J Schindler Poker
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A funny thing happened on Jake Schindler’s path towards decimating the field in the 2017 Super High Roller Bowl…he ran into Christoph Vogelsang, who fought back from a monumental chip disadvantage to win the championship of the event on Thursday night.
Greenwood has his own blog and writes movie reviews. (It’s refreshing to know that these high rollers also have lives and passions outside of the poker room.) J.C. Tran; Total Winnings: $12,962,466. Justin Cuong Van “J.C.” Tran is a Vietnamese-American poker shark based in Sacramento, California. Jake Schindler won the $100,000 buy-in Seminole Super High Rollers event last night after controversy over the payout structure dominated the tournament. Due to several potential high rollers still being involved in the $10 million guaranteed Seminole Hard Rock “Championship” tournament, the Seminole SHR event attracted just nine players.
With $12 million of the $16.8 million still on the table from the original prize pool, three men – chip leader Schindler (10.67 million), Vogelsang (5.245 million) and Stefan Schillhabel (hanging on with 885,000) – were still in contention for the title. Many thought, however, that Schindler was the odds-on favorite to win after his play on Wednesday to reach the final trio. What was thought to be a foregone conclusion, however, became an outstanding battle.J Schindler Poker Games
Schillhabel came out of the gate looking to build his stack and remain viable in the tournament, but it wasn’t to be. Although he would be able to make some key all-in moves for roughly the first half-hour of play, he would run into a classic race against Vogelsang that would end his tournament. After opening the betting while holding an off suit A-J, Schillhabel saw Vogelsang three-bet him out of the big blind. Schillhabel decided the time was now and pushed, which was met with an immediate call from Vogelsang as he tabled his pocket Queens. A Jack would come on the flop for Schillhabel, but there was no more help on the turn or river as he departed the event in third place.
*Jacob Carl Schindler (born September 26, 1989) is an American professional poker player from Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania known for his accomplishments in live and online poker tournaments.
*On the hand, Schindler limped in with an off suit A-K and Vogelsang chose to raise from the big blind with a K ♦ J ♦ to 400K. Schindler kept the pressure on Vogelsang, three-betting the German.
Down to heads up, Vogelsang was still more than five million chips behind Schindler even after knocking off Schillhabel. In less than a half-hour after the start of play, Schindler had increased that lead to more than 3:1 when, on a 10-J-A-9-6 board, Schindler picked off a Vogelsang bluff and called a 575K river bet with just J-5; Vogelsang could only muster a Q-5 for
complete air as the chips went to Schindler (12.9 million) and his stack dropped to under four million (3.9 million).
Vogelsang didn’t succumb to the pressures, however. He quietly worked his stack over the next hour and would surprisingly take the lead after a double. On the hand, Schindler limped in with an off suit A-K and Vogelsang chose to raise from the big blind with a K♦ J♦ to 400K. Schindler kept the pressure on Vogelsang, three-betting the German to 1.2 million, which Vogelsang called to see a 4♥ 5♦ 7♦ flop. Vogelsang would check-call another big bet (650K) from Schindler and an Ace came on the turn. Now holding top pair/top kicker, Schindler would fire another bet of 1.2 million, which was check-called again by Vogelsang. The 9♦ was the money card for Vogelsang, but Vogelsang didn’t deviate from his act and checked again. When Schindler moved all in after a great deal of thought, Vogelsang immediately called and tabled his flush, taking the five million-plus pot and taking over the lead.
Automatic poker odds calculator download. The next half-hour of battle saw Schindler scratch his way back to where the chip stacks were virtually even. After more than two hours of play, Vogelsang (8.6 million) only held a 400K lead over Schindler (8.2 million) as the battle raged onward. Schindler was relentless, taking another 90 minutes to work a reclaimed lead back out to a significant advantage, his 14.1 million against Vogelsang’s 2.7 million, but Vogelsang was just as resolute, coming back in a 30-minute span to steal the lead back from Schindler.
