2013 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure

$100,000 Super High Roller
Day: 3
Event Info

2013 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
a7
Prize
$2,003,480
Event Info
Buy-in
$98,000
Prize Pool
$5,724,180
Entries
59
Level Info
Level
24
Blinds
100,000 / 200,000
Ante
30,000

Scott Seiver Wins the 2013 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure $100,000 Super High Roller ($2,003,480)

Level 24 : 100,000/200,000, 30,000 ante
Scott Seiver wins the 2013 PCA $100,000 Super High Roller.
Scott Seiver wins the 2013 PCA $100,000 Super High Roller.

After over 200 hands at the official final table, Scott Seiver is the winner of the 2013 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure, defeating David “Doc” Sands heads up to earn $2,003,480. In a post-win interview with Joe Stapleton, Seiver credited his comeback to a little bit of run good.

“It’s easy when you get dealt aces and other players go all in,” Seiver said,

The final table began with Sands as the overwhelming chip leader, and in the first seven hands, three players were eliminated. The first player to bow out was Dan Shak, who finished runner-up in this event last year. With the blinds at 20,000/40,000/5,000, Shak opened to 100,000 in early position with {k-Diamonds}{j-Diamonds}. Greg Jensen called on his left, and Seiver three-bet to 275,000 with {a-Clubs}{a-Hearts}. Both Shak and Jensen called.

The flop came {10-Spades}{9-Clubs}{9-Hearts}, Shak insantly moved all in for 500,000, and Jensen tanked for a bit before re-shoving. Seiver instantly called off his last 565,000, and the hand was over when the {a-Spades} turned, giving him a full house. The {k-Clubs} completed the board, and suddenly Seiver had over 2.5 million chips.

Vladimir Troyanovsky was the next to exit when he open-shoved his last 485,000 with {10-Hearts}{10-Clubs}. Nick Schulman woke up with {a-Spades}{a-Hearts} in the big blind, and held as the board ran out {a-Diamonds}{5-Clubs}{6-Spades}{7-Spades}{3-Clubs}. Troyanovsky earned $257,580 for his efforts, while Schulman’s stack shot up to 2.8 million chips.

A few hands later, Jensen three-bet jammed his last 710,000 with {a-Diamonds}{5-Hearts} over an 80,000-chip open from Schulman. The action folded back to Schulman, who called with {k-Clubs}{k-Hearts}, and again held as the flop, turn, and river produced {3-Clubs}{q-Diamonds}{10-Spades}{4-Hearts}{5-Spades}.

At the beginning of Level 19, Philipp Gruissem hit the rail. Seiver jammed out of the small blind for effectively 1,085,000, calling it a “freeroll” for the German. Gruissem sweated his first card, said it was enough, and called. Gruissem’s {a-Spades}{8-Clubs} was ahead of Seiver’s {k-Spades}{q-Spades}, but Seiver took the lead when the dealer fanned {5-Spades}{5-Clubs}{q-Hearts}. Seiver held as the turn and river came {9-Hearts}, {4-Diamonds}, and Gruissem was out in fifth place ($400,700).

For the better part of the next four hours, and for a total of 96 hands, no one was eliminated. There were a few big hands however, including a three-outer by Schulman. Schulman found himself all in and at risk on a flop of {5-Clubs}{k-Hearts}{3-Diamonds} holding {k-Spades}{10-Hearts}, and he was crushed by Seiver’s {k-Clubs}{j-Diamonds}. The {2-Hearts} on the turn was a big red brick, but the {10-Spades} spiked on the river, giving Schulman a winning two pair.

No one doubled more than Cary Katz during four-handed play however – the businessmen somehow won four all ins when he was at risk. In his second double-up hand, Katz shoved for 710,000 with {k-Hearts}{10-Hearts}, and the blinds at 40,000/80,000/10,000. Schulman called with {a-Spades}{9-Diamonds} in the big blind, and paired his ace when the flop fell {a-Clubs}{q-Clubs}{9-Spades}. The {3-Spades} on the turn was a brick, but the {j-Clubs} on the river gave Katz a miraculous straight.

