2016 World Championship of Online Poker

$102,000 Super High Roller
Day: 1
Event Info

2016 World Championship of Online Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
k4
Prize
$1,172,461
Event Info
Buy-in
$100,000
Prize Pool
$2,800,000
Entries
28
Level Info
Level
21
Blinds
2,400 / 4,800
Ante
720

Rast Eliminated, Haxton Leads

Level 13 : 500/1,000, 150 ante
Brian Rast
Brian Rast

From first position, Brian "tsarrast" Rast raised to 2,500 and small blind "bencb789" made the call. Big blind Ike "philivey2694" Haxton squeezed to 8,500 and Rast shoved for 28,855. "bencb789" folded, Haxton called.

Brian "tsarrast" Rast: {6-Diamonds}{6-Clubs}
Ike "philivey2694" Haxton: {A-Clubs}{A-Diamonds}

The board ran out {5-Clubs}{J-Spades}{2-Hearts}{8-Hearts}{3-Clubs} and Rast hit the rail.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of philivey2694 us
philivey2694
150,961
35,285
35,285
Profile photo of tsarrast us
tsarrast
Busted

Tags: Brian RastIsaac Haxton

Doug Polk Busted

Level 11 : 300/600, 90 ante
Doug Polk
Doug Polk

Jason Mercier just bought in for a second time, which makes Doug "WCG|Rider" Polk the first one to completely bust from the tournament. He started his last hand with 17,577 chips in the 250/500-level.

Under the gun Polk raised to 1,250 before Mustapha "lasagnaaammm" Kanit put in a 3-bet to 3,312. All other folded and Polk made the call.

He checked to Kanit on the {6-Hearts}{k-Spades}{a-Hearts} flop and the Italian continued for 3,115. Polk called leaving him with less than a pot size bet behind. He checked again when the {5-Clubs} hit the virtual felt on the turn. Kanit put Polk all in and he made the call.

Polk: {a-Clubs}{9-Clubs}
Kanit: {8-Hearts}{7-Hearts}

Polk was ahead with his pair of aces, but Kanit had an open ended straight draw and a flush draw. The {4-Spades} on the river gave him a straight and sent Polk to the rail.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of lasagnaaammm us
lasagnaaammm
48,702
18,702
18,702
Profile photo of WCG|Rider us
WCG|Rider
Busted

Kuznetsov Exit

Level 9 : 200/400, 60 ante
Timofey Kuznetsov
Timofey Kuznetsov

This Super High Roller became a disappointment for Timofey "Trueteller" Kuznetsov. The Russian was just eliminated from the tournament by Mikael "ChaoRen160" Thuritz.

In his last hand, Kuznetsov opened from the button with a raise to 750. Thuritz put in a reraise from the small blind, making it 2,400. The flop came down {7-Hearts}{3-Hearts}{3-Diamonds} and Thuritz made a continuation bet of 1,800. Kuznetsov called.

On the {8-Diamonds} turn Thuritz checked, only to check-shove after Kuznetsov put in a bet of 3,900, leaving him with 13,400 behind. Kuznetsov called which put his tournament life on the line.

Thuritz {A-Hearts}{J-Diamonds}
Kuznetsov {A-Diamonds}{5-Diamonds}

Although Thuritz only had ace-high he was still in front against Kuznetsov's flush draw. The Russian needed a diamond or a five to double up and had some split outs as well. The {J-Hearts} wasn't one of those outs and Kuznetsov was eliminated from the tournament.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of ChaoRen160 se
ChaoRen160
56,251
22,140
22,140
Profile photo of Trueteller ru
Trueteller
Busted

Polk's Bluff Fails

Level 8 : 150/300, 50 ante
Doug Polk
Doug Polk

Christoph "26071985" Vogelsang increased his chiplead a little bit by picking off Doug "WCG|Rider" Polk's bluff.

Polk opened under the gun to 750 and Vogelsang defended his big blind. Both players check on the {9-Clubs}{4-Clubs}{7-Diamonds} flop. The turn gave the {2-Diamonds} and Vogelsang checked again. This time Polk fired 1,091 and his German opponent called.

