Daniel Negreanu Scores $700,000 Victory in Event #7 of 2021 PokerGO Cup
![Daniel Negreanu wins Event #7 of the 2021 PokerGO Cup](https://storage.googleapis.com/pokercentral/2021/07/346a9edf-daniel-negreanu_pokergo-cup_antonioabrego_dsc_0350-1024x684.jpg)
For as much as Daniel Negreanu has won in his poker career, it’s been a long time since he landed himself in first place in a live poker tournament. On Tuesday, Negreanu picked up the victory in Event #7: $50,000 No-Limit Hold’em at the 2021 PokerGO Cup, scoring his first victory in an open event since 2013 and earning $700,000 in prize money.
“If I look at my results since 2013, I’ve cashed for $20 to $30 million, so I’ve still been able to post wins in terms of finances, but the elusive top prize has been missing,” Negreanu said when talking about the drought of first-place results. “I’ve been a bridesmaid so many times. Just the demons and the ghosts in your brain, like when I’m heads up with [David Coleman] and that three hit the turn, it was just every reminder, like Buckner back in Shea Stadium. Every possible bad thing I’m thinking in my head. I can’t help it. I’m human. So just to get that win out of the way it feels like I don’t have to think about that anymore.”
Negreanu topped a field of 35 entries and jumped into second place on the PokerGO Cup’s overall series leaderboard. Negreanu defeated David Coleman in the end, with Coleman improving his series standing to second place on the leaderboard. It remains Ali Imsirovic atop the standings, but it’s a tight race heading into the $100,000 finale.
When asked how he feels about the current state of his game and how he feels his game has evolved over the years, Negreanu said he felt good where his game is at and was quick to answer that he’s grown to have a positive relationship with bluffing.
“I think my game is better than it’s ever been,” Negreanu said. “It’s simply a factor of really understanding bluffing more and understanding that I need to do it more. For most of my career in the 2000s, I didn’t need to bluff much because people called too often. I got to play a small-ball approach that didn’t require me taking any risks. Now, if you do that against really great players, you’re not going to get value because they’re just going to keep folding. The value has to come from a little bit more aggression. So I upped my aggression in a lot of spots, I do a lot more bluffing, and earn some pots.
“In the old days, I used to think, ‘Well, these guys are all bad, they’re going to pay me off,’ so what’s the point in bluffing? But to beat these guys, you have to earn it. You have to have some cojones to be like, ‘Alright, I’m all in. If you call, I lose,’ and feel OK with that. My relationship with bluffing has changed. It used to feel like a punch in the gut when I lost those chips. Like I screwed up, but now it’s just like, ‘No, it was a good bluff. He called, but so what?’ I’ve gotten to that place now with bluffing.”
When it comes to competing inside the PokerGO Studio, the privilege is one not lost on Negreanu, who says that if you want to be the best, you have to beat the best.
“I feel like I’ve competed well all week,” Negreanu said. “I had a bubble, I had two min-cashes, and then I had this one. I feel like I’ve been in there. I have the utmost respect for my opponents and how good they are. I do believe it’s the best learning ground, too – watching what the top players do, the Ali Imsirovic’s, the Jake Schindler’s, and Alex Foxen – there are so many great players here. I have the luxury of being able to afford to play with them and feel like I’m doing pretty well against them, but it’s the best test of where you’re at. If you really, really, want to say that you’re the best tournament player in the world or you’re among them, then you need to compete against them and they’re here in droves. This is the spot. Here at the PokerGO Studio.”
To relive all of the action from Negreanu’s PokerGO Cup victory, check out the replay of the event on PokerGO.com.
Although he entered the final day of play with the chip lead, Ali Imsirovic was the first player to bust. He went out in fifth place and took home $122,500 in prize money. With the blinds at 20,000-40,000 with a 40,000 big blind ante, Imsirovic raised to 220,000 with pocket tens from under the gun. Negreanu was next in the cutoff seat and looked down to see pocket aces. He reraised all in for 665,000. Play folded back to Imsirovic and he called all in for 520,000 total. The board ran out to keep Negreanu’s aces in front and Imsirovic was sent to the rail.
Next to go was Sergi Reixach. He picked up two kings on the button and raised almost all in, putting in 235,000 in chips from his stack of 275,000. In the big blind, Daniel Negreanu called with pocket eights. A seven-high flop prompted Negreanu to bet enough to put Reixach all in. Reixach called. The turn was an eight to shoot Negreanu into the lead. The river was a five and Reixach was off to collect his $192,500 payday.