When the final hand came, it wasn’t in a massive clash but in a caught bluff. Schindler limped in with a J♥ 8♥ and Vogelsang, holding an inferior 10♠ 7♣, checked his option. The 3-10-2 hit Vogelsang, but he once again pulled into a shell and check-called the aggressive Schindler’s 100K flop bet. A seven on the turn gave Vogelsang two pair, but he continued to feed Schindler the rope to hang himself with another check. After Schindler fired off another big bet (400K), Vogelsang finally awoke to pop in a 1.5 million check-raise. Schindler made the call and, after a deuce came down, the “mind game” began.
Vogelsang, after check-raising the turn, plopped 2.3 million in the center and looked down, waiting for Schindler to make his decision. Despite holding absolutely nothing, Schindler read his opponent for a big nothing and put him to the test by moving all-in. With $6 million on the line and no time extensions left, Vogelsang had to make his decision within the 30-second shot clock (in use for the entirety of the Super High Roller Bowl). In the end, it was the right decision; Vogelsang called and turned up his two pair, thrusting his arms skyward in celebration of his new championship after Schindler’s bluff was displayed.
1. Christoph Vogelsang, $6,000,000
2. Jake Schindler, $3,600,000
3. Stefan Schillhabel, $2,400,000
4. Leon Tsoukernik, $1,800,000*
5. Byron Kaverman, $1,400,000*
6. Pratyush Buddiga, $1,000,000*
7. Justin Bonomo, $800,000*
(* – eliminated on Wednesday night)
With the new bankroll boost, Vogelsang should be set for the summer at the World Series of Poker. At the minimum, Vogelsang has a new achievement to add to his resume: he is now in the Top 100 players in all-time money earnings. Along with his previous $1.7 million-plus in tournament poker earnings, Vogelsang now sits in 82nd place all-time, ahead of such players as former World Champions Greg Raymer and Huck Seed, and others like Olivier Busquet, Yevgeniy Timoshenko and Nam Le.
With that, the 2017 Super High Roller Bowl has come to an end. It is expected that the edited product will be seen on NBC Sports Network later this year, which will give Christoph Vogelsang the opportunity to relive his career-defining moment as the champion of the event.Win gives Petrangelo his first World Poker Tour Championship
Nick Petrangelo added yet another accolade to his world-class poker resume Tuesday.
Petrangelo came out the winner in the WPT World Online Championships 6-Max Championship, taking home a $494,550 payday in the process. The tournament, officially titled Event #4: $3,200 6-Max Championship, ended with Petrangelo winning his first career World Poker Tour event.
Second-place finisher Artsiom Prostak of Belarus earned $368,250 for the runner-up showing. Prostak went into heads-up play with a three-to-one chip advantage over Petrangelo, but after a three-hour battle, Petrangelo emerged victorious.
Other top finishers included Russian Arsenii Karmatckii (3rd – $278,448) and the UK’s Patrice Brandt (4th – $192,200).Petrangelo navigates tough final tableJ Schindler Poker Player
Prostak came into final table play with a commanding chip lead, holding more than a third of the total chips in play. Prostak’s 68-big-blind stack doubled that of Elior Sion, who entered the seven-handed final table with 34 big blinds. Brandt (32 big blinds) and Petrangelo (31 big blinds) followed in close contention for the second-highest chip stack.
Jake Schindler (7th – $70,200) was the first to hit the rail from the final seven, losing most of an already short stack to Jiachen Gong in a pocket sevens versus pocket aces all-in preflop battle. Schindler’s pocket sevens found no improvement, and Schindler lasted just a few more hands before bowing out in seventh place.J Schindler Poker Club
Elior Sion (6th – $93,630) was the next to exit, seeing much of his 27-big-blind stack lost to Petrangelo after Sion’s pocket jacks ran into Petrangelo’s pocket aces. Sion open-shoved his remaining six big blinds under the gun with A♠3♦ a few hands later, but lost the last of those chips to Gong’s J♦J♥.
