Showing posts with label Shooting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shooting. Show all posts

March 10, 2012

Moon Kim Rises Above Field to Win WPT Bay 101 Shooting Star

Poker News RSS / / 10 March 2012 / Leave a Comment

Moon Kim and friends celebrate his victory in the 2012 WPT Bay 101 Shooting Star Main Event (Photo: World Poker Tour)

Moon Kim and friends celebrate his victory in the 2012 WPT Bay 101 Shooting Star Main Event (Photo: World Poker Tour)

Kim's $960,900 score is well above his previous career best cash of $85,000 for winning another Bay 101 event back in 2007. The amateur player won his entry into this year's Shooting Star Main Event by winning a $1K satellite.

In a tournament that featured many of poker's biggest names, the 2012 World Poker Tour Bay 101 Shooting Star saw an amateur, Moon Kim, rise above the field of 364 entrants to claim the title and first prize of $960,900. In fact, none of the final six who made the final table were among the tourney's designated bounties, although Kim nonetheless had to outlast a tough final group that included Erik Cajelais, Joe Serock, and another amateur and runner-up finisher, Ubaid Habib.

Cajelais was the chip leader to start Friday's final table with more than 3.6 million chips, with Habib and Kim his closest challengers with a bit more than 2 million each. After 112 hands all six were still at the table, with Kim having nudged out ahead of Cajelais into the lead with a little more than 3 million.

By then Joseph Elpayaa had become the super-short stack with less than a big blind, and was soon all in with Ac-6c against Andrew Badecker's Kd-Jh. A jack flopped, and when the turn and river brought no help Elpayaa was out in sixth.

About 20 hands later it was Badecker raising from the button, then watching Kim push all in from the big blind. Badecker called with Ac-Kc and was racing against Kim's 4d-4h. The flop came As-5s-2s to give Badecker the lead, but the 3h turn gave Kim a wheel, making the 8d no matter. They were down to four.

Over the next couple of hours Cajelais fell down below a half million chips while Kim built up over 6.5 million. Then came a hand in which Cajelais was all in before the flop against both Kim and Habib. Five cards later Habib had drawn kings and queens while the others had but ace-high, eliminating Cajelais in fourth.

Soon Serock was all in for his last 1.15 million or so with 9c-9s and hoping his pair would hold against Kim's Kc-Qc. But the board came 8s-6d-3h-Ks-7d to give Kim kings and knock out Serock in third.

Kim held the lead to start heads-up play with 6.76 million to Habib's 4.16 million. After 35 hands the pair's stacks were nearly the same when Kim opened with a min-raise to 240,000 from the button and Habib called. The flop came 9d-4c-2d, and Habib checked. Kim bet 300,000, Habib raised to 900,000, then Kim pushed all in and Habib called.

Habib had Qc-9h for top pair of nines while Kim had Jd-7d for a flush draw. The turn was the Ac and Habib was still best, but the river was the 8d, bringing Kim the flush and the win.

2012 WPT Bay 101 Shooting Star final table payouts:
1st:  Moon Kim -- $960,900?
2nd:  Ubaid Habib -- $570,200?
3rd:  Joe Serock -- $320,400
4th:  Erik Cajelais -- $256,300?
5th:  Andrew Badecker -- $192,300?
6th:  Joseph Elpayaa -- $128,200

Kim, a recreational player from California, has several small cashes over the last five years, his previous best being an $85,000 score for winning a spread-limit hold'em event at Bay 101 back in 2007. Kim also finished 393rd in the 2008 WSOP Main Event for $28,950.

Kim won a $1,000 satellite to gain entry into this year's $10,000 buy-in Bay 101 Main Event, and thus comes away with a sweet return of better than 960 times his initial investment.

Join Betfair Poker Now.

Twenty players returned to their seats inside the Bay 101 Casino in San Jose, California yesterday each of them hoping to at least make it through the day with their chip stacks intact and earn their place on the televised...

Poker is a game of decisions. Each session or tournament consists of numerous hands, with every hand involving numerous choices made by all players. Strategists often talk of the need to consider every "decision point" in a hand carefully, asking...

From time to time poker players, for some unknown reason, love to start with shallow stacks and move all-in like crazy horses just for the laugh. Poker players especially like to do this when they can rebuy and try to...


Amazon Sports Center

March 22, 2011

Satellite Winner Takes Down Shooting Star Event

Poker News RSS / Matthew Pitt / 21 March 2011 / Leave a Comment

From left ot right, Mike Sexton, Alan Sternberg and Vivek Rajkumar. Photo credit to the World Poker Tour

From left ot right, Mike Sexton, Alan Sternberg and Vivek Rajkumar. Photo credit to the World Poker Tour

Although it may not have been as epic as Chris Moneymaker turning a $38 online satellite win into $2,500,000 when he won the 2003 World Series of Poker Main Event but Alan Sternberg's win at the Bay 101 Shooting Star World Poker Tour event will go down as one of the great success stories.

