Sorel Mizzi Wins partypoker Premier League VII for $466,000

8 min read
Sorel Mizzi

The partypoker Premier League VII has been completed following a several tough days of poker at the Playground Poker Club in Montreal, Canada. With a buy-in of $125,000 and a star-studded field, the stakes were high and the competition was ferocious. Emerging victorious to earn the $400,000 first-place prize was Sorel Mizzi.

Premier League VII Results

PlacePlayerPrize
1Sorel Mizzi$466,000
2Jeff Gross$274,000
3Dan Colman$194,000
4Scott Seiver$130,000
5Jason Koon$118,000
6Brian Rast$102,000
7Jonathan Duhamel$52,000
8Daniel Cates$48,000
9Antonio Esfandiari$40,000
10Phil Laak$38,000
11Dan Shak$20,000
12Vanessa Selbst$18,000

The event consisted of 12 world-class players, with each playing in four eight-handed preliminary heats prior to the final table. Points would be awarded based upon finishing position in each heat, and the top four point earners would automatically reach the final table. The remaining eight players would then battle in a series of best-of-three heads-up matches for the remaining two spots at the six-handed final table. Each point earned through the preliminary heats was worth $2,000 in prize money.

Gross Wins Heat No. 1

Jeff Gross, Antonio Esfandiari, Daniel Cates, Sorel Mizzi, Jason Koon, Brian Rast, Dan Colman, and Scott Seiver were selected to participate in the first heat. When it came down to heads-up play, Gross found himself pitted against Colman.

According to the partypoker blog, Gross defeated Colman on the 236th hand of the heat. Gross moved all in with the 98 and was called by Colman holding the K3. The board ran out 106482, and Gross secured the win to lock up an important 14 points. Colman earned 11 points for his runner-up finish.

Here are how the overall standings looked following Heat No. 1:

RankPlayerHeat 1Total
1Jeff Gross1414
2Dan Colman1111
3Daniel Cates99
4Sorel Mizzi77
5Antonio Esfandiari55
6Jason Koon33
7Brian Rast11
8Scott Seiver00
T9Jonathan Duhamel--0
T9Dan Shak--0
T9Phil Laak--0
T9Vanessa Selbst--0

Koon Wins Heat No. 2

In the second heat, Vanessa Selbst, Jonathan Duhamel, Phil Laak, and reigning partypoker Premier League champion Dan Shak participated in their first match, joining Cates, Koon, Rast, and Seiver in their second.

When action got down to the final two players, it was Koon up against Seiver. This came after the elimination of Duhamel in third place, and on the 228th hand of the heat, things were all over.

Koon and Seiver were all in preflop, but it was Koon's dominating A{8d{ that would prevail over the Q8 of Seiver. The flop, turn, and river ran out QJ8A6 to give Koon the victory.

Here are how the standings looked following Heat No. 2:

RankPlayerHeat 1Heat 2Total
1Jason Koon31417
2Daniel Cates9716
3Jeff Gross14--14
T4Scot Seiver01111
T4Dan Colman11--11
6Jonathan Duhamel--99
7Sorel Mizzi7--7
8Brian Rast156
9Antonio Esfandiari5--5
10Phil Laak--33
11Vanessa Selbst--11
12Dan Shak--00

Mizzi Wins Heat No. 3

The third heat consisted of Gross, Duhamel, Mizzi, Koon, Shak, Laak, Selbst, and Colman, while Esfandiari, Rast, Seiver, and Cates sat on the sidelines.

First to go was Laak, who earned no points for his last-place finish and continued a very lackluster performance in the event thus far. He was followed out the door by Duhamel (1 point), Koon (3 points), Selbst (5 points), Shak (7 points), and Colman (9 points) before Mizzi and Gross went heads up.

On the 211th hand of the third heat, Mizzi put an end to things and defeated Gross when his A7 held up against the J10. The money went in before the flop, and the board ran out A42K9 to give Mizzi the victory and 14 points. Gross added 11 points for finishing in second place, and that was enough to move him back into the overall lead.

