2017 PokerStars Championship Bahamas

$5,000 Main Event
Day: 2
Event Info

2017 PokerStars Championship Bahamas

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
aj
Prize
$429,664
Event Info
Buy-in
$5,000
Prize Pool
$3,376,712
Entries
738
Level Info
Level
31
Blinds
80,000 / 160,000
Ante
20,000

Top Ten Chip Counts

Level 12 : 1,000/2,000, 300 ante

With three levels almost in the can, here are the Top Ten players on the outer tables. We've left the live-streamed feature table out of our round-up so that you can enjoy it as it plays out with chip counts updated on screen.

Player Chips Progress
Thomas Bo Markussen dk
Thomas Bo Markussen
324,000
69,000
69,000
James Martyn ca
James Martyn
310,000
112,600
112,600
Michael Vela us
Michael Vela
255,000
189,900
189,900
WPT 1X Winner
Daniel Koop de
Daniel Koop
236,000
206,300
206,300
Jason Mercier us
Jason Mercier
225,000
77,000
77,000
Andrew Ryan us
Andrew Ryan
220,000
-4,300
-4,300
Jack Duong us
Jack Duong
210,000
185,800
185,800
WSOP 1X Winner
Richard Seymour us
Richard Seymour
196,000
36,000
36,000
James Juvancic us
James Juvancic
190,000
-56,000
-56,000
Diego Gomez es
Diego Gomez
170,000
70,000
70,000

Jean Montury Eliminated

Level 12 : 1,000/2,000, 300 ante

Jean Montury, who won the PokerStars EPT Malta back in 2015 for €687,400, has just been eliminated. We ran into him in the hallway and he told us he had fallen victim to a flush over flush situation. Montury had {K-Hearts}{6-Hearts} for a king-high flush but his opponent had {A-Hearts}{8-Hearts} for a higher flush and that meant the end of it for Montury.

Player Chips Progress
Jean Montury fr
Jean Montury
Busted
EPT 1X Winner

Tags: Jean Montury

"Timex" Hopes to Correct Poker Market, Cater to Fans

Level 12 : 1,000/2,000, 300 ante
Mike McDonald
Mike McDonald

Any time a new poker-related business venture gets introduced, poker players and industry observers everywhere often collectively set lines on how long this venture will last.

With the new PokerShares website introduced by Mike "Timex" McDonald via a Twitter post Jan. 4, things feel a little different. That's because the poker world has always been enamored with action, and this represents more of it with the chance to bet on the performance of players. In part, it's because PokerShares has the potential to change the landscape of the tournament poker action-selling market and give poker fans a connection to players with real, monetary incentives.

It all started as almost a joke on a poker forum nearly a decade ago.

What McDonald estimates was about nine years ago, selling bundles of action was becoming more and more the norm, and pricing started to climb as sellers realized they could make out like bandits with high mark-up. Playing a $10,000 event? Sell 40 percent at 1.25 and you've made a cool $1,000 in no time.

Some felt things were getting out of hand. Players named their own prices, and yet buyers still clamored for action — these are poker players, after all. McDonald was among those casting a skeptical eye on some of the prices he saw. He looked at one long-forgotten posting and wondered at the state of things.

"Someone was selling at some crazy markup and I was just like, I'd bet against this guy at this rate," he recalled. "For a long time, I've felt the poker marketplace was not very fair to buyers."

The seeds had been planted for what would become the Bank of Timex. In June 2013, McDonald opened the Bank of Timex Twitter account. He originally wasn't intending to make many bets, but he wanted to have a platform to have some fun and call out players selling action at absurd prices. The response from the community blew McDonald away.

"Within a week, it had like 1,000 followers," McDonald said. "People were messaging me... I never anticipated it would get as popular as it did."

With that popularity, though, came potential scrutiny. Veron Lammers, a friend "well-versed in the gambling industry", alerted McDonald to the perils of what he was doing: essentially acting as a bookmaker. McDonald, 23 at the time, decided he shouldn't take any chances and quickly opted to shut down the unofficial book, at least publicly.

Behind the scenes, the wheels spun for at least one associate of McDonald's. Lammers, who has now become McDonald's chief business partner in PokerShares, is "one of the best no-limit deepstack players in the world" according to Timex. He accepted an opportunity to provide McDonald some coaching and the two have become friends.