Katz actually started to chip up, and was second in chips at one point during four-handed play, but was unfortunate in an all-in hand against the eventual champ. Seiver open-jammed his last 1.505 million on the button with {a-Diamonds}{7-Spades}, and the blinds at 50,000/100,000/10,000, and Katz re-shoved from the small blind with {9-Diamonds}{9-Hearts}. The {8-Diamonds}{4-Clubs}{3-Clubs} flop was dry, but the {a-Spades} on the turn gave Seiver a leading pair of aces. The {3-Hearts} on the river changed nothing, and Seiver doubled to over 3.1 million chips. Katz was left with eight big blinds.

When Level 22 (60,000/120,000/20,000) began, Seiver took the chip lead from Sands, but Sands was hot on his heels, especially after eliminating Katz. In Katz’s final hand, he shoved for 1.35 million with {a-Spades}{j-Hearts}, and Sands called in the big blind with {5-Diamonds}{5-Clubs}. The fives held as the board came {4-Clubs}{9-Spades}{3-Spades}{3-Diamonds}{9-Hearts}, and play was finally three-handed.

The remaining three players went on a dinner break, and upon returning, Schulman exited in third place. Level 23 (80,000/160,000/20,000) had just begun when Schulman open-shoved on the button for 2.435 million with {k-Spades}{6-Spades}. Sands snap-called with {10-Diamonds}{10-Spades} in the big blind, and flopped a set when the dealer fanned {10-Clubs}{6-Clubs}{a-Clubs}. Schulman could still win with a straight or chop with running clubs, and the turn was the {j-Clubs}, keeping both draws alive. The river was a brick ({3-Hearts}) however, and Schulman was out in third place.

Heads-up play began with Sands commanding 60 percent of the chips in play, and Seiver was willing to make a chip chop deal if Sands was willing to forfeit five percent of equity. He was not.

“I’m gonna f***in play ‘em,” Sands told his friend Tom Marchese.

The match was back-and-forth until Level 24 (100,000/200,000/30,000) started. Seiver opened to 400,000 on the button with two red nines, David Sands three-bet to 900,000 with {10-Clubs}{10-Hearts}, and Seiver immediately went all in for 6.22 million. Sands snapped it off.

"As JC [Alvarado] says nines make the most sets," Seiver announced.

There was a nine in the window of the {3-Spades}{7-Spades}{9-Clubs} flop, giving Seiver a set.

"I still feel like I'm going to win," Sands said.

He was wrong, the turn and river came {4-Clubs}, {6-Hearts} respectively, and Seiver shipped a massive double.

A few hands later, Sands moved all in with {k-Hearts}{4-Diamonds}, and Seiver called with {a-Clubs}{7-Spades}. The board ran out {q-Diamonds}{8-Diamonds}{5-Diamonds}{9-Hearts}{3-Hearts}, and Seiver was your champion.

2013 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure $100,000 Super High Roller Final Table Results

PlacePlayerPrize
1stScott Seiver$2,003,480
2ndDavid Sands$1,259,320
3rdNick Schulman$744,140
4thCary Katz$543,800
5thPhilipp Gruissem$400,700
6thGreg Jensen$286,200
7thVladimir Troyanovsky$257,580
8thDan Shak$228,960

Congratulations to Seiver on claiming his largest prize to date and crossing the five million-dollar career threshold all in one fell swoop. For continuous coverage of the 2013 PCA, be sure to stay tuned to PokerNews.com.

Tags: Scott Seiver

David "Doc" Sands Eliminated in 2nd Place ($1,259,320)

David Sands - 2nd
David Sands - 2nd

David "Doc" Sands, who began the final table as the chip leader, was dealt a crushing blow moments ago, and Scott Seiver recently finished the job.

It happened when Sands looked down at {K-Hearts}{4-Diamonds} and moved all in from the small blind for 1.865 million. Seiver picked up {A-Clubs}{7-Spades} and made a quick call to put his opponent at risk. Sands was in need of some help, and while the {Q-Diamonds}{8-Diamonds}{5-Diamonds} flop did not hit him directly, it gave him a flush draw to any diamond.

The {9-Hearts} turn was not was he was looking for, and neither was the {3-Hearts} river. Seiver successfully sweated both the turn and river to capture the 2013 PCA $100K Super High Roller title; meanwhile, Sands finished as runner-up and secured a $1,259,320 consolation prize.