Gong (5th – $128,100) found an unlucky end to his tournament run a few hands later. Gong, with A♥A♦, got all-in preflop against Petrangelo’s J♦T♦. The board proved unkind for Gong, however, as 7♥J♣J♥J♠7♣ hit the table and left Ging drawing dead after the turn. The quad jacks set up Petrangelo with a 63-big-blind stack going into four-handed play, only trailing Prostak’s 71 big blinds.Final fourJ Schindler Poker Game
Both Brandt (22 big blinds) and Karmatckii (11 big blinds) went into the final four short-handed. Brandt went out in fourth place at the hands of Prostak, with Prostak’s turned set of eights rendering Brandt’s top pair of aces no good. Karmatckii exited in third, with his ace-king offsuit unable to improve against Prostak’s pocket jacks in an all-in preflop scenario.
Those two eliminations set up the heads-up match between Petrangelo and Prostak. Petrangelo went into the final matchup at a three-to-one chip deficit, but gained ground after pulling off a big bluff that resulted in Prostak folding a flush.
With 3♦K♦5♦7♦Q♣ on the board, Prostak checked from the big blind with Q♥J♦, and Petrangelo made a pot-sized shove for his last 18 big blinds. A call would have clinched the championship for Prostak, but Petrangelo’s bluff did the job, prompting Prostak to fold.
That hand narrowed Prostak’s chip advantage to a two-to-one lead, and Petraneglo continued to whittle away. Petrangelo battled to even the stacks within the next half hour.
Petrangelo held his own two-to-one chip lead going into the final hand. The stacks went in from both players on the river of a T♥2♠T♠5♠A♥ board, with Prostak’s A♣Q♠ up against Pentrangelo’s K♣T♣. Petrangelo’s trip tens stood as the winner, rendering Prostak’s aces up no good.
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*J Schindler Poker Games
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A funny thing happened on Jake Schindler’s path towards decimating the field in the 2017 Super High Roller Bowl…he ran into Christoph Vogelsang, who fought back from a monumental chip disadvantage to win the championship of the event on Thursday night.
Greenwood has his own blog and writes movie reviews. (It’s refreshing to know that these high rollers also have lives and passions outside of the poker room.) J.C. Tran; Total Winnings: $12,962,466. Justin Cuong Van “J.C.” Tran is a Vietnamese-American poker shark based in Sacramento, California. Jake Schindler won the $100,000 buy-in Seminole Super High Rollers event last night after controversy over the payout structure dominated the tournament. Due to several potential high rollers still being involved in the $10 million guaranteed Seminole Hard Rock “Championship” tournament, the Seminole SHR event attracted just nine players.
With $12 million of the $16.8 million still on the table from the original prize pool, three men – chip leader Schindler (10.67 million), Vogelsang (5.245 million) and Stefan Schillhabel (hanging on with 885,000) – were still in contention for the title. Many thought, however, that Schindler was the odds-on favorite to win after his play on Wednesday to reach the final trio. What was thought to be a foregone conclusion, however, became an outstanding battle.J Schindler Poker Games
Schillhabel came out of the gate looking to build his stack and remain viable in the tournament, but it wasn’t to be. Although he would be able to make some key all-in moves for roughly the first half-hour of play, he would run into a classic race against Vogelsang that would end his tournament. After opening the betting while holding an off suit A-J, Schillhabel saw Vogelsang three-bet him out of the big blind. Schillhabel decided the time was now and pushed, which was met with an immediate call from Vogelsang as he tabled his pocket Queens. A Jack would come on the flop for Schillhabel, but there was no more help on the turn or river as he departed the event in third place.
*Jacob Carl Schindler (born September 26, 1989) is an American professional poker player from Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania known for his accomplishments in live and online poker tournaments.