Here are how the standings looked following Heat No. 3:

RankPlayerHeat 1Heat 2Heat 3Total
1Jeff Gross14--1125
2Sorel Mizzi7--1421
T3Dan Colman11--920
T3Jason Koon314320
5Daniel Cates97--16
6Scott Seiver011--11
7Jonathan Duhamel--9110
8Dan Shak--077
T9Brian Rast15--6
T9Vanessa Selbst--156
11Antonio Esfandiari5----5
12Phil Laak--303

Colman Wins Heat No. 4

In the fourth heat, Esfandiari got back into action and two breaks in a row, and he was joined by Cates, Mizzi, Duhamel, Laak, Selbst, Colman, and Seiver.

Seiver was eliminated first, earning zero points and not doing himself any favors in terms of the overall standings, before Cates following him out the door next for just one point. Then it was Selbst (3 points), Mizzi (5 points), Duhamel (7 points), and Esfandiari (9 points) next to go in that order before Colman took on Laak in heads-up play.

On the 156th hand of the heat — the shortest heat thus far — Colman finished off Laak. Laak had raised the button with the K10, and Colman called in the big blind with the 86 to bring about a K86 flop. Colman check-raised Laak's bet of 40,000 to 120,000, and Laak called to see the 2 land on the turn. Colman bet 240,000, and Laak called. After the 7 completed the board on the river, Colman moved all in. Laak called and saw the bad news that his top pair was second best.

Here are how the standings looked following Heat No. 4:

RankPlayerHeat 1Heat 2Heat 3Heat 4Total
1Dan Colman11--91434
2Sorel Mizzi7--14526
3Jeff Gross14--11--25
4Jason Koon3143--20
T5Daniel Cates97--117
T5Jonathan Duhamel--91717
7Phil Laak--301114
8Antonio Esfandiari5----914
9Scott Seiver011--011
10Vanessa Selbst--1539
11Dan Shak--07--7
12Brian Rast15----6

Rast Wins Heat No. 5

In the fifth heat, Gross, Koon, Esfandiari, Cates, Shak, Laak, Rast, and Colman all saw action, but it was Rast who came out on top to grab a much needed win.

Shak was first to go, and then it was Esfandiari (1 point), Colman (3 points), Laak (5 points), Cates (7 points), and Koon (9 points) to follow. That left Rast to do battle with Gross, who had once again made it to heads-up play in a heat.

On the 153rd hand of the table, Gross four-bet jammed with the K8 into Rast's AA. He received no help on the 653J5 board, and Rast earned the 14 points for the win. Gross added 11 to his overall tally.

Here are how the standings looked following Heat No. 5:

RankPlayerHeat 1Heat 2Heat 3Heat 4Heat 5Total
1Dan Colman11--914337
2Jeff Gross14--11--1136
3Jason Koon3143--929
4Sorel Mizzi7--145--26
5Daniel Cates97--1724
6Brian Rast15----1420
7Phil Laak--3011519
8Jonathan Duhamel--917--17
9Antonio Esfandiari5----9115
10Scott Seiver011--0--11
11Vanessa Selbst--153--9
12Dan Shak--07--07

Seiver Wins Heat No. 6

In the final preliminary heat, Mizzi, Esfandiari, Rast, Gross, Duhamel, Selbst, Seiver, and Shak all took their seats. Selbst was first to go, earning zero points and finishing her Premier League with just nine points.

From there, Gross (1 point), Shak (3 points), Esfandiari (5 points), Mizzi (7 points), and Duhamel (9 points) were all eliminated, and it was Seiver up against Rast.

After a long duel between the two, Seiver came out on top on the 220th hand of the heat. The two found all the money in on the A108 flop, with Seiver holding the Q6 for a flush draw and Rast the 107 for a pair of tens. The turn kept things clean for Rast when the K fell, but the 5 spiked on the river to give Seiver a flush and the win.