The turn was the {8-Hearts} and Vogelsang checked a third time. Polk fired again this time for an amount of 2,903. Vogelsang quickly called and Polk had to show {q-Spades}{j-Hearts} for a complete bluff. Vogelsang had {8-Spades}{4-Spades} for a rivered two pair.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of 26071985 de
26071985
64,100
4,509
4,509
Profile photo of WCG|Rider us
WCG|Rider
24,200
-2,763
-2,763

OtB_RedBaron Eliminated and Re-entered

Level 7 : 125/250, 40 ante

We just saw our first elimination of the day, as OtB_RedBaron lost in a flush over flush situation. But the Belgian wasn't completely gone, because he re-entered right away.

It all happened in a blind battle between him and Christoph "26071985" Vogelsang. OtB_RedBaron put in a 4-bet preflop to 3,360 and was called by big blind Vogelsang.

Both checked the {6-Diamonds}{3-Diamonds}{Q-Diamonds} flop and the {2-Diamonds} turn. The action came on the river when the {K-Spades} was dealt. OtB_RedBaron put in a bet of 5,572 with only 14,772 behind. Vogelsang wasted little time and shoved all in. His Belgian opponent tanked for several minutes before he elected to call.

Vogelsang showed {a-Diamonds}{10-Spades} for an ace-high flush which bested OtB_RedBaron's {a-Clubs}{j-Diamonds} for a worse flush. The Belgian was sent to the virtual rail for only a couple of seconds before he put in another $102,000 as he re-entered this Super High Roller.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of 26071985 de
26071985
58,600
26,100
26,100
Profile photo of OtB_RedBaron be
OtB_RedBaron
30,000
4,191
4,191

It's Time for the Biggest Ever Buy-In Online Poker Tournament: the WCOOP $102,000 Super High Roller

Today, September 11, 2016, will go down in the online poker history books, if there were such a thing. At 12:30 Eastern U.S. Time (18:30 Central European Time, 6 hours and 30 minutes from posting this entry), the biggest ever buy-in tournament commences on PokerStars. Players are going to buy in for a whopping $102,000 for the 8-Max Super High Roller, event number 28 on the World Championship of Online Poker schedule. With a guaranteed $2,000,000 prize pool, it's the second biggest event on the schedule, only outdone by the Main Event.

Last year, the Super High Roller format debuted online as part of WCOOP 2015 with a $51,000 buy-in event. Ben "Ben86" Tollerene took down the tournament, beating a field of 46 to walk away a $616,518.34 winner after striking a deal with Jose "Cejakas14" Angel Latorre (second, $560,412.13) and Nikita "fish2013" Bodyakovskiy (third, $594,069.53).

PokerNews.com will provide you with live updates so you can keep track of who's winning and who's losing if you're not able to follow along with the action in the PokerStars client or live stream. We'll bring you all the big hands, all the bad beats and all the drama of this phenomenal event!

PokerStars' Lee Jones, Bryan Slick Talk WCOOP $102,000 Super High Roller

We sat down with Head of Poker Communications at PokerStars Lee Jones and Senior Manager of Online Championships at PokerStars Bryan Slick to get all the details on this event.

After the $51,000 Super High Roller during SCOOP last year, what made you decide to have a $102,000 this time?
Bryan Slick: When we put the $51,000 out last year, we did so with the intention of upping the ante in 2016, given there was success with the $51K and demand to go higher in 2016. The goal is to continue to push the envelope with the highest buy-in tournament in online history, to have an event that is extremely high-profile and that brings the elite stakes players out to play.

We ran an extensive survey of nosebleed stakes players to determine what they wanted and the $102,000 Super High Roller and $21,000 6-Max Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller emerged.

Lee Jones: The survey was sent to everyone that played a $10,000 or bigger event during TCOOP, SCOOP or WCOOP in the last year. We got 450 responses and those indicated there was really a demand for a $100,000 event. Unsurprisingly, the next popular choice was a PLO High Roller.

Were even bigger buy ins considered?
Slick: We considered $200,000, but only briefly.

