Day 3 of Card Player Poker Tour's 2017 CPPT World Cup of Cards gets underway at 2:30 p.m. local time inside Playground Poker Club this afternoon. When cards hit the felt, just eight players will get dealt a hand, all eyeing the $98,000 top prize.
Luc Bellerive starts with the chip lead. Bellerive built a stack of 1,698,000 by the time the clock was paused on Day 2. Tam Ho has also crossed the million-chip mark wielding a stack of 1,327,000. Both players are miles ahead of their competition, accumulating almost 60% of the chips in play.
Here is how the eight finalists stack up:
Seat
Player
Chip Count
1
Sam Chartier
587,000
2
Luc Bellerive
1,698,000
3
Ha Van Nguyen
278,000
4
Tristan Bergeron
325,000
5
Robert Laberge
692,000
6
Jonathan Marrie
283,000
7
Stuart Taylor
800,000
8
Tam Ho
1,327,000
Bellerive is already guaranteed his largest live-recorded tournament cash ever. Sitting at just under $7,000 in career tournament earnings, Bellerive's Hendon Mob page is sure to get a huge boost however the day progresses.
The most dangerous member of the table is surely Sam Chartier. Chartier is a world-class player with almost $3,000,000 in tournament earnings alone. Chartier is also a high stakes cash game player and won't be shy about putting himself at risk to better his position at the table.
There is still lots of money up for grabs. Here's a look at the prizes available for the final eight:
Place
Prize (CAD)
1
98,000
2
67,050
3
40,000
4
24,210
5
18,700
6
15,480
7
13,190
8
11,520
Day 3 will kick off at Level 24 with a 12,000 small blind and 24,000 big blind. The ante will start at 4,000 and play will continue with one-hour levels until they reach heads-up.
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Action folded to Robert Laberge in the hijack and he raised to 60,000. Tam Ho was in the small blind and quickly three-bet to 125,000. Laberge snap moved all-in for 545,000 and Ho asked for a count. After seeing how much he had left to call, he piled some chips in the middle.
Robert Laberge:
Tam Ho:
It was a flip and Laberge needed to hit one of his two over cards to remain in contention.
The flo pcame and Ho remained ahead with jacks. The turn was the and Laberge cheered as he paired his king. The river was the and Ho roared as he hit a miracle river to eliminate yet another opponent, not even halfway through the first level of play today.
Laberge finished in 7th place, taking home $13,190 for his deep run.
Stuart Taylor shoved all-in for 335,000 on the button and Tam Ho snap-shoved from the small blind. Luc Bellerive tank-folded.
Taylor was at risk with , up against Ho's .
The flop came and Taylor was in the clear. The dealer put the on the turn and it looked like Taylor was going to double-up but the hit the river. Ho cheered and Taylor was eliminated in 3rd place.
Shortly after Tam Ho lost a large chunk of his chips, he limped in on the button. Luc Bellerive raised all-in and Ho snap-called, setting the trap perfectly.
Tam Ho:
Luc Bellerive:
It appeared as though the tides would turn again and the chip lead would shift once more. A four on the flop left Ho drawing slim and Bellerive faded the on the turn and the on the river to claim the final pot of the tournament.
Ho takes home $67,050 for his runner-up finish while Bellerive earns a top prize of $98,000 and the Champion's trophy.
Four days of poker are in the books and Luc Bellerive has taken down the $1,650 Card Player Poker Tour World Cup of Cards event for a payday worth $98,000! He defeated Tam Ho in a heads-up battle lasting for about an hour of play.
Ho pocketed a nice sum worth $67,500 for his runner-up finish for his second-best live cash. His top score was earlier this year for $71,670 after coming in 4th place in the World Poker Tour Main Event right here at the Playground Poker Club. Ho also took down a tournament in June for $9,000, bringing his total live earnings over $150,000 now.
In the final hand, the two players got their chips in the middle before the flop with Ho holding two queens, up against Bellerive's pocket fours. The cards had other plans though, as the flop brought a four and Bellerive held on to win the hand and the tournament.
Bellerive has now booked his first live tournament win for his fifth-ever cash. Before today, his overall earnings were just over $6,000, so this was most definitely a big day for the Quebec native. Bellerive is a recreational player and talked a bit about his career in general. "I play cash and tournaments but I'm not a professional. I play with my friends, they are all professionals. I learn a lot from them and I try to do my best and sometimes it works. I own a microbrewery in Quebec. So I'm a businessman."
When asked about how he was feeling about his win Bellerive said "Tired, but I'm good. Happy!" He went on to comment about his winnings and said "I just bought a cabin so it's going to help me to pay it and I'll have fun with some of it."
This event attracted 76 entries on Day 1a and 115 on Day 1b for a total of 191 across two starting flights for a guaranteed prize pool of $400,000! A total of 24 players were paid out a minimum of $3,600, but it was the $98,000 that everyone was really after.
