Short-stack ninja Matthias Widmann, who laddered himself up quite nicely today, shoved all in with his last 195,000. Behind him, Fernandez made the call and the other players folded.
Matthias Widmann:
Fernandez:
No escape for Widmann on , making him the eighth place finisher.
Mohamed El Bakkouri open-shoved 810,000 from the button. In the big blind, Arron Fletcher called directly to put El Bakkouri at risk.
Mohamed El Bakkouri:
Arron Fletcher:
The window card was the , improving Fletcher's inferior kicker and giving him a huge lead in the hand. The board got completed with and El Bakkouri's tournament came to an end.
With El Bakkouri gone, the last Frenchman was out of the tournament. After two French winners in a row, the title will go to a new country.
With 980,000 left, Julio Sanchez open-shoved from under the gun. To his direct left, Arron Fletcher called and the other players quickly went out of the way.
Julio Sanchez:
Arron Fletcher:
The flop was save for Sanchez, but the on the turn was a nightmare for the Spaniard. Sanchez now needed one of his remaining two tens to stay in the tournament.
"Diez! Diez! Diez!" Sanchez chanted, and his rail quickly chimed in. It wasn't a diez on the river but an ocho, the , ending the start-of-the-day chipleader's run in 6th place. Sanchez takes home 275,000 MAD, around €25,684, back to Spain.
In first position, Mika Kakkonen open-shoved for 1,200,000. Pablo Rodero reshoved all in and had Kakkonen covered by a wide margin.
Mika Kakkonen:
Pablo Rodero:
The flop brought the king Rodero needed to take the lead. Kakkonen was looking for a five to survive, but didn't find it on the turn or river. The young Finn's deep run ended in 5th place, worth 355,000 MAD (€33,156).
In an unexpected shocker, Arron Fletcher has eliminated second in chips Hamza NBaba and claimed a monster chiplead. After Fletcher opened on the button, NBaba three-bet to 350,000 out of the small blind. Fletcher four-bet to 950,000, which brought the action back to NBaba.
"All-in", the Moroccan whispered.
"What did you say?", Fletcher wanted to make sure.
"All-in", NBaba said, this time a little louder.
Within a second, Fletcher reached for as many chips as he could muster and splashed them into the pot. With a loud bang, he slammed open on the table. NBaba's face went aghast when he saw what he was up against.
Nbaba held , but had run into the biggest cooler of his poker career. It was a pot of over 7 million in chips, half the chips in play, with NBaba looking for a miracle.
It didn't come; NBaba's fate was sealed after the turn on a board and he finished in fourth place. By eliminating the number two in chips, Fletcher suddenly holds over two-thirds of all the chips in play.
With NBaba's shocking elimination, short stack Fernandez laddered up a place he didn't expect ten minutes ago. Having hovered around the ten big blind mark for the better part of two hours, Fernandez kept his stack afloat by getting numerous shoves through.
In the small blind, Fernandez shoved again, this time for 840,000. Pablo Rodero instantly called in the big blind.
Fernandez:
Pablo Rodero:
Rodero flopped a set of tens on , but Fernandez still had straight outs. He added flush outs as well after the on the turn, but the on the river was a brick. After being short for most of the final table, Fernandez held on until 3rd place and banked 635,000 MAD (€59,307).
Pablo Rodero limped in on the button and Arron Fletcher raised to 500,000. Rodero reraised to 1,500,000 and called off a shove from Fletcher.
Pablo Rodero:
Arron Fletcher:
Fletcher had Rodero multiple times on the ropes during this heads-up battle and finally delivered the knockout punch: . Rodero proved to be tough to crack but eventually succumbed to Fletcher's non-stop barrage of pressure.
The Spaniard takes home 910,000 MAD (€84,991) for his incredible accomplishment, by far the biggest score of his poker career.
Arron Fletcher has won the 2017 WSOP International Circuit Main Event in Casino de Marrakech! The British player outlasted 510 other players to claim the coveted gold WSOP Circuit Ring. Fletcher took home an astonishing 1,400,000 MAD (€130,755) by winning this record setting event. Runner-up was Spain's Pedro Rodero, who cashed 910,000 MAD (€84,991). Winner of the inaugural Main Event two years ago, Ricardo Manquant, finished in 9th.
