Sergi Reixach Wins Event #8 $25,000 NLH ($369,000)
![Sergi Reixach wins Poker Masters Event #8 for $369,000.](https://storage.googleapis.com/pokercentral/2019/11/9a11d2b4-sergi-reixach-wins-event-8_poker-masters_ata_2193-1-1024x681.jpg)
Spanish high roller specialist Sergi Reixach has won his first Poker Masters event as he took down the $25,000 No Limit Hold’em Event #8 for $369,000 after beating George Wolff heads up. Sam Soverel, who finished fourth, took over the Poker Masters Championship lead from Chance Kornuth with only two events left to be played.
“Everything went in my favor today. When I bluffed, it worked, when I called they were bluffing. I was very lucky today,” Reixach said after closing things out with pocket aces. Reixach busted every player at the final table on his way to victory.
Relive the entire final table on PokerGO right here. For all future PokerGO events check out the Live Events page.
2019 Poker Masters Event #8 No Limit Hold’em Results | |||
1 | Sergi Reixach | 300 | $369,000 |
2 | George Wolff | 210 | $246,000 |
3 | Orpen Kisacikoglu | 150 | $164,000 |
4 | Sam Soverel | 120 | $102,500 |
5 | Andras Nemeth | 90 | $82,000 |
6 | Sean Winter | 60 | $61,500 |
The six-handed final table started off with a bang when the eventual winner knocked out two players in one hand. Watch the hand in the player below as Reixach took care of business sending Sean Winter and Andras Nemeth to the rail.
Oops! 🙈😳😅 @bhanks11 and @MariaHo break down @srxakgirona's wild double knockout at the $25K final table. https://t.co/5rUlItuiNK #PokerMasters pic.twitter.com/NDbxgVov6D
— PokerGO (@PokerGO) November 13, 2019
The current clubhouse leader, Sam Soverel, was next to go as he ended up all in for eight big blinds with queen-ten suited against Reixach’s king-five offsuit. The board gave both players and Soverel busted in fourth place, which was enough to take the Poker Masters Championship lead.
The start of the day chip leader, Orpen Kisacikoglu, was the next player to get all in as he shoved pocket jacks and got called by Reixach holding pocket eights. With nearly equal stacks this pot has massive implications and after flopping a set, Reixach made quads on the river to send his Turkish opponent to the rail.
“I had quads yesterday and I had my lucky quads today,” Reixach joked in the interview after winning the tournament.
On the final hand of the tournament, Reixach found pocket aces and managed to get George Wolff to commit his entire stack after flopping a pair of sixes on a queen-six-seven. Wolff picked up a draw on the turn hitting a five, but the river did not bring him any help and the tournament ended with Reixach holding up two aces.
2019 Poker Masters Championship Standings | ||||
Name | Points | Earnings | Results | |
1 | Sam Soverel | 690 | $594,300 | 5 |
2 | Chance Kornuth | 630 | $556,400 | 3 |
3 | George Wolff | 420 | $404,500 | 3 |
4 | Sean Winter | 330 | $311,600 | 3 |
5 | Kahle Burns | 330 | $194,200 | 2 |
6 | Kristen Bicknell | 300 | $408,000 | 1 |
7 | Sergi Reixach | 300 | $369,000 | 1 |
8 | Isaac Baron | 300 | $223,100 | 1 |
9 | Ryan Laplante | 300 | $186,000 | 1 |
10 | Julien Martini | 300 | $166,400 | 1 |
“Luck, first of all,” Reixach laughed when we asked him to explain why everything has been clicking for him this year. Reixach is up to over $3 million in tournament earnings this year and fifth on Spain’s all-time money list.
“But obviously it’s important to be good at short-handed play,” Reixach continued as he elaborated on his experience as a Sit & Go player helping him get success in the later stages of big live events. “With playing Sit & Gos and Spin & Gos I’m very used to playing three-handed and heads up and I think that helps me a lot.”
Through his victories and bringing home some trophies, Reixach has been able to show to his parents and family that his poker career is a very serious one and that he’s playing at a very high level. Despite having plenty of winning and earnings, Reixach’s not too familiar with playing on live streams and he admitted to feeling some nerves today on PokerGO set.
“I just tried being in the zone and thinking that it’s an online tournament and nobody’s watching because everybody makes mistakes.”
![Sergi Reixach in action at the final table.](https://storage.googleapis.com/pokercentral/2019/11/620a9ef6-sergi-reixach_poker-masters_ata_2055.jpg)
There are two events left at the 2019 Poker Masters. Event #9 $25,000 No Limit Hold’em is now underway and can be followed through the Live Reporting page. The $50,000 Main Event gets underway tomorrow and streams its final table on Thursday. New to PokerGO? Subscribe right now. Read the full winner interview right here.