Player Chips Progress
Scott Seiver us
Scott Seiver
WSOP 4X Winner
WPT 1X Winner
14,750,000 2,250,000
David Sands us
David Sands
Busted

Tags: David SandsScott Seiver

"Nines Make the Most Sets"

Scott Seiver
Scott Seiver

Scott Seiver opened to 400,000 on the button with two red nines, David Sands three-bet to 900,000 with {10-Clubs}{10-Hearts}, and Seiver immediately went all in for 6.22 million. Sands snapped it off.

"As JC [Alvarado] says, nines make the most sets," Seiver announced.

There was a nine in the window of the {3-Spades}{7-Spades}{9-Clubs} flop, giving Seiver a set.

"I still feel like I'm going to win," Sands said.

He was wrong. The turn and river came {4-Clubs}, {6-Hearts} respectively, and Seiver shipped a massive double.

Player Chips Progress
Scott Seiver us
Scott Seiver
WSOP 4X Winner
WPT 1X Winner
12,500,000 5,910,000
David Sands us
David Sands
2,255,000 -5,910,000

Tags: David SandsScott Seiver

Nick Schulman Eliminated in 3rd Place ($744,140)

Nick Schulman - 3rd
Nick Schulman - 3rd

Nick Schulman began the day second in chips, but he has to settle for third place as he was just eliminated by David "Doc" Sands.

It happened when Schulman open-shipped the button for 2.435 million with {K-Spades}{6-Spades}, Scott Seiver folded {K-Clubs}{9-Diamonds} from the small blind, and Sands snap-called from the big blind with {10-Diamonds}{10-Spades}.

Schulman was up out of his seat just as soon as he discovered the bad news. What he didn't know was that it was even worse than he thought as Seiver had folded a king. The {10-Clubs}{6-Clubs}{A-Clubs} flop was about as bad as it could come as Sands flopped a set, but the {J-Clubs} turn gave Schulman some hope as he could win with a non-club queen and chop with any club. Unfortunately for him, the {3-Hearts} blanked on the river and it'd be the last card he would see in the 2013 PCA $100,000 Super High Roller.

Not a bad showing for the man who took fourth in 2011 as he's had two PCA $100K Super High Roller final tables in three years.

Player Chips Progress
Nick Schulman us
Nick Schulman
WSOP 4X Winner
WPT 2X Winner
Busted

Tags: David SandsNick SchulmanScott Seiver

Cary Katz Eliminated in 4th Place ($543,800)

Cary Katz - 4th Place
Cary Katz - 4th Place

Cary Katz shoved for 1.35 million with {a-Spades}{j-Hearts}, and David "Doc" Sands called in the big blind with {5-Diamonds}{5-Clubs}.

The {4-Clubs}{9-Spades}{3-Spades} flop changed little, and the {3-Diamonds} on the turn was meaningless as well. The {9-Hearts} completed the board, and on the 97th hand of four-handed play, Katz was eliminated.

He'll earn $543,800 for the finish.

Player Chips Progress
Cary Katz us
Cary Katz
Busted

Tags: Cary KatzDavid Sands

Nick Schulman Binks a Three-Outer; Doubles

Nick Schulman (Day 2)
Nick Schulman (Day 2)

Nick Schulman opened to 150,000 from the small blind with {k-Spades}{10-Hearts}, Scott Seiver defended from the big blind with an unknown hand, and the flop was {5-Clubs}{k-Hearts}{3-Diamonds}. Schulman led out for 180,000, and Seiver raised to 400,000.

Schulman re-raised to 775,000, Seiver moved all in, and Schulman called all in for 1.65 million.

Seiver showed {k-Clubs}{j-Diamonds}.

The turn was a meaningless {2-Hearts}, but the {10-Spades} spike on the river, doubling Schulman.

Schulman now has over 3.6 million chips, while Seiver dipped to 3.3 million.

Player Chips Progress
David Sands us
David Sands
7,095,000 100,000
Nick Schulman us
Nick Schulman
WSOP 4X Winner
WPT 2X Winner
3,640,000 1,740,000
Scott Seiver us
Scott Seiver
WSOP 4X Winner
WPT 1X Winner
3,370,000 -1,710,000
Cary Katz us
Cary Katz
650,000 -130,000

Tags: Nick SchulmanScott Seiver

Philipp Gruissem Eliminated in 5th Place ($400,700)

Philipp Gruissem - 5th
Philipp Gruissem - 5th

The blinds and antes have put the pressure on the short stacks, and it didn't take long for one of them to commit. That man was Germany's Philipp Gruissem, and unfortunately for him, he wouldn't survive the red-hot Scott Seiver.

