Roger Teska Wins Caribbean Poker Party $25,500 MILLIONS World

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Roger Teska Wins Caribbean Poker Party $25,500 MILLIONS World for $2,000,000!

It turned out to be a grueling 13-hour day but when all was said and done, it was all worth it for Roger Teska. The partypoker Caribbean Poker Party $25,500 MILLIONS World wrapped up and Teska earned the victory along with a cool $2,000,000.

"There might be some partying the next couple days."

The high-stakes cash game regular defeated Steve O'Dwyer. "I definitely wasn't expecting to win coming into this [tournament]," Teska said in his winner's interview. "These guys know when to shove, what hands to shove with, and I don't. Steve is a better player than I am so I wanted to play bigger pots."

Teska hasn't played many tournaments in the past, but did make a name for himself in the Bahamas back in 2014 in a tournament where he really like the local alcoholic beverages while there. He was also announced to play the $1 million dollar buy-in Big One for One Drop back in 2012, so he definitely is no newby to the game. He admits that he enjoys testing his skills against some of the best in the game. This will definitely top his career-high score of $371,000, and Teska knows exactly what he's gonna do with his major payday. "There might be some partying the next couple days."

partypoker Caribbean Poker Party $25,500 MILLIONS World Final Table Results

PositionPlayerCountryPrize
1Roger TeskaUnited States$2,000,000
2Steve O'DwyerIreland$1,300,000
3Charles La BoissoniereCanada$1,000,000
4Paul TedeschiFrance$700,000
5Andras NemethHungary$550,000
6Ben TollereneUnited States$450,000
7Ranier KempeGermany$350,000
8Niall FarrellUnited Kingdom$300,000
9Joao VieiraPortugal$250,000

partypoker Caribbean Poker Party $25,500 MILLIONS World Final Table Action

Only nine players returned to the felt for the final day of competition with each of them guaranteed at least $250,000. Each elimination came with a hefty pay jump, and it was evident in the early going that ICM was a key factor.

Paul Tedeschi stormed into the final day as the short stack but held the chip lead by the end of the first level.

It would take over three hours for the first bust out to occur and it was partypoker's Joao Vieira to hit the rail first. Vieira eventually got his seventeen big blind stack in the middle with pocket jacks but ran into the pocket aces of Tedeschi.

Once the official final table of eight was formed, it didn't take long for Niall Farrell to get his chips in the middle as well. "Firaldo" finally picked up a pocket pair in the small blind, but Teska held a larger pair in the big blind to eliminate Farrell in eighth place.

Niall Farrell out in 8th place for $300,000
Niall Farrell out in 8th place for $300,000

In the same level, Rainer Kempe found himself on a stack of fewer than twenty big blinds. The German moved in with two Broadway cards but was dominated by the ace-jack of O'Dwyer. An ace came on the flop, and Kempe was drawing dead by the turn, ending his day in seventh place.

Six-handed play lasted for nearly two hours with the chip stacks fluctuating between all of the players. Ben Tollerene came into the day second in chips and even held the chip lead at one point, but had a bad run of cards over the course of an hour. Tollerene lost a big flip to Teska and was forced all in for just a couple of big blinds in the next hand. He was unable to survive and disappointedly hit the rail in sixth place.

When the players were sent on a dinner break, there were only four players remaining. That was after Andras Nemeth built up a stack from five big blinds to second in chips. He then played a monster pot with O'Dwyer for the chip lead, and the two players were flipping preflop. O'Dwyer out-flopped Nemeth's pocket pair and Nemeth was ousted in fifth place.

O'Dwyer held a monster chip lead after the break, and he was comfortable sitting back and watching the small stacks duke it out. Tedeschi and Teska elected to battle with pair versus pair preflop and the stacks nearly level. Teska came out on top which left Tedeschi on crumbs, and he was eliminated shortly after.

When three-handed play began, the chip stacks started to level out, and it quickly became anyone's game. Charles La Boissonniere jumped out to the chip lead, but it didn't take long for O'Dwyer to come roaring back. O'Dwyer started hitting every card in the deck, and he built up a massive lead with over 300 million in chips. When Teska shoved all in from the small blind with queen-seven, La Boissoniere called off his nine big blind stack with pocket nines. A queen on the flop gave Teska the lead, and La Boissonniere was unable to recover as he was eliminated in third place for $1,000,000.

Steve O'Dwyer
Steve O'Dwyer second for $1.3 million

It was 3-to-1 chip lead for O'Dwyer at the start of heads-up play, but an instant cooler leveled the match. Teska picked up pocket queens against O'Dwyer's pocket kings and hit a queen on the flop to score a double up. The chip lead swung back and forth a couple of times, but the major turning point was when Teska caught O'Dwyer bluffing and earned himself a double up. The players took a quick break, and Teska finished things off just a couple of hands later.

There is still plenty of more action to come your way from the Baha Mar Resort in the Bahamas. The PokerNews live reporting team will be back to bring you tournament coverage of the partypoker Caribbean Poker Party Main Event and the Super High Roller Championships so don't go anywhere!

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