Position
Player
Country
Prize in MAD
Prize in €
Prize in $
1
Arron Fletcher
United Kingdom
1,400,000 MAD
€130,755
$140,224
2
Pedro Rodero
Spain
910,000 MAD
€84,991
$91,146
3
Fernandez
Spain
635,000 MAD
€59,307
$63,602
4
Hamza NBaba
Morocco
465,000 MAD
€43,430
$46,574
5
Mika Kakkonen
Finland
355,000 MAD
€33,156
$35,557
6
Julio Sanchez
Spain
275,000 MAD
€25,684
$27,544
7
Mohamed El Bakkouri
France
215,000 MAD
€20,080
$21,534
8
Matthias Widmann
Germany
176,500 MAD
€16,485
$17,678
9
Ricardo Manquant
France
153,000 MAD
€14,290
$15,324
23 hopefuls returned at 1 p.m. for the final day and continue their quest to capture WSOP glory. In the first level of the day, action started furiously right off the bat. For [Removed:16], Cheng Li, Thibault Saillard, Thierry Gogniat, Roland Rozal and Thomas Cristobal their hopes of capturing a WSOP ring got crushed in the early stages.
In the second level of the day, one of the most crucial hands of the day took place. Romain Lewis, who started the day second in chips, suddenly went out after losing two hands in a row. In the first hand he lost pocket eights against ace-ten, then Lewis got it in with pocket aces against Fletcher's pocket tens. It was a pot big enough to give either winner the chip lead, but a ten on the flop gave the pot to Fletcher. Needless to say, the monstrous pot was pivotal in Fletcher's eventual success.
Selim Oulmekki, Hakim Hadj, Teresio Ciancanelli, Jaouad Berrada, Tsunamy and Vincent Mansour quickly followed Lewis to the exit. With ten players left, it was Pedro Jimenez who became the final table bubble boy. Jimenez went out in style, as he ran against a true Royal Flush from Mika Kakkonen.
At the final table, Ricardo Manquant would be the first to go after losing queen-ten against pocket jacks. Manquant, who won the first edition of this event back in 2015, saw his second attempt at a Circuit ring come to an end in ninth place. He was soon followed by Matthias Widmann, who couldn't catch up with ace-trey against ace-queen and ended in eight.
It took over two hours before the next player would bust out. It was the last standing Frenchman, Mohamed El Bakkouri, who fell by the wayside. Holding ace-king, El Bakkouri lost against Fletcher's ace-queen when a queen appeared in the window.
After the dinner break, start-of-the-day chipleader Julio Sanchez went out in sixth. Sanchez lost the classic flip of pocket tens against ace-queen when an ace on the turn sent him packing. Mika Kakkonen soon followed him to the rail in fifth place, after losing pocket fives against Rodero's ace-king.
With four players left, the biggest hand of the final table took place. Chipleader Fletcher and second in chips Hamza NBaba clashed in a pot that contained more than half the chips in play. Fletcher held pocket aces and NBaba had the inferior ace-king. All the money went in preflop and NBaba was left drawing dead after the turn. The last hometown player in the tournament received 465,000 MAD for finishing fourth, but will probably not forget the biggest cooler of his poker career any time soon.
Fernandez was the lucky short stack that laddered up due to the big clash. Being short for hours, Fernandez eventually succumbed in 3rd place, netting himself a nice 635,000 MAD payday.
The heads-up started with Fletcher holding more than a 2:1 chip lead over his opponent Rodero. Although Rodero found himself at risk multiple times during the heads-up battle, he proved to be the proverbial cat with nine lives and doubled multiple times. Eventually, Rodero succumbed to the relentless raising and reraising from Fletcher. In the last hand of the tournament, Rodero called an all-in with queen-ten, but Fletcher had ace-jack and held up to win the tournament.
That's all from Casino de Marrakech, located in the beautiful Es Saadi Resort. PokerNews will be back here in March to provide all the updates from the 2017 Marrakech Poker Open. Au revoir et a la prochaine!