Watch the Final Table on PokerGO at 4pm ET
![](https://storage.googleapis.com/pokercentral/2019/11/91fee98c-orpen-kisacikoglu_poker-masters_ata_1863-1024x681.jpg)
Get set for another thrilling Poker Masters final table on PokerGO today! Lead by Orpen Kisacikoglu, this $25,000 No Limit Hold’em final table will see Sam Soverel grab the Poker Masters Championship lead as he’s one elimination away from overtaking Chance Kornuth on the leaderboard. If Soverel finishes in sixth place he’d tie Kornuth and fall just $3,100 in total cashes short of overtaking him.
Watch it all unfold live on PokerGO at 4:00 pm ET in the player below!
Orpen Kisacikoglu Leads Event #8 Final Table; Sam Soverel Eyeing Lead in Poker Masters Championship Standings
![](https://storage.googleapis.com/pokercentral/2019/11/a92f58bd-orpen-kisacikoglu_poker-masters_ata_1866-1024x681.jpg)
The race to claim the Poker Masters Purple Jacket is beginning to heat up in the 2019 Poker Masters as the PokerGO Studio played host to Event #8: $25,000 No-Limit Hold’em. With only two more events after this one, a field of 41 entrants would take a seat in the field, and it would be Orpen Kisacikoglu finishing as the chip leader heading into Tuesday’s PokerGO streamed Event #8 final table.
With No-Limit Hold’em events to close out the remainder of the 2019 Poker Masters, a total of 29 players would enter Event #8, and each would have different goals from collecting their first cash of the series or to rise up the Poker Masters Championship Standings. The action flowed a constant rate throughout the day, but a late influx of players saw four full tables in operation once registration closed with 41 entrants creating a $1,025,000 prize pool.
Once the overall points leader in Chance Kornuth was soon eliminated once registration closed, the likes of Sam Soverel, Kahle Burns, and Sean Winter were just some of the players looking to close the gap on Kornuth by registering a cash and a final table berth on Day 2. The business end of the tournament saw Burns hit the rail, while the likes of defending Poker Masters Purple Jacket winner Ali Imsirovic, along with Manig Loeser, Alex Foxen, and Anthony Zinno were all eliminated just shy of reaching the final table of eight players.
Only six spots would finish in the money, and players jostled for position before Ben Yu would be eliminated in eighth place when his suited ace couldn’t outdraw Andras Nemeth’s pocket pair. With the points on the line, and an open discussion occurring between Soverel and Winter, it would be Winter assuring himself of at least 60 points when he eliminated Nick Petrangelo when his kings held up against sevens to conclude play for the night.
Seat | Name | Country | Chip Count |
1 | Sergi Reixach | Spain | 785,000 |
2 | Sean Winter | United States | 470,000 |
3 | George Wolff | United States | 950,000 |
4 | Orpen Kisacikoglu | Turkey | 1,640,000 |
5 | Sam Soverel | United States | 920,000 |
6 | Andras Nemeth | Hungary | 360,000 |
The button is on Orpen Kisacikoglu, and there is 30:00 remaining in Level 18 with blinds at 15,000-30,000 and a 30,000-big blind ante.
Leading the final six into Tuesday’s final table is Orpen Kisacikoglu with 1,640,000 in chips. After arriving mid-series, this is Kisacikoglu’s first cash in any High Roller Triple Crown event, and his ascent into the chip lead was on the back of picking off a Sergi Reixach bluff on the penultimate hand of play. Kisacikoglu may be unknown to some, but he has been on the International High Roller scene for a few years amassing over $4.5 million in lifetime earnings that includes a 100k Super High Roller victory at the recent partypoker MILLIONS Europe for €905,937.
Second in chips is George Wolff with 950,000 in chips who is at his second final table of the series. At the British Poker Open in September, he took first and second in the only two Pot-Limit Omaha events, but this is his first No-Limit Hold’em cash on the High Roller Triple Crown. Third in chips is Sam Soverel with 920,000 who is fresh off a victory in Event #7. With his appearance at the Event #8 final table, he has moved into a points tie with Kornuth but officially sits in second place as the tie-breaker is money earned. If Soverel can finish fifth-or-better, he will take the lead and begin to extend the gap between himself and Kornuth with just two events remaining.
Fourth overall is Sergi Reixach with 785,000 in chips. Reixach made an appearance at the British Poker Open where he won Event #6 £25,000 No-Limit Hold’em for £253,000, and if it wasn’t for his bluff with seven-high on the penultimate hand of play, he would be the one holding the chip lead. Fifth on the leaderboard is Sean Winter with 470,000 and who is also looking to gain ground on Kornuth in the points standings. With this cash, Winter currently sits in third overall with 330 points, while a win can put him a min-cash shy of being tied with Kornuth. Rounding out the final table is Hungary’s Andras Nemeth with 360,000 in chips. Two events ago, Nemeth made his 2019 Poker Masters debut in Event #6, and that resulted in a fourth place finish. Nemeth will begin the final table in the big blind with 12 big blinds.