It happened when action folded to Seiver in the small blind and he simply moved all in. "Freeroll," he told Gruissem, who was smiling in the big blind. The German looked down at his first card and chuckled a bit. "Is it a good one?" Seiver asked.

"Yeah, it's enough," Gruissem said before peeking at the other card and calling off for 1,085,000. Gruissem then tabled {A-Spades}{8-Clubs}, which was a 55% favorite to beat Seiver's {K-Spades}{Q-Spades}.

The German seemed hopeful, but not after the flop fell {5-Spades}{5-Clubs}{Q-Hearts}, giving Seiver the lead with a pair of queens. Neither the {9-Hearts} turn nor {4-Diamonds} river allowed Gruissem to retake the lead, and he exited in fifth place for $400,700.

Player Chips Progress
Philipp Gruissem de
Philipp Gruissem
WSOP 1X Winner
Busted

Tags: Philipp GruissemScott Seiver

Seiver Jams Two Times Pot on Turn

Scott Seiver
Scott Seiver

Scott Seiver opened to 115,000 from under the gun with {a-Clubs}{q-Diamonds}, Nick Schulman three-bet to 315,000 from the big blind with {10-Spades}{9-Hearts}, and Seiver called.

The flop fell {7-Spades}{7-Hearts}{q-Hearts}, Schulman tanked for 30 seconds or so then led out for 280,000. Seiver called.

The turn was the {10-Clubs}, Schulman checked, and Seiver moved all in for effectively 2.5 million - more than two times the pot.

Schulman shot back in his chair, shocked that Seiver moved all in, then began staring at the board. He took a drink of his water, then mumbled, "This is a really weird hand."

He removed his hat, put it back on, stroked his goatee, then started playing with chips. All the while, Seiver sat silently. Motionless.

Eventually, after three minutes, Schulman folded.

Player Chips Progress
Scott Seiver us
Scott Seiver
WSOP 4X Winner
WPT 1X Winner
3,740,000 640,000
Nick Schulman us
Nick Schulman
WSOP 4X Winner
WPT 2X Winner
2,400,000 -670,000

Tags: Scott SeiverNick Schulman

Greg Jensen Eliminated in 6th Place ($286,200)

Greg Jensen
Greg Jensen

Greg Jensen is quite the successful hedge fund CEO, and it was a surprising, and incredibly kind gesture, when he informed everyone that he was donating all of his winnings to the victims of the school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut. Jensen's generosity will see $286,200 donated, the prize he earned for finishing in sixth place.

His demise came after Nick Schulman opened for 80,000 on the button and Jensen shoved all in for 710,000 from the small blind. The big got out of the way and Schulman snap-called.

Showdown
Jensen: {A-Diamonds}{5-Hearts}
Schulman: {K-Clubs}{K-Hearts}

It was a bad spot for Jensen, and he had just a 29% of keeping his tournament hopes alive. Unfortunately for him, that percentage only went down as the board ran out {3-Clubs}{Q-Diamonds}{10-Spades}{4-Hearts}{5-Spades}. With that, the amateur who played the $100K on a whim was eliminated from the tournament.

Player Chips Progress
Nick Schulman us
Nick Schulman
WSOP 4X Winner
WPT 2X Winner
3,590,000 775,000
Greg Jensen us
Greg Jensen
Busted

Tags: Greg JensenNick Schulman

Vladimir Troyanovsky Eliminated in 7th Place ($257,580)

Vladimir Troyanovsky - 7th
Vladimir Troyanovsky - 7th

Vladimir Troyanovsky open-shoved for 485,000 from late position with {10-Hearts}{10-Clubs}, and Nick Schulmann snapped it off with {a-Spades}{a-Hearts} in the big blind.

The {a-Diamonds}{5-Clubs}{6-Spades} flop put Troyanovsky in bad shape, and it was all over after the {7-Spades} turned.

A meaningless {3-Clubs} completed the board, and Troyanovsky was eliminated in seventh place.

Player Chips Progress
Nick Schulman us
Nick Schulman
WSOP 4X Winner
WPT 2X Winner
2,815,000 535,000
Vladimir Troyanovsky
Vladimir Troyanovsky
Busted

Tags: Nick SchulmanVladimir Troyanovsky