Alex Foxen busted shortly thereafter in third place. He also went out at the hands of Negreanu. Negreanu and Foxen got all the money in preflop in blind-versus-blind action. Negreanu had queen-seven of clubs and Foxen had ace-jack. Negreanu flopped a flush draw but it would be a seven on the river that gave him the knockout and sent him into heads-up play with Coleman. Foxen earned $280,000 in prize money.
Coleman entered heads-up play with the lead, having 2.95 million in chips to Negreanu’s 2.3 million. The two battled for quite some time, and it was Negreanu who held the lead for most of the match despite starting off behind. It looked as though Negreanu was going to finish off Coleman when his ace-jack flopped a pair of jacks against Coleman’s pocket threes, but a three on the turn allowed Coleman to double up.
Negreanu fought to extend another lead from there and the two eventually got the money in the middle for another flip. Coleman had pocket fives against Negreanu’s king-ten. The flop and turn missed Negreanu, but he did have two overs and a flush draw going to the river. The river was a ten to and that’s exactly what Negreanu needed to secure the win. Coleman walked away with $455,000 in prize money for what was his fourth final table of the series.
The final table payouts are as follows.
2021 PokerGO Cup Event #7: $50,000 No-Limit Hold’em | ||||
Place | Name | Country | Payout | PokerGO Tour Points |
1 | Daniel Negreanu | Canada | $700,000 | 420 |
2 | David Coleman | USA | $455,000 | 273 |
3 | Alex Foxen | USA | $280,000 | 168 |
4 | Sergi Reixach | Spain | $192,500 | 116 |
5 | Ali Imsirovic | Bosnia and Herzegovina | $122,500 | 74 |
With his fifth-place finish in this event, Imsirovic improved to 497 points on the PokerGO Cup leaderboard. That allowed him to stay in first place, but the race is tight heading into the final event of the series. Coleman is just 27 points behind with 470 points, and then Negreanu is third with 468 points. Also above 400 points is Alex Foxen, who sits on 421 points after his third-place finish behind Negreanu and Coleman in Event #7.
2021 PokerGO Cup Top 10 | ||||
Rank | Name | Country | Earnings | Points |
1 | Ali Imsirovic | Bosnia and Herzegovina | $545,500 | 497 |
2 | David Coleman | USA | $710,000 | 470 |
3 | Daniel Negreanu | Canada | $766,200 | 468 |
4 | Alex Foxen | USA | $533,200 | 421 |
5 | Jason Koon | USA | $446,000 | 316 |
6 | Dylan Linde | USA | $255,000 | 255 |
7 | Sergi Reixach | Spain | $320,700 | 244 |
8 | Jake Schindler | USA | $324,000 | 194 |
9 | Daniel Weinand | Canada | $181,900 | 182 |
10 | Sam Soverel | USA | $168,200 | 168 |
Imsirovic’s finish also allowed him to boost his lead atop the 2021 PokerGO Tour leaderboard. He now has 2,394 points in that race, with Sean Perry a bit of a ways off in second at 1,553 points. Foxen leaped ahead of Sam Soverel and into seventh place thanks to his third-place finish in Event #7 of the PokerGO Cup.
Updated PokerGO Tour Top 10 | ||||
Rank | Name | Country | Total Earnings | PokerGO Tour Points |
1 | Ali Imsirovic | Bosnia and Herzegovina | $3,004,960 | 2,394 |
2 | Sean Perry | USA | $2,206,378 | 1,553 |
3 | Andrew Moreno | USA | $1,460,105 | 1,200 |
4 | Clayton Maquire | USA | $1,443,757 | 1,200 |
5 | Toby Lewis | UK | $1,235,204 | 1,200 |
6 | Sean Winter | USA | $1,795,790 | 1,193 |
7 | Alex Foxen | USA | $1,207,786 | 1,023 |
8 | Sam Soverel | USA | $1,336,896 | 1,020 |
9 | Chris Brewer | USA | $1,194,850 | 843 |
10 | David Peters | USA | $1,068,750 | 796 |
Connect with PokerGO on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Use code “CUP2021” for $20 off an annual PokerGO.com subscription now! Follow coverage for Event #8: $100,000 No-Limit Hold’em via our live reporting right now. Watch the Event #8 final table on PokerGO.com tomorrow at 4 p.m. ET.
Watch the Event #7 Final Table on PokerGO.com at 4 p.m. ET
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The final table of Event #7: $50,000 No-Limit Hold’em of the 2021 PokerGO Cup is set and will be airing on PokerGO.com at 4 p.m. ET.
