2010 PokerStars.net NAPT Mohegan Sun

2010 PokerStars.net NAPT Mohegan Sun Main Event
Day: 4
Event Info

2010 PokerStars.net NAPT Mohegan Sun

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
108
Prize
$750,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$4,700
Entries
716
Level Info
Level
32
Blinds
100,000 / 200,000
Ante
20,000

Drama Bomb Update!

When the players came back from dinner, Vanessa Rousso and Scott Seiver had a quiet conversation for a few minutes. We couldn't hear all that was said but it appeared that Seiver apologized to Rousso for his part in the outburst that occurred during the last hand before dinner. Rousso seemed pleased with the result of the conversation by the time she took her seat for the start of Level 26.

Level: 26

Blinds: 25,000/50,000

Ante: 5,000

Chip Counts at the Dinner Break

Vanessa Selbst - 6,680,000
Scott Seiver - 2,654,000
Michael Woods - 2,380,000
Mike Beasley - 1,700,000
Alistar Melville - 1,680,000
Cliff Josephy - 1,600,000
Jonathan Aguiar - 1,595,000
Derek Raymond - 1,500,000
Brandon Hall - 1,100,000
Vanessa Rousso - 1,005,000

Dinner Theater

What's a poker tournament without a little drama? A Category 5 hurricane blew through the NAPT Mohegan Sun Main Event on the final hand before the dinner break.

Things started off typically enough. Vanessa Selbst limped for 40,000 before the other remaining Vanessa, Vanessa Rousso, raised to 100,000. Selbst called.

The flop came ace-high with two hearts, {A-Hearts} {8-Hearts} {J-Spades}. Selbst checked and called a bet of 100,000, bringing the two women to a {10-Clubs} turn. Selbst checked again, prompting Rousso to move all in for 525,000.

"God, that card gave me so many outs," said Selbst. Rousso, for her part, said she didn't care whether or not Selbst called.

"I'm getting 2-to-1 here, I think I'm supposed to call," continued Selbst. She and Rousso traded more banter.

The other remaining table had already finished the last hand. Players were racking chips in preparation for a color-up during the dinner break. Jonathan Aguiar and Scott Seiver were about to leave the table when Aguiar heard the table talk between the two Vanessas. He became livid.

"They're in a hand?" he asked incredulously. He was hopping mad that such talk was being allowed to go on, alleging that it was blatant collusion. Rousso was miffed and wanted to know what she'd done wrong; Selbst said nothing. Aguiar responded that they shouldn't be talking during the hand.

"You play poker for a living?" he shouted. "How do you not know that?" Seiver also got irate and backed up Aguiar.

"You know what?" said Selbst. "It doesn't matter." She folded her hand.

Rousso was unwilling to let the matter rest so easily. "I want to know what I did wrong," she said. A floor standing near the table told her that she wasn't allowed to talk unless play was heads-up. When Rousso responded that the hand was indeed heads-up, the floor said "No, heads-up in the tournament."

Rousso was dumbfounded and claimed never to have heard of such a thing. For his part, Aguiar had already blown out of the tournament room in a steam but Seiver was still racking up chips for the color-up. A second floor was summoned, who told Rousso that as long as she didn't reveal the contents of her hand, any table talk was allowed.

"Thank you!" said an indignant Rousso. She felt Aguiar and Seiver were completely out of line and were treating her "like s***". She said (and we're paraphrasing here) that she goes out of her way to be nice to people but that it happens at every tournament, that there is always someone who treats her very badly for no reason. She got right up in Seiver's face and started shouting at him.

"But where's the line?" Seiver responded. "Is it ok for you to say 'If you fold I'll give you 5% of my action?'" That only incensed Rousso further since none of that kind of talk was taking place at the table.

Rousso eventually stormed out of the room, leaving Seiver to rack the rest of his chips and complain that he wasn't sure how he could "always treat [Rousso] badly" since he'd "never met you before today."

Rousso returned to the ballroom twenty minutes later to speak with the floor staff. She wanted clarification that she and Selbst were within bounds. We'll watch her, Selbst, Seiver and Aguiar very carefully when they come back from dinner to see if anything further is said.

Bax Dominated and Chops Again

Cliff Josephy raised to 100,000 from the cutoff and Derek Raymond called in the big blind.

The flop came down {8-Diamonds}{10-Diamonds}{Q-Clubs} and Raymond checked. Josephy bet 125,000 and Raymond raised to 325,000. "JohnnyBax" went all in and Raymond called.

Josephy: {A-Spades}{J-Clubs}
Raymond: {Q-Diamonds}{J-Diamonds}

The turn was a {5-Hearts} and kept Raymond ahead, but the {9-Hearts} river card made a queen high straight for both and chopped the pot.

Tags: Cliff JosephyDerek Raymond

Aguiar Runs Into Bax's Aces

Action folded to Jonathan "FatalError" Aguiar on the button and he raised to 101,000. Cliff "JohnnyBax" Josephy was in the small blind and moved all in. When it got back to Aguiar he quickly called. Bax then slammed over two black aces and Aguiar revealed two queens.

The board ran out {A-Diamonds}{9-Diamonds}{7-Clubs}{6-Hearts}{8-Diamonds} and Bax earned the double up. He was all in for 664,000 total and now has about 1.4 million chips. Aguiar dropped back to 1.7 million.

Tags: "FatalError""JohnnyBax"Cliff JosephyJonathan Aguiar

Big Hand for Aguiar

Aguiar
Aguiar
Brandon Hall raised to 80,000, and Jonathan Aguiar called from the small blind. Cliff Josephy folded his big blind, and it was time for a flop. Both Aguiar and Hall checked the {K-Spades} {5-Spades} {3-Hearts} that came out. The turn was the {7-Clubs}, and Aguiar checked again. Hall bet 70,000, and Jonathan check-raised to 204,000. Hall made a slow call. The river was the {2-Diamonds}, and Aguiar fired 520,000. He remained frozen, hands folded in front of his face, for two minutes before Hall gave it up.

Tags: Brandon HallJonathan Aguiar

Two to Go

We're down to two tables of five, one off the unofficial final table of nine. Don't expect anyone to bust out soon though. The current average stack is 2.1 million, or more than 50 big blinds. That is very deep for this stage of a tournament, and with television exposure on the line none of these players will be too quick to get their chips in light.