3 million live tournament earnings. His largest cash came just this past summer, when he won the 2016 World Series of Poker $10,000 Dealers Choice 6-Handed Championship for $306,621, the first gold bracelet of his career. Gaspard also won a WSOP Circuit event in 2009, the New Orleans & Bayou Poker Challenge Championship Event, for $211,722.
Gaspard told WPT.com that he took the week off before the Borgata Winter Poker Open so that he could come in fresh.
“I’ve been ready, and I told my friend I was going to bag up 200K,” he said. “Obviously you’ve got to run a little bit good. I played well, and I didn’t run bad. The one spot where I did run bad in a pot, usually I allow that to stay in my mind, but I erased it right away.”
As mentioned, there were 1,120 registrations in the two starting flights. The tournament allows for unlimited re-entries until the start of Level 11, which should be around 2:15pm today. Thus, it is very likely that likely that last year’s field of 1,171 players will be eclipsed. With the entry totals as they stand right now, the guaranteed prize pool of $3 million has already been surpassed.
Day 2 is about to start at the Borgata in Atlantic City as the players prepare for the continued long grind to the final table.
Wpt Borgata Poker Open 2017 Results Payouts
2017 World Poker Tour Borgata Winter Poker Open – Day 1A Chip Leaders
Olivier Busquet – 185,000
James Dorrance – 181,000
Joel Gola – 177,000
Frank Calderone – 175,700
Michael Hahn – 162,000
Stephen Deutsch – 160,100
Lily Kiletto – 150,500
Randolph Pearson – 148,000
William Horan – 145,100
Adam Geyer – 142,800
2017 World Poker Tour Borgata Winter Poker Open – Day 1B Chip Leaders
Wpt Borgata Poker Open 2017 Results 2020
Jean Gaspard – 216,900
Shankar Pillai – 209,200
Ryan Smith – 185,400
Asher Conniff – 180,400
Abe Aboukhalil – 177,700
Adnan Mohammad – 152,700
Tony Tran – 144,500
Aaron Overton – 143,800
Nicholas Immekus – 143,700
Barry Leventhal – 140,600
2017 World Poker Tour Borgata Winter Poker Open – Combined Day 1 Chip Leaders
Wpt Borgata Poker Open 2017 Results 2019
Jean Gaspard – 216,900
Shankar Pillai – 209,200
Ryan Smith – 185,400
Olivier Busquet – 185,000
James Dorrance – 181,000
Asher Conniff – 180,400
Abe Aboukhalil – 177,700
Joel Gola – 177,000
Frank Calderone – 175,700
Michael Hahn – 162,000