The Bay 101 Shooting Star Main Event is one of the toughest fields on the WPT circuit due to the heavy presence of well-known and respected professional players taking part but that did not seem to bother Sternberg who handled himself impeccably throughout the tournament despite finding himself on the end of a horrible bad beat early at the final table.

The six handed final table played for just under an hour, during which time 27 hands were played, before it lost its first player. With blinds at 12,000/24,000/4,000a Mike Matusow raised to 55,000 from the button and then called when Mike Sexton moved all in for 200,000 from the big blind. Sexton's KcQs was dominating the KhJd of Matuswo but by the river the board read Ah-8d-4s-2h-Jc and Sexton was sent to the rail to pick up $148,000.

Casey McCarrel followed him just three hands later, his AhQh losing to the JcTs of World Series of Poker bracelet winner Steven Kelly. The money went in preflop and Kelly spiked a ten on the flop, which held, to eliminate McCarrel in fifth place, worth $221,800.

Then on the 45th hand of the final table disaster struck for Sternberg. On a board reading As-6c-5h-Qd-Qc he called an all in bet from Vivek "Psyduck" Rajkumar whilst holding 6d6s for a full house, only for Rajkumar to flip over QhQs for rivered quads! Losing a 1,800,000 chip pot would be enough to tilt most players but Sternberg kept his cool, did not panic and sat patiently choosing his spots to accumulate chips

Whilst he was doing so Rajkumar was busy losing the chips he had won from Sternberg, though it took another 100 hands for him to do so. On hand #131 with blinds now at 30,000/60,000/10,000a Rajkumar found himself with just 750,000 chips and these found their way into the middle when he open shoved from the button. Kelly re-shoved and Matusow showed king-queen before folding. This didn't please Kelly as he also held king-queen and Matusow had two of his outs but Rajkumar had made the play with KdJc and was badly dominated. The final board ran out Ac-3c-2h-7d-Th and Rajkumar was eliminated in fourth place, worth $295,800.

Matusow followed suit another hour later as his dream of a first WPT title lay in ruins. The blinds had increased to 40,000/80,000/10,000a and when Sternberg raised to 180,000 on the button, Matusow moved all in for 1,380,000 from the big blind. Sternberg made the call and turned over KhQh, nicely in front of the lowly 9d2s of Matusow. A Qd-Tc-6d-4d-2h board was enough to bust Matusow in third place which netted him $369,800.

Going into heads-up there was only 50,000 chips difference between the two players but Sternberg quickly put some distance between them. On hand #182 he raised to 200,000 preflop, Kellyt made it 560,000 to play and Sternberg made the call. The flop came down Ts-8s-5d, Kelly bet 470,000 and Sternberg smooth called. The turn saw the 5h make an appearance and Kelly upped the ante by betting 1,100,000 and again Sternberg just called. The river was the Td and both players checked, Kelly turning over 9h7h, losing out to the 9c8c of Sternberg, who now lead 8,300,000 to 4,160,000.

Seven hands later and he won another 2,300,000 chips when he forced Kelly to fold on a Td-4h-3h-5c-Kh board to give himself a five-to-one chip lead. Despite the massive advantage it took 46 hands for Sternberg to dispatch of his opponent. Kelly min-raised to 240,000 which prompted Sternberg to move all in. Kelly made the call and looked set for a double up as his AhQh was much stronger than the Ts8c of his opponent. Both players made a pair on the Qd-8h-7h flop and when the turn was the 7s it looked like Kelly was back in business. However the dealer put out the 8c on the river to give Sternberg a full house and the win! $1,039,000 from a small satellite win will be one of the best ROIs ever seen!

Final table payouts

1: Alan Sternberg: $1,039,000
2: Steven Kelly: $595,300
3: Mike Matusow: $369,800
4: Vivek Rajkumar: $295,800
5: Casey McCarrel: $221,800
6: Mike Sexton: $148,000

Join Betfair Poker now!

A convergence of recent experiences and events got me thinking a lot about "image" and poker. I'm not referring to image in poker -- that is, the impression someone projects at the table regarding what kind of player he or...

The World Poker Tour Bay 101 Shooting Star Main Event has reached the final table after the 24 players who returned to the San Jose based casino yesterday afternoon where whittled down to just six. Just two weeks ago were...

The World Poker Tour Bay 101 event is one of the most eagerly anticipated stops on the WPT circuit thanks to the unique format that is played out. At the start of each of the Day 1's there is a...


Betfair website