"Why don't you actually try to get it licensed?" Lammers asked. "Why don't you actually try to turn this into a business?"

McDonald's only answer was "laziness," so Lammers, who had experience setting up international companies, agreed to take on most of the behind-the-scenes duties if McDonald took charge of things like pricing and marketing on the front end. For the past 18 months, the two have worked to form what's become PokerShares.

The workload has become intense in recent weeks leading up the site's launch and McDonald arrived at the PokerStars Championship Bahamas with a new outlook on the game. Where he would once be looking to ship some of the biggest tournaments in the world with his trademark glare etched on his features, McDonald now throws on a PokerShares shirt and sees an opportunity to market a hit venture and relax away from the office.

Normally a familiar face in the $100,000 Super High Roller, McDonald skipped the event because he didn't feel ready for that caliber of competition. It's perhaps a surprising admission for a man who has built a ledger that makes him one of the true legends of both online and live poker. He's cashed for over $13 million live alone, with much of his success coming in some of the very nosebleeds he bypassed here.

"I feel like my game is fairly rusty right now," McDonald admitted. "I just don't think I'm very likely to bring my A-game or even my B-game."

McDonald estimates he's played about 200 hands of poker in the past four months and lost countless more potential playing hours working on PokerShares and other projects. The results bear that out: McDonald cashed for just $544,361 live in 2016, only his second year in the past seven scoring less than $1 million.

Now, he's here at PokerStars Championship Bahamas, which also happens to be the first big event with listed prices on PokerShares. McDonald himself was the primary force shaping those prices, which gives an interesting look at how at least one person ranks the relative abilities of poker players.

For example, the $25,000 High Roller lists 23 players that users can invest in. At the top of the list price-wise are Fedor Holz and Christoph Vogelsang each with a mark-up of 1.5 — it costs €1.50 to buy €1 of action. On the other end of the spectrum, recreational players Paul Newey and Bill Perkins are listed at 1.07. Prices are listed in euros, as PokerShares doesn't accept action from American customers due to U.S. sports-betting laws.

McDonald knows he won't be making any friends in some cases when players see themselves priced down, something he said was "inevitability."

"I'm sure there are some acquaintances and people in my friends circle that aren't thinking so highly of me," he said. "With all of the people that I actually care about, I don't think it'll have any sort of effect. It's purely business."

Another aspect of PokerShares that McDonald already sees the community getting excited for is the chance to sweat players like Daniel Negreanu and Erik Seidel. Such players, enriched by their vast poker success and having built a strong circle of friends, have no need to sell action to the general public.

That option now exists thanks to PokerShares.

"You would not believe how many people there are who just bet €1 on Daniel Negreanu in the $100K," Timex said. "It gives the viewer and fan at home an opportunity they've never really had before."

McDonald said buzz and response has been huge. Even people outside the poker and gambling worlds have responded. While enjoying a drink at a bar recently, a representative of a venture capital company recognized McDonald and asked if McDonald would get in touch with his employer.

Company emails have been inundated with résumés and job applications — PokerShares isn't currently hiring — from people who see an opportunity with a company that has upside.

Given all that, and McDonald's commitment to a large role with the company moving forward, he can envision a future where he's no longer a professional poker player.

"I don't know how big this will get," he said. "But, if it gets to be pretty big, I could see poker becoming my secondary thing and this being my primary thing."

Tags: Mike McDonald

River Delivers Another Nasty Blow

Level 12 : 1,000/2,000, 300 ante

Predrag Bukovec moved all in for his last 24,500 from middle position and Tom Thomas, who had 24,800, called from the big blind.

Bukovec: {a-Spades}{10-Diamonds}
Thomas: {7-Clubs}{7-Spades}

It was a flip, but not after the flop came down {j-Clubs}{10-Spades}{a-Diamonds}. The {9-Clubs} turn gave Thomas a gutshot, and much to his opponent's dismay, it hit when the {8-Clubs} spiked on the river.

Player Chips Progress
Tom Thomas us
Tom Thomas
50,000
18,800
18,800
Predrag Bukovec hr
Predrag Bukovec
Busted

Tags: Predrag BukovecTom Thomas

A Prosperous Day 2 for Mike Vela

Level 12 : 1,000/2,000, 300 ante

Mike Vela is currently sitting with a monster pile of 345,000. Not too shabby considering he began Day 2 with 65,100.