Jones: We do what the players want us to do in these kinds of matters. That's the business we're in. We did the survey after last year's event and we did what the players got back to us. I'm sure we'll do a survey after this one. If the players say 'Let's do a million dollar one!,' we probably are going to say no though. I kind of doubt we would do an event that big.

looking at the buy-in. I think that we're uniquely qualified to organize such an event and we're incredibly excited to be running it. The option to be able to run the biggest buy-in event in the history of online poker is a big deal to us.

Will a Super High Roller be a fixture on the WCOOP schedule?
Jones: That's just a question the survey will have to answer for us. I think it will attract huge public attention and people will really enjoy it, so I don't see a reason it shouldn't. I think it will be a fantastic event with a murderers' row of the best players in the business and I'm excited to watch it.

Are there any special precautions for this biggest ever buy-in tournament?
Slick: I've added a special preregistration message to each High Roller tournament, warning players that

  • that they should be precisely aware of the date and time of the event;
  • that they should ensure the strength of their connection(s);
  • and that PokerStars will not be held liable for the stability of connections except in the case of a server crash.

It's noted that they should arrange for a backup connection in order to ensure that they're able to remain connected to the server in order to continue playing at such expensive stakes. An example of this message is as followed, in an approximation of how it will appear within the client:

“Please note the date and time of this tournament. This tournament begins at 12:30 Eastern U.S. time on Sunday, September 11. Refunds will not be issued to players missing this tournament fully or partially due to absence from the server. It is each player's responsibility to ensure that he or she is online and available to play.

By participating in a tournament, a player accepts the risk of Internet disconnection due to problems with the connection between their computer and the servers, lag, freeze or some other problem on the player's computer. PokerStars does not accept any responsibility for a player disconnect except in the case of a server crash.

It is recommended that players arrange for a backup connection in case the primary connection malfunctions for any reason.”

Jones: In terms of the mechanics of running the event, you just put a different number into the buy-in amount field. Back in the old days running such an event started with thinking about the total amount of chips in play and problems like that. That obviously isn't going to be a problem anymore in the modern age.

Are there any other security measures in place to prevent cheating in this huge event?
Jones: As soon as this tournament was put on the schedule, I went straight to one of our senior gaming integrity people and asked what the plan was. They're implementing additional measures to ensure the tournament is played fairly, but they're not going into details on those additional measures for obvious reasons.

We're not really concerned about Player A using Player B's account because this is a $100,000 buy-in event and it's a small community. Everyone knows everyone. If someone who no one has ever heard of buys in, I can assure you our security guys are going to be all over that.

Slick: This is the highest buy-in online event in history. As well as PokerStars' usual security checks, which all players on our site are subject to, we will indeed be implementing additional measures to ensure that this tournament is played fairly by all participants. We are not at liberty to let you know everything we'll be checking for reasons of privacy, but we can assure you that this will be the most heavily scrutinized tournament in the history of PokerStars.

How many players do you expect?
Jones: We had 46 runners in last year's $51,000 Super High Roller and I imagine that number will be similar. If you can find $50,000 to put into an online tournament, you can probably find $100,000 right?

We just have to see who signs up. We're not contacting players. I know for a fact that Jason Mercier is playing. I think Daniel Negreanu might play, but some of that, unfortunately, has to do with which country he's in. I expect Daniel is probably going to go back to Toronto to play this event.

Other than that, I don't have any specific names. I think for a $100,000 event you're looking at the usual suspects, though. There's just only so many people who are able to play a $100,000 event and they probably don't want to pass up on the opportunity to do so online. I'm gonna be astonished if you don't see guys like Fedor Holz and Mike McDonald sign up.

Are players allowed to play from the same IP address?
Jones: Yes, they are. Simple as that.

The world biggest buy-in online event will likely attract the crème de la crème of poker players and a rail unseen ever before. PokerNews will be covering the event with live reporting so everyone will be able to follow along, even if you don't have the PokerStars' client installed. Follow along starting Sunday, September 11. After the event is on the books, a replay with hole card information will be available for viewing in the PokerStars' client. A $34,680 qualifier Sit & Go regarding two seats runs upon six players signing up.