Rabichow Leads the Final Six in the partypoker LIVE MILLIONS North America Main Event

Adam Lamers
Live Reporter
Brandyn Trenholm
Live Reporter
8 min read
Kevin Rabichow

The final six players have been reached in the CA$10,000 Main Event at the 2019 partypoker MILLIONS LIVE North America at the Playground Poker Club in Montreal, Canada. It took 12 hours on Day 4 to dwindle the field down from 16 players and Kevin Rabichow has once again claimed the chip lead.

Rabichow bagged the Day 2 chip lead and coasted through Day 3 to finish second in the counts behind a surging Danick Landriault. However, the tides turned today and Rabichow was on the receiving end of a couple of bluffs gone bad from Landriault. Heading into the final day, Rabichow will return with 156,150,000 chips, more than a quarter of the chips in play.

Francois Billard, the hometown favorite, is not far behind with 126,250,000. Billard made a late rally that all stemmed from a lucky double up when he spiked a three-outer on the river. He topped that off by picking up a couple of key pots toward the end of the night to finish second in chips, the only other player in the nine-figure range.

Francois Billard
Francois Billard

Paul Fontan (87,975,000), partypoker pro Joni Jouhkimainen (79,050,000), Alexandros Kolonias (40,550,000), and Landriault (33,150,000) round out the remaining players. They will all return with CA$250,000 locked up but there is a cool CA$1,000,000 awaiting the winner.

Main Event Final Table Seating Assignments

SeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Paul FontanSpain87,975,00063
2Danick LandriaultCanada33,150,00024
3Kevin RabichowUnited States156,150,000112
4Joni JouhkimainenFinland79,050,00056
5Francois BillardCanada126,250,00090
6Alexandros KoloniasGreece40,550,00029

With only 16 players returning for the penultimate day and the blinds being increased to 90 minutes after a couple of levels, the action was expected to be much slower than the previous days. It took a while for the first elimination to occur but when it did, they seemed to come in bunches. Senthuran Vijayaratnam was the first to fall by the wayside and was quickly followed by Josue Sauvageau and Seyedrohollah Ettehadi. Before the first break of the day, John Cayley was also sent to the rail leaving just 12 players.

There were no eliminations in the next level of play but Erik Lemarquand was grinding a short stack. He eventually got his chips in with king-jack suited but was dominated by the ace-king of Upeshka De Silva. He found no help on the runout and hit the rail. Those chips didn't stay with De Silva for long as he was the next to be ousted. De Silva turned two pair against Fontan's pocket aces but the river counterfeit De Silva as he bowed out in 11th place.

Upeshka De Silva
Upeshka De Silva

It was about 90 minutes later when the next bustout would finally occur. Chips were tossed back and forth and multiple players grabbed a hold of the chip lead and Jason James was forced to watch it all happen in front of him. His flopped two pair was no match for Fontan's turned set of deuces and all of the chips got in the middle on the river.

The unofficial final table of nine players lasted nearly three hours as everyone started with a stack of over 30 big blinds. Armin Rezaei was the casualty of bluff gone wrong against Rabichow and quickly became one of the shorter stacks. He eventually found himself at risk with pocket fives against the pocket kings of Kolonias and was unable to improve.

As the schedule dictated, two more eliminations were required before the action would conclude for the day. Ruben Perceval put up a strong fight for quite some time but also ran a small pocket pair into a premium hand of Rabichow. In the last hand of the night, Ben Heath found himself on the wrong side of the river again. Both players turned a pair but Kolonias rivered two pair to bring an end to Day 4.

2019 partypoker LIVE MILLIONS North America Main Event Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize (CAD)Prize(USD)
1----$1,000,000$744,138
2----$650,000$483,690
3----$473,700$352,498
4----$370,000$275,331
5----$300,000$223,241
6----$250,000$186,035
7Ben HeathUnited Kingdom$200,000$148,828
8Ruben PercevalCanada$150,000$111,621
9Armin RezaeiAustria$100,000$74,414

The final six will return Sunday, May 26 for the last day of the 2019 partypoker MILLIONS LIVE North America at the Playground Poker Club. The action will resume at 12 p.m. EST with 26:17 remaining in Level 33. The blinds will be 700,000/1,400,000 with a 1,400,000 big blind ante. The levels will continue to be 90 minutes in length and will be reduced to 45 minutes when heads-up begins.

Continue to follow along with the PokerNews live reporting team as we bring you all of the coverage until a winner is crowned.

Brian Yoon Wins the High Roller

A total of 102 entry slips were sold for the 2019 partypoker LIVE MILLIONS North America CA$10,300 High Roller at the Playground Poker Club in Kahnawake, Quebec. When the last chance saloon had closed for business it was Brian Yoon taking home the trophy, along with the CA$300,000 first place cash prize.

Brian Yoon
Brian Yoon

Yoon started the final day second in chips and got off to a slow start, losing multiple pots during the first couple levels of play. It was not until the third level that he really started to kick it up and gain some traction. He built his stack back up to the third position when the unofficial final table started and then took another plummet.