*On the hand, Schindler limped in with an off suit A-K and Vogelsang chose to raise from the big blind with a K ♦ J ♦ to 400K. Schindler kept the pressure on Vogelsang, three-betting the German.
Down to heads up, Vogelsang was still more than five million chips behind Schindler even after knocking off Schillhabel. In less than a half-hour after the start of play, Schindler had increased that lead to more than 3:1 when, on a 10-J-A-9-6 board, Schindler picked off a Vogelsang bluff and called a 575K river bet with just J-5; Vogelsang could only muster a Q-5 for
complete air as the chips went to Schindler (12.9 million) and his stack dropped to under four million (3.9 million).
Vogelsang didn’t succumb to the pressures, however. He quietly worked his stack over the next hour and would surprisingly take the lead after a double. On the hand, Schindler limped in with an off suit A-K and Vogelsang chose to raise from the big blind with a K♦ J♦ to 400K. Schindler kept the pressure on Vogelsang, three-betting the German to 1.2 million, which Vogelsang called to see a 4♥ 5♦ 7♦ flop. Vogelsang would check-call another big bet (650K) from Schindler and an Ace came on the turn. Now holding top pair/top kicker, Schindler would fire another bet of 1.2 million, which was check-called again by Vogelsang. The 9♦ was the money card for Vogelsang, but Vogelsang didn’t deviate from his act and checked again. When Schindler moved all in after a great deal of thought, Vogelsang immediately called and tabled his flush, taking the five million-plus pot and taking over the lead.
Automatic poker odds calculator download. The next half-hour of battle saw Schindler scratch his way back to where the chip stacks were virtually even. After more than two hours of play, Vogelsang (8.6 million) only held a 400K lead over Schindler (8.2 million) as the battle raged onward. Schindler was relentless, taking another 90 minutes to work a reclaimed lead back out to a significant advantage, his 14.1 million against Vogelsang’s 2.7 million, but Vogelsang was just as resolute, coming back in a 30-minute span to steal the lead back from Schindler.
When the final hand came, it wasn’t in a massive clash but in a caught bluff. Schindler limped in with a J♥ 8♥ and Vogelsang, holding an inferior 10♠ 7♣, checked his option. The 3-10-2 hit Vogelsang, but he once again pulled into a shell and check-called the aggressive Schindler’s 100K flop bet. A seven on the turn gave Vogelsang two pair, but he continued to feed Schindler the rope to hang himself with another check. After Schindler fired off another big bet (400K), Vogelsang finally awoke to pop in a 1.5 million check-raise. Schindler made the call and, after a deuce came down, the “mind game” began.
Vogelsang, after check-raising the turn, plopped 2.3 million in the center and looked down, waiting for Schindler to make his decision. Despite holding absolutely nothing, Schindler read his opponent for a big nothing and put him to the test by moving all-in. With $6 million on the line and no time extensions left, Vogelsang had to make his decision within the 30-second shot clock (in use for the entirety of the Super High Roller Bowl). In the end, it was the right decision; Vogelsang called and turned up his two pair, thrusting his arms skyward in celebration of his new championship after Schindler’s bluff was displayed.
1. Christoph Vogelsang, $6,000,000
2. Jake Schindler, $3,600,000
3. Stefan Schillhabel, $2,400,000
4. Leon Tsoukernik, $1,800,000*
5. Byron Kaverman, $1,400,000*
6. Pratyush Buddiga, $1,000,000*
7. Justin Bonomo, $800,000*
(* – eliminated on Wednesday night)
With the new bankroll boost, Vogelsang should be set for the summer at the World Series of Poker. At the minimum, Vogelsang has a new achievement to add to his resume: he is now in the Top 100 players in all-time money earnings. Along with his previous $1.7 million-plus in tournament poker earnings, Vogelsang now sits in 82nd place all-time, ahead of such players as former World Champions Greg Raymer and Huck Seed, and others like Olivier Busquet, Yevgeniy Timoshenko and Nam Le.