Day 2 concluded on Sunday with nine levels of play before 43 players whittled down to just the final eight. Ninth place finisher Michael Malm ($9,850) was the start-of-day chip leader but was unable to add a CPPT title to his World Series of Poker title. Jonathan Marrie was the one to burst the bubble after nine hands of hand-for-hand play, midway through the day, and it was Matthew Paplyk who had his kings cracked by queens to send the final 24 players in the money. Players dropped steadily and the final table of 10 came together with a few levels to go in the night.
Day 3 picked up at 2:30 p.m. today with eight runners gunning for glory, and lasted about five hours and five levels of play.
Final Table Results
Place
Player Name
Country
Prize (CAD)
1
Luc Bellerive
Canada
98,000
2
Tam Ho
Canada
67,050
3
Stuart Taylor
Canada
40,000
4
Jonathan Marrie
Canada
24,210
5
Tristan Bergeron
Canada
18,700
6
Ha Van Nguyen
Canada
15,480
7
Robert Laberge
Canada
13,190
8
Sam Chartier
Canada
11,520
9
Michael Malm
Canada
9,850
In addition to the final-table finishers, some familiar faces to make the final 24 in the money included Thomas Lefort (11th place - $8,490), Patrick Braga (12th place - $8,490), Jean-Philippe Piquette (16th place - $5,970), and William Blais (22nd place - $3,600).
As expected, many notables took shots in the field and the ones who were unable to get their hands on a piece of this massive prize pool included partypoker Team Pros Kristen Bicknell and Natalia Breviglieri, Mike Leah, Marc Etienne Mclaughlin, Scott Montgomery, Dustin Melanson, Andrew Watt, Pablo Mariz, David Guay, Ruben Perceval, Rodney Ramalho, Alyssa MacDonald, Steven Kerr, Carter Swidler, David Ormsby, Ami Alibay, Laurence Grondin, and Alexandre Lavgine.
Final Table Action
Two players were eliminated late on Day 2, with Jake Labonte being the first to go in 10th place ($8,490). His pocket nines were no good as he ran into tens and made an early exit on the final table. Michael Malm was also eliminated on Day 2 after losing a big chunk to Tam Ho after folding in a big pot on the river. He eventually got his remaining chips in with queen-deuce of clubs but was unable to improve against ace-ten.
The remaining eight players came back a little later than expected on Day 3, beginning at 2:30 p.m. Ho came out gunning and eliminated Sam Chartier in the first several minutes of the day. Chartier picked up two queens but was unlucky enough to run into Ho's aces and he settled for 8th place ($11,520).
Just a few short hands later, Robert Laberge opened the pot and faced a three-bet from the small blind from a blazing hot Ho. Laberge immediately shipped in 22 big blinds and Ho called after a few seconds of thought. They were flipping, with Laberge holding king-queen and Ho holding two jacks. Laberge turned a king but Ho rivered a set to send his opponent packing in 7th place ($13,190).
As soon as the second level of the day went up, so did the aggression. Ho opened from under the gun and faced a three-bet from Ha Van Nguyen. Ho piled his chips in the middle and Nguyen couldn't fold. Ho tabled aces and was disappointed to see he was in rough shape with jacks. The board ran out dry and Nguyen settled for 6th place ($15,480). A few minutes later, Tristan Bergeron moved all-in with his short stack and it was Stuart Taylor who woke up to a couple of ladies on the button. Bergeron held king-jack and was unable to improve, but he pocketed $18,700 for his 5th place finish today.
It wasn't long before Jonathan Marrie picked up ace-queen and got his chips in the middle against Bellerive. Marrie was well ahead but had to fade a flush draw against Bellerive's king-nine of diamonds. The flush came right away on the turn and Marrie was the 4th place finisher for a payout of $24,210.
The remaining three players discussed the possibility of a deal but the numbers weren't making everyone happy so play continued. Bellerive extended his lead to hold more than half of the chips in play, but Ho chipped away and stole that lead quickly after. Three-handed play lasted almost three hours before Stuart Taylor chipped away and slid into second in chips but quickly lost most of them to Ho. He raised it up and faced a three-bet jam from Ho. Taylor snap-called with two red aces and Ho sheepishly tabled nine-five of hearts. Ho ended up flopping two pair and backed into a flush for the extra needle. Taylor was left with crumbs and ended up getting it in with pocket nines, only to get rivered by Ho after his ace-three off-suit improved.
Heads-up play began with Bellerive having 2,950,000 chips to Ho's 2,7500,000. Ho built it up fast but Bellerive found some timely spots and took the lead back. Eventually Bellerive binked a two-outer at the right time to seal the deal and win the whole thing.
As always, thanks for following along as the PokerNews team reported all of the action from start to finish. Keep checking back as the action continues to heat up at the Playground Poker Club in beautiful Kahnawake, Quebec in Canada for the duration of the 2017 World Cup of Cards!