2017 World Series of Poker

Event #73: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em MAIN EVENT - World Championship
Event Info
2017 World Series of Poker
Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
a2
Prize
$8,150,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$67,877,400
Entries
7,221
Level Info
Level
43
Blinds
1,500,000 / 3,000,000
Ante
500,000
Players Left 1 / 7221
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Updated Stacks on Table 706: Pollak is Running the Show

Level 30 : 80,000/160,000, 20,000 ante
Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Benjamin Pollak fr
Benjamin Pollak
17,450,000
2,470,000
2,470,000
Profile photo of Joshua Marvin us
Joshua Marvin
12,900,000
1,200,000
1,200,000
Profile photo of Christian Pham us
Christian Pham
10,640,000
730,000
730,000
Day 6 Chip Leader
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Jonathan Dwek ca
Jonathan Dwek
9,320,000
480,000
480,000
Profile photo of Florian Lohnert de
Florian Lohnert
4,805,000
1,495,000
1,495,000
Profile photo of Chris Wallace us
Chris Wallace
3,800,000
1,050,000
1,050,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Zu Zhou us
Zu Zhou
3,050,000
550,000
550,000

Tags: Benjamin Pollak

Player Spotlight: Jack Sinclair

Level 30 : 80,000/160,000, 20,000 ante
Jack Sinclair
Jack Sinclair

Jack Sinclair might not be a familiar face to many of the players in the field, but this 26-year-old has got some serious game. Sinclair mainly cut his teeth online and came to try his hand in the live games at the prodding of his friends, Philipp Gruissem and Anton Morgenstern. No big deal.

Being an online pro who doesn't play a lot live and having a huge chip stack with 40 people left in the Main Event has to be a surreal experience. We asked Sinclair what it felt like to be here and if the experience has started to sink in.

"I'm trying not to think too much about that. But, yeah, it is definitely surreal. I keep thinking, 'It's been fun.' If I make it to the next break, I'll be happy."

It's always an advantage to show up to the table with your opponents not having a clue who you are. The less people know about you at the table, the better. But apparently, Sinclair can't use that to his advantage for more than one hand.

"As soon as I sit down at a table, people automatically assume I'm three-betting them light and doing a bunch of crazy stuff. I don't know why; it must be the way I look at them or something. If someone looks me up, they are basically going to find nothing. They might think, 'This guy's going to be a huge fish.' I sit down and play one hand, and my image is completely gone. Maybe the first hand I play, I can get away with something. But overall no."

No one would argue that the Main Event is the ultimate grind. The days start to run together, hands are forgotten, and what happened when becomes a blur. Sinclair, however, was able to recall his Main Event journey with amazing detail. Here it is in his own words.

Sinclair's Main Event Journey (So Far) In Own Words

Day 1: It was just a breeze. I won most of the pots I played. Every bluff went through and value bet got called.

Day 2: It was kind of similar. It was quite smooth, but then I made a few bad decisions towards the end. I came through it with a decent-sized stack.

Day 3: I had a horrendous table draw. The first four hours of the day, it was just brutal. It was the toughest table I've played the entire tournament. In fact, it's probably the toughest table I've played live ever.

There was one really old woman. You know when you sit down at a table, and there's an old woman there, you're like, "Sweet." Then within the first hour, she three-bet four people, and I was like, "Dammit! I've got the most aggressive grandmother in the world." So that was really tough and I managed to survive.

I got really short coming into the bubble. I had just about 60k with about 200 people off the money. At this point, I was like, "This is going to suck because I'm going to have 10k on the bubble and sit there and fold."

I kept playing aggressively, and I jammed queens, and someone called me with nines. Then I won six of the next ten hands and went on a crazy heater. I had a big stack on the bubble and was able to abuse my table for the next couple of hours.

Day 4: I had Mickey Craft at my table on my direct left. That's an experience I'll never forget. Mickey was just completely insane. And we got moved to the secondary feature table, and he calmed down. He was much calmer than he was for the five hours before. I couldn't believe he was on my left. That was tilting.

I did manage to double up through Mickey three times. In between each double, I got quite low on chips and then doubled up and then got low. I did increase my stack a decent amount on that day. If I were on Mickey's left, then I would have probably won the tournament by now. Mickey's a great guy. It was actually the most fun I've had at a table, possibly ever.

Day 5: Again, it was quite tough. I started the day with 1.7 million and ended with 2.2 million. It wasn't a great day. I had some ups and downs. I had Shyam Srinivasan on my left, and he was tough, and I had David Guay on my right, and he was tough. Quite a tough table. I just kept thinking, "It can't be as bad as that Day 3."

So it kept me a little bit calm. I just scraped through the day. I won a flip at the end of the day to sort of have a dream, as it were.

Day 6: I came into the day with 30 big blinds and had an insane day. I came in with less than 30bbs, and now I've 17 and a bit million. It's been quite the day.

Tags: Anton MorgensternDavid GuayJack SinclairMickey CraftPhilipp GruissemShyam Srinivasan

Sarkisyan Check-Raises All In

Level 30 : 80,000/160,000, 20,000 ante

Pedro Oliveira opened under the gun for 380,000, Bryan Piccioli called next to act, Marcel Luske called on the button, and Karen Sarkisyan called in the small blind.