2019 Poker Masters Championship Standings | ||||
Name | Points | Earnings | Results | |
1 | Chance Kornuth | 630 | $556,400 | 3 |
2 | Sam Soverel | 570 | $491,800 | 4 |
3 | Kahle Burns | 330 | $194,200 | 2 |
4 | Kristen Bicknell | 300 | $408,000 | 1 |
5 | Isaac Baron | 300 | $223,100 | 1 |
6 | Ryan Laplante | 300 | $186,000 | 1 |
7 | Julien Martini | 300 | $166,400 | 1 |
8 | Jared Bleznick | 300 | $153,000 | 1 |
9 | Jonathan Depa | 300 | $133,200 | 1 |
10 | Sean Winter | 270 | $250,100 | 2 |
The Event #8: $25,000 No-Limit Hold’em final table begins at 12 p.m. (PT) on Tuesday, November 12, with action continuing until the Event #8 champion is crowned. Follow every hand when the PokerGO coverage begins at 1 p.m. (PT) / 4 p.m. (ET).
Follow the final table exclusively on PokerGO through your favorite devices and in the embedded player below. Can’t watch live? Catch the action on-demand at your leisure. New to PokerGO? Subscribe right now.
Event #8 Final Table Chip Counts
Player | Chips | Change |
---|---|---|
Orpen Kisacikoglu | 1,640,000 |
-15,000 ![]() |
George Wolff | 950,000 |
-150,000 ![]() |
Sam Soverel | 920,000 |
-50,000 ![]() |
Sergi Reixach | 785,000 |
-5,000 ![]() |
Sean Winter | 470,000 | - |
Andras Nemeth | 360,000 |
-10,000 ![]() |
Nick Petrangelo Eliminated in 7th Place
![](https://storage.googleapis.com/pokercentral/2019/11/66735804-nick-petrangelo_poker-masters_ata_1685-1024x681.jpg)
Sean Winter raised to 140,000 in the hijack, and Nick Petrangelo moved all in from the button for 190,000. Winter called.
Winter: [KhKc]
Petrangelo: [7h7s]
The board ran out [5c4d8h2hAd] and Petrangelo was eliminated in seventh place.
Player | Chips | Change |
---|---|---|
Sean Winter | 470,000 |
40,000 ![]() |
Nick Petrangelo | Busted |
-205,000 ![]() |
Orpen Kisacikoglu Takes Chip Lead from Sergi Reixach
Sergi Reixach raised in middle position to 50,000 and Orpen Kisacikoglu called in the big blind. The flop landed [Kd6c8s] and Kisacikoglu checked to Reixach who bet 35,000.
Kisacikoglu called, and then checked the [8h] on the turn. Reixach bet 175,000 and Kisacikoglu called.
The river landed the [9h] and Kisacikoglu checked. Reixach used a time extension and then slid forward a bet of 510,000.
Kisacikoglu used two time extensions and then called.
Reixach revealed his [7c4c], and Kisacikoglu tabled his [Kh9c] to collect the pot with two pair.
Player | Chips | Change |
---|---|---|
Orpen Kisacikoglu | 1,655,000 |
1,008,000 ![]() |
Sergi Reixach | 790,000 |
-405,000 ![]() |
Aces for George Wolff
On a final board of [5sKc2dQsKs], Andras Nemeth checked from the big blind and George Wolff bet 80,000 in the hijack.
Nemeth used two time extensions and then called.
Wolff tabled his [AcAs] and Nemeth mucked.
Player | Chips | Change |
---|---|---|
George Wolff | 1,100,000 |
55,000 ![]() |
Andras Nemeth | 370,000 |
-370,000 ![]() |
Ace-King-High Win for Sam Soverel
Sam Soverel raised to 40,000 from middle position and Nick Petrangelo called in the big blind.
The flop landed [2dTc5h] and Petrangelo check-called a bet of 20,000.
The turn fell the [Js], and after Petrangelo checked, Soverel used a time extension and then checked behind.
Both players checked the [9d] on the river.
“Ace,” Petrangelo declared.
Soverel tabled his [AcKs] and Petrangelo mucked.
Player | Chips | Change |
---|---|---|
Sam Soverel | 970,000 |
65,000 ![]() |
Nick Petrangelo | 205,000 |
-80,000 ![]() |
Ben Yu Eliminated in 8th Place
![](https://storage.googleapis.com/pokercentral/2019/11/09746e5b-ben-yu_poker-masters_ata_1723-1024x681.jpg)
Ben Yu shoved all in from middle position for 110,000 and Andras Nemeth reshoved the button for 580,000.
Yu: [Ad9d]
Nemeth: [9h9c]
The board ran out [Kd4s5d6sTh] and Yu was eliminated in eighth place.
Player | Chips | Change |
---|---|---|
Andras Nemeth | 740,000 |
95,000 ![]() |
Ben Yu | Busted |
-220,000 ![]() |
You're all caught up!
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