The Torrance, California native continued his rollercoaster ride throughout the final table, losing almost half of his stack to second place finisher Pierre-Paul Paulin on an ill-timed bluff with king-high against Paulin's set of sevens. Yoon's sails caught wind again during six-handed play, finding himself on the better end of a cooler against Aleksandr Merzhinskii who was holding kings against the aces of Yoon.

When asked about how he was feeling Yoon replied: "It's cool, I haven't done well in any partypoker tournaments or anything like that so I think this is the first for any partypoker related venue and I don't really have any trophies or anything, I have some bracelets but I actually don't have a trophy, so it was nice to win one."

partypoker LIVE MILLIONS North American High Roller Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize (CA)
1Brian YoonUnited States$300,000
2Pierre-Paul PaulinCanada$185,000
3Anatoly FilatovRussia$129,400
4Maria HoUnited States$95,000
5Louis BoutinCanada$75,000
6Aleksandr MerzhinskiiRussia$55,000
7Bartlomiej MachonPoland$45,000
8David LopezSpain$35,000
Final Table
Final Table

Final Day Action

The final day saw just 16 return and before the second level of play was finished the bubble had already come and gone. partypoker pro Bertrand Grospellier would be dubbed the bubble boy during a hand that seemed unlikely for him to have an outcome where he would not cash. Maria Ho moved all in, Grospellier jammed over the top and fellow partypoker pro Anatoly Filatov called them both. Filatov flopped two pair, it was looking like both Grospellier and Ho would take an exit at the end of the hand, with Ho bubbling and Grospellier min-cashing. The board ran out runner-runner spades and Ho scooped with her flush while Grospellier was sent packing.

Maria Ho & Bertrand Grospellier
Maria Ho and Bertrand Grospellier

After the bubble popped, Doigo Veiga moved all in and found a caller in David Lopez. Veiga was ahead before the flop with his ace but Lopez flopped two pair and sent Veiga out in eleventh. Lander Lijo grinded a short stack for the better part of the day and elected to jam on the button for his remainder with suited connectors. Ho moved all in over the top with king-jack and the board ran out dry as Ho took down the pot with her king high, sending Lijo out in tenth.

The unofficial final table was set and after just 15 minutes of play, the first casualty took an exit. Bartlomiej Machon opened from the hijack and Charles La Boissonniere defended his big blind. La Boissonniere check-raised all in on the flop and Machon called. La Boissonniere flopped a flush and straight draw, Machon had the only pair between the two and it was the only one that mattered after the board bricked out, sending La Boissonniere out in ninth place.

The tournament was now officially down to the final table and the first elimination happened just twenty minutes into play. Filatov raised largely from the small and Lopez moved all in for around double the original raise. Filatov snap-called and the two turned over their hands. Lopez was in incredible shape with pocket queens against Filatov's ace-rag. The dealer spread out an ace-high board and that was the end of Lopez's night, being eliminated in eighth place.

Machon slowly lost his once-promising looking stack and shoved his remaining chips into the middle from the button. Filatov yelled "Let's gamble!" as he slammed in the call. Machon's king-seven failed to connect with any of the board and he was eliminated to the ace-high of Filatov in seventh. Merzhinskii had an up and down day come to an end in a way that no poker player likes to see unless you are on the same side that Yoon was. The Russian moved his stack in with pocket kings, only to run into the pocket aces of Yoon, busting out in sixth.

Louis Boutin fought as long as possible but in the end, he could not win a flip against Paulin. Boutin pushed his remaining stack all in with jack-ten against the pocket nines of Paulin. The board ran out dry and Boutin headed to the payout desk in fifth place. Ho won several hands throughout the final table that almost put her in a spot to really take control and apply some pressure but shortly after every hand she won, it seemed like she would lose two in return. She moved her remaining chips in with queen-eight against the nines of Yoon, she hit a queen but Yoon's flopped set took down the pot, sending her out in fourth.

The three-handed play lasted for just over an hour before someone headed to the rail and that someone was partypoker pro Filatov. He could not compete with how hot his two opponents were running, losing chips in almost every pot he played. Slowly he withered down to a short stack and moved all in with his king-ten against the ace-nine of Yoon. Filatov failed to hit anything and was drawing dead after Yoon turned the nut flush, being eliminated in third.

Saying the heads-up match was back and forth would be an understatement for the way it played out. Paulin and Yoon duked it out for almost five hours of play before someone had all the chips. The two saw a different leader after every few hands of play and both were short multiple times during the marathon of a heads-up match. One hand during the match stood out the most when Paulin made an incredible call for his tournament life against a bluffing Yoon. Paulin would lose the next few hands soon after, putting him in the short stack position. He attempted to make a move on Yoon but was to no avail as Yoon called with his pair and held on to take down the tournament, sending Paulin out in second place for a respectable CA$185,000.

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Adam Lamers
Live Reporter
Brandyn Trenholm
Live Reporter

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