The flop came {8-Clubs}{6-Spades}{5-Diamonds}, and Sarkisyan checked. Oliveira bet one million, and Piccioli and Luske folded. Sarkisyan called and checked again on the {Q-Spades} turn, and Oliveira continued for 2.7 million. Sarkisyan moved all in by sliding forward his big tower of T500,000 chips. Oliveira shook his head, said he thought Sarkisyan had {A-Spades}{7-Spades}, and folded.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Karen Sarkisyan ru
Karen Sarkisyan
18,000,000
2,400,000
2,400,000
Profile photo of Pedro Oliveira pt
Pedro Oliveira
9,600,000
4,195,000
4,195,000

Tags: Bryan PiccioliKaren SarkisyanMarcel LuskePedro Oliveira

Mackoff Doubles Through Messina

Level 30 : 80,000/160,000, 20,000 ante

Michael Sklenicka opened for 360,000 first to act, and Jonas Mackoff shoved all in from middle position for 895,000. Valentin Messina put in an under-raise to 1,250,000, but Sklenicka folded, anyway.

Mackoff: {k-Hearts}{j-Hearts}
Messina: {a-Clubs}{q-Spades}

Mackoff needed help and found some as the flop came {9-Hearts}{2-Diamonds}{3-Hearts} to bring him a flush draw. The {5-Clubs} turn was a brick, but the {j-Clubs} river paired Mackoff for a double. He also jammed the next hand and won the blinds and antes.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Valentin Messina fr
Valentin Messina
8,300,000
65,000
65,000
Profile photo of Jonas Mackoff ca
Jonas Mackoff
2,850,000
1,795,000
1,795,000

Tags: Jonas MackoffMichael SklenickaValentin Messina

Luske Gets There?

Level 30 : 80,000/160,000, 20,000 ante
Marcel Luske
Marcel Luske

From early position, Randy Pisane raised to 380,000. Jake Bazeley called from the cutoff, and Marcel Luske called from the big blind.

The flop came down {K-Hearts}{A-Diamonds}{2-Diamonds}, and Luske checked to Pisane, who bet 500,000. Bazeley called, and Luske called, as well, bringing all three players to the {10-Clubs} on the turn. There, action checked to Bazeley, who fired 1,000,000. Luske called, but Pisane folded. The river was the {8-Clubs}, and Luske led out with a small bet relative to the size of the pot, just 500,000. Bazeley scrunched up his face a bit, then tossed in the chips needed to call.

Lusked showed {K-Diamonds}{8-Diamonds} and Bazeley shook his head and mucked after a few seconds.

"You were just going to call it all off, weren't you, Marcel?" Bazeley asked after the hand.

Luske took in the big pot and moved close to seven million chips.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Marcel Luske nl
Marcel Luske
6,800,000
2,985,000
2,985,000
Profile photo of Jake Bazeley us
Jake Bazeley
4,805,000
3,000,000
3,000,000

Tags: Jake BazeleyMarcel Luske

Hesp's Re-Raise Takes It

Level 30 : 80,000/160,000, 20,000 ante

John Hesp raised to 350,000 from the cutoff, and Dan Ott called from the big blind.

The flop came down {J-Hearts}{7-Diamonds}{6-Spades}, and Ott checked to Hesp, who continued for 500,000. Ott check-raised to 1,200,000, Hesp re-raised to 3,500,000, and Ott folded after a few moments.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Dan Ott us
Dan Ott
15,830,000
1,210,000
1,210,000
Profile photo of John Hesp gb
John Hesp
7,345,000
1,040,000
1,040,000

Tags: Dan OttJohn Hesp

[Removed:508] Eliminated in 40th Place ($176,399)

Level 30 : 80,000/160,000, 20,000 ante

[Removed:508] raised to 400,000 from late position, Benjamin Pollak called on the button, and Florian Lohnert called in the big blind.

The flop came {q-Clubs}{8-Hearts}{6-Hearts}, and Lohnert checked. Crivello quickly bet 1,100,000, and Pollak wasted no time calling. Lohnert folded. The turn was the {2-Clubs}. Crivello instantly moved all in for 3,535,000, and Pollak asked for a count. After about a minute, he called.

"Flush draw?" asked Crivello. He tabled {k-Diamonds}{q-Hearts} for top pair with a king kicker, at risk against Pollak's {9-Clubs}{8-Clubs} for a pair of eights and a flush draw.

The river was the {10-Clubs}, and Pollak made his flush, sending him the pot and Crivello to the rail.

Crivello headed off to the payout desk to collect $176,399 for his 40th-place finish.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Benjamin Pollak fr
Benjamin Pollak
14,980,000
5,240,000
5,240,000
Profile photo of [Removed:508] us
[Removed:508]
Busted

Tags: Benjamin PollakFlorian Lohnert

Richard Gryko Four-Bets Michael Krasienko

Level 30 : 80,000/160,000, 20,000 ante

Richard Gryko opened to 360,000 in the cutoff, and Michael Krasienko three-bet to 900,000 on the button. The blinds folded, and Gryko four-bet to 4,720,000. Krasienko quickly folded, and Gryko took down the pot.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Richard Gryko gb
Richard Gryko
11,870,000
1,160,000
1,160,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Run It Once
Profile photo of Michael Krasienko us
Michael Krasienko
3,820,000
1,200,000
1,200,000

Tags: Michael KrasienkoRichard Gryko

Ostapchenko Over Saout

Level 30 : 80,000/160,000, 20,000 ante

Antoine Saout raised to 325,000 from under the gun, and Andrew Ostapchenko called from the cutoff.

The flop came {A-Spades}{10-Spades}{9-Hearts}. Saout continued for 310,000, and Ostapchenko called. The turn was the {9-Spades}. Both players checked, and the {8-Spades} river completed the board. Saout checked, and Ostapchenko bet 550,000. Saout mulled it over for about two minutes before he released his hand.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Andrew Ostapchenko us
Andrew Ostapchenko
4,645,000
1,015,000
1,015,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Antoine Saout fr
Antoine Saout
4,515,000
385,000
385,000

Tags: Andrew OstapchenkoAntoine Saout

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