Here are how the standings looked following Heat No. 6:

RankPlayerHeat 1Heat 2Heat 3Heat 4Heat 5Heat 6Total
T1Dan Colman11--9143--37
T1Jeff Gross14--11--11137
3Sorel Mizzi7--145--733
4Brian Rast15----141131
5Jason Koon3143--9--29
6Jonathan Duhamel--917--926
7Scott Seiver011--0--1425
8Daniel Cates97--17--24
9Antonio Esfandiari5----91520
10Phil Laak--30115--19
11Dan Shak--07--0310
12Vanessa Selbst--153--09

Koon and Seiver Advance to Final Table

With the top four points earners — Colman, Gross, Mizzi, and Rast — all securing an automatic bid to the final table of six, the next four point earners — Koon, Duhamel, Seiver, and Cates — had to battle for the final two spots. Koon was to take on Cates, and Duhamel was to face Seiver.

Koon took on Cates in the first of the best-of-three matches, and he eliminated him by winning the first and second. The following day, Duhamel took on Seiver for the last spot at the final table, but lost when Seiver was able to pull off the victory. Seiver won the first match, Duhamel won the second, and then Seiver captured the third.

Mizzi Tops Final Table, Wins partypoker Premier League VII

There was plenty of firepower at the final table, but inevitably there could only be one winner. Falling first, though, was Rast, as he was sent packing by Colman on the 17th hand thanks to a bad beat. The two found the money in the middle preflop, and it was Rast's KK dominating Colman's AK. Following a board of Q108410, Colman had backed into a club flush and that was the end of the line for Rast. He earned $40,000 for his sixth-place finish at the final table.

Koon was next to go, and this one was a cooler for the young pro on the 59th hand of the final table. With the board reading 10658 on the turn, Koon had the 106 for two pair, but little did he know Mizzi had the best of it with the 97 for the straight. The two got all in, and Koon wasn't able to improve to a full house ager the Q landed on the river. Koon earned $60,000 for his fifth-place finish at the final table.

Just two hands later, Seiver was out the door. After raise-calling a three-bet against Colman, Seiver moved all in on the A109 flop against his opponent. Colman quickly called with the 1010 for middle set of tens, while Seiver was in a world of hurt with the A7. The 8 on the turn did give Seiver a straight draw and some help, but the Q landed on the river to end his tournament. Seiver pocketed $80,000 for his fourth-place finish at the final table.

After falling back to the short stack during three-handed play, Colman's final hand came on the 75th hand of the final table. It was his K10 that couldn't come from behind against Mizzi's KK, and he was gone in third place, worth an additional $120,000.

When heads-up play began between Mizzi and Gross, Mizzi had a big 9-1 chip lead. He had 1.807 million in chips to Gross' 210,000. That didn't stop Gross, as he battled back a couple of times, even slightly taking the chip lead at one point. In the end, though, Mizzi proved to be too much for Gross and the Canadian won the first partypoker Premier League event held in his homeland.

The 97 proved to be Mizzi's hand of the final table, as he severely crippled Gross on the 159th hand after flopping a combo draw and turning his inside straight. Gross had flopped top pair and was drawing dead when the money went in on the turn.

On the final hand, the 186th hand of the final table, Gross moved all in with the QQ, and Mizzi called with the Q8. Despite Gross having a dominating hand, it was just Mizzi's day. The flop, turn, and river came 109475 to give Mizzi the flush and send Gross home in second place.

For his runner-up finish, Gross earned $200,000. Add that to the $74,000 he earned off of his points, and Gross walked away with $274,000. On the other hand, Mizzi scored the impressive $400,000 first-place prize and the right to be called champion. Mizzi also earned $66,000 from his points, for a grand total of $466,000 in prize money.

Congratulations to all of the winners, and especially to Sorel Mizzi on becoming the partypoker Premier League VII champion.

Data courtesy of the partypoker blog.

Get all the latest PokerNews updates on your social media outlets. Follow us on Twitter and find us on both Facebook and Google+!

Share this article
Donnie Peters

More Stories

Other Stories