We asked Vela how he's managed to acquire said chips, and much to our surprise he revealed the biggest pot he's played is when he won 60,000 with kings against queens. He said he made a nice call with the {j-Diamonds}{8-Diamonds} to win a 40,000 pot, but other than that it's simply been collecting the small pots no one else seems to want.

Whatever he's doing it's clearly working.

Player Chips Progress
Michael Vela us
Michael Vela
345,000
90,000
90,000
WPT 1X Winner

Tags: Michael Vela

Ema Zajmovic Crushed by Buddiga

Level 12 : 1,000/2,000, 300 ante

Ema Zajmovic was all-in against Pratyush Buddiga and the latter was at risk, the former Spelling Bee champion well ahead but needing to hold with {K-Hearts}{K-Diamonds} against Zajmovic's {Q-Hearts}{Q-Diamonds}.

The board of {5-Clubs}{K-Spades}{3-Hearts}{3-Diamonds}{8-Diamonds} gave Buddiga the pot and he took Zajmovic out in the next hand when her one big blind was into the middle. Just 184 players remain in the Main Event.

Player Chips Progress
Pratyush Buddiga us
Pratyush Buddiga
126,000
74,000
74,000
Ema Zajmovic ba
Ema Zajmovic
Busted
WPT 1X Winner

Rex Clinkscales is Chipping Up

Level 12 : 1,000/2,000, 300 ante

Rex Clinkscales, a regular circuit grinder, has been chipping up steadily all tournament. He began the day with 87,000 chips and has added about 100,000 to his stack midway through Day 2.

With about 10,000 in the middle already, on a board reading {a-Diamonds}{j-Diamonds}{9-Spades}, Clinkscales checked and his opponent bet 7,500. Clinkscales called.

The turn was the {3-Spades} and Clinkscales checked again. His opponent bet 15,000 this time. Clinkscales splashed a fistful of chips in the middle, indicating another call.

The river was the {5-Spades}. Both players checked and Clinkscale's opponent tabled Kx9x for king-high. Clinkscales tabled {j-Clubs}{10-Hearts} for a pair of jacks and raked in the pot.

Player Chips Progress
Rex Clinkscales us
Rex Clinkscales
188,000
28,000
28,000

Pascal Lefrancois Doubles Big Through Benny Chen

Level 12 : 1,000/2,000, 300 ante

When we arrived at the table, the dealer was busy confirming the stack of Pascal Lefrancois, who had just doubled big through Benny Chen. We missed the action, but by the look of the cards — the board read {6-Diamonds}{2-Diamonds}{8-Diamonds}{5-Diamonds}{a-Spades} — the chips likely got in on the flop.

Chen: {8-Clubs}{8-Hearts}
Lefrancois: {a-Diamonds}{7-Diamonds}

Chen had flopped top set, but Lefrancois flopped the nuts which held when neither the turn nor river paired the board.

Player Chips Progress
Pascal Lefrancois ca
Pascal Lefrancois
250,000
146,800
146,800
WSOP 1X Winner
Benny Chen ca
Benny Chen
40,000
-122,500
-122,500
WSOP 1X Winner

Tags: Pascal LefrancoisBenny Chen

Kessler Keeps Climbing

Level 12 : 1,000/2,000, 300 ante

Earlier in the level, Allen Kessler was moved to a new table after his broke and he said, "I eliminated the best female poker player in the world." As he sat down, Mike McDonald asked, "Vanessa (Slebst)?" Kessler confirmed he eliminated Vanessa Selbst earlier, and proceeded to bust another player a short while later.

On a board reading {q-Diamonds}{7-Hearts}{5-Hearts}, Kessler called his opponent's all in and the hands were tabled.

Kessler: {a-Hearts}{q-Hearts}
Opponent: {k-Diamonds}{k-Clubs}

The turn was the {4-Hearts}, sealing the deal for Kessler with the nut flush. The river was the insignificant {4-Spades} and Kessler raked in the pot, sending his opponent to the rail.

Player Chips Progress
Allen Kessler us
Allen Kessler
180,000
100,000
100,000

Tags: Allen KesslerMike McDonaldVanessa Selbst