With that, the 2017 Super High Roller Bowl has come to an end. It is expected that the edited product will be seen on NBC Sports Network later this year, which will give Christoph Vogelsang the opportunity to relive his career-defining moment as the champion of the event.Win gives Petrangelo his first World Poker Tour Championship
Nick Petrangelo added yet another accolade to his world-class poker resume Tuesday.
Petrangelo came out the winner in the WPT World Online Championships 6-Max Championship, taking home a $494,550 payday in the process. The tournament, officially titled Event #4: $3,200 6-Max Championship, ended with Petrangelo winning his first career World Poker Tour event.
Second-place finisher Artsiom Prostak of Belarus earned $368,250 for the runner-up showing. Prostak went into heads-up play with a three-to-one chip advantage over Petrangelo, but after a three-hour battle, Petrangelo emerged victorious.
Other top finishers included Russian Arsenii Karmatckii (3rd – $278,448) and the UK’s Patrice Brandt (4th – $192,200).Petrangelo navigates tough final tableJ Schindler Poker Player
Prostak came into final table play with a commanding chip lead, holding more than a third of the total chips in play. Prostak’s 68-big-blind stack doubled that of Elior Sion, who entered the seven-handed final table with 34 big blinds. Brandt (32 big blinds) and Petrangelo (31 big blinds) followed in close contention for the second-highest chip stack.
Jake Schindler (7th – $70,200) was the first to hit the rail from the final seven, losing most of an already short stack to Jiachen Gong in a pocket sevens versus pocket aces all-in preflop battle. Schindler’s pocket sevens found no improvement, and Schindler lasted just a few more hands before bowing out in seventh place.J Schindler Poker Club
Elior Sion (6th – $93,630) was the next to exit, seeing much of his 27-big-blind stack lost to Petrangelo after Sion’s pocket jacks ran into Petrangelo’s pocket aces. Sion open-shoved his remaining six big blinds under the gun with A♠3♦ a few hands later, but lost the last of those chips to Gong’s J♦J♥.
Gong (5th – $128,100) found an unlucky end to his tournament run a few hands later. Gong, with A♥A♦, got all-in preflop against Petrangelo’s J♦T♦. The board proved unkind for Gong, however, as 7♥J♣J♥J♠7♣ hit the table and left Ging drawing dead after the turn. The quad jacks set up Petrangelo with a 63-big-blind stack going into four-handed play, only trailing Prostak’s 71 big blinds.Final fourJ Schindler Poker Game
Both Brandt (22 big blinds) and Karmatckii (11 big blinds) went into the final four short-handed. Brandt went out in fourth place at the hands of Prostak, with Prostak’s turned set of eights rendering Brandt’s top pair of aces no good. Karmatckii exited in third, with his ace-king offsuit unable to improve against Prostak’s pocket jacks in an all-in preflop scenario.
Those two eliminations set up the heads-up match between Petrangelo and Prostak. Petrangelo went into the final matchup at a three-to-one chip deficit, but gained ground after pulling off a big bluff that resulted in Prostak folding a flush.
With 3♦K♦5♦7♦Q♣ on the board, Prostak checked from the big blind with Q♥J♦, and Petrangelo made a pot-sized shove for his last 18 big blinds. A call would have clinched the championship for Prostak, but Petrangelo’s bluff did the job, prompting Prostak to fold.
That hand narrowed Prostak’s chip advantage to a two-to-one lead, and Petraneglo continued to whittle away. Petrangelo battled to even the stacks within the next half hour.
Petrangelo held his own two-to-one chip lead going into the final hand. The stacks went in from both players on the river of a T♥2♠T♠5♠A♥ board, with Prostak’s A♣Q♠ up against Pentrangelo’s K♣T♣. Petrangelo’s trip tens stood as the winner, rendering Prostak’s aces up no good.
Register here: http://gg.gg/ugfmm
https://diarynote-jp.indered.space
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