Watch the Event #7 final table on PokerGO.com here!
Ali Imsirovic ended Day 1 as chip leader with 1,835,000 in chips ahead of Alex Foxen, Daniel Negreanu, Sergi Reixach, and David Coleman. The final five players are guaranteed $122,500 in prize money, but eyes are locked on the Event #7 title and $700,000 first-place prize.
Event #7 Final Table | |||
Seat | Name | Country | Chip Count |
1 | Daniel Negreanu | Canada | 975,000 |
2 | Alex Foxen | United States | 1,010,000 |
3 | Sergi Reixach | Spain | 755,000 |
4 | David Coleman | United States | 675,000 |
5 | Ali Imsirovic | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 1,835,000 |
When play resumes, there is 25:40 remaining in level 13, and the button is in seat 5, and there is a dead small blind
Connect with PokerGO.com on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Use code “CUP2021” for $20 off an annual PokerGO subscription now!
Ali Imsirovic Leads the Final Table of Event: #7 $50,000 No-Limit Hold’em
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It’s deja vu in the PokerGo Studio as Ali Imsirovic leads the final table of Event: #7 $50,000 No-Limit Hold’em over Alex Foxen and Daniel Negreanu. Imsirovic capitalized on the chip lead to take home the trophy in Event: #2 and Event: #4 and will be looking to make it three for three when play resumes. Event: #1 winner Foxen is second in chips with just over a million in chips, while Negreanu is looking to further improve from his sixth-place finish in Event: #5 and is currently third in chips with just under a million.
Sergi Reixach, who is making his third final stream of the series after finishing third in Event: #1 and fifth in Event: #3, and David Coleman, who is making his fourth final table stream of the series after finishing fourth in Event: #1, sixth in Event: #4, and third in Event: #5 round out the final five and will be the short stacks heading into day two.
Foxen, who held the chip lead for much of the final table play, would lose the chip lead the hand before the final elimination of the night when Negreanu picked off Foxen’s river bet with two pair on a four-flush board. Negreanu held queen-ten against Foxen’s ace-high as the two ended the night nearly identical in chips.
William Ichioka, playing in his first poker tournament ever, was eliminated on the direct money bubble after falling to Imsirovic to end the night. Imsirovic moved all-in in the small blind holding pocket nines, and Ichioka called from the big hold ace-eight. Imsirovic rivered a straight to send Ichioka to the rail just shy of his first tournament cash and cemented his chip lead in the process. Other notables to finish just off the money included U.S. Poker Open Main Event winner Sean Winter, six-time WSOP Bracelet winner John Hennigan, and Event: #5 winner Jake Schindler.
Event #7 Final Table | |||
Seat | Name | Country | Chip Count |
1 | Daniel Negreanu | Canada | 975,000 |
2 | Alex Foxen | United States | 1,010,000 |
3 | Sergi Reixach | Spain | 755,000 |
4 | David Coleman | United States | 675,000 |
5 | Ali Imsirovic | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 1,835,000 |
When play resumes, there is 25:40 remaining in level 13, and the button is in seat 5, and there is a dead small blind
The final six players will return to the PokerGO Studio on Tuesday, July 13, at 12 p.m. PT with the final table airing on PokerGO.com at 1 p.m. PT.
Connect with PokerGO.com on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Use code “CUP2021” for $20 off an annual PokerGO subscription now!
End Of Day Chip Counts
The play has been suspended for the evening, and the final six players will return to the PokerGO Studio, July 13 at 12 p.m. PT with the final table stream airing on PokerGO.com at 1 p.m. PT.
Player | Chips | Change |
---|---|---|
Ali Imsirovic | 1,835,000 | - |
Alex Foxen | 1,010,000 |
60,000 ![]() |
Daniel Negreanu | 975,000 |
115,000 ![]() |
Sergi Reixach | 755,000 |
35,000 ![]() |
David Coleman | 675,000 |
-110,000 ![]() |
William Ichioka Eliminated by Ali Imsirovic to Burst the Money Bubble
Action folded to Ali Imsirovic in the small blind, and he moved all-in. William Ichioka was in the big blind and used two time extensions before he called.
Imsirovic: [9c9h]
Ichioka: [As8c]
The board ran out [JcTh7cKd8h], and Imsirovic rivered a straight to eliminate Ichioka in sixth place and burst the money bubble.
Player | Chips | Change |
---|---|---|
Ali Imsirovic | 1,835,000 |
715,000 ![]() |
William Ichioka | Busted |
-290,000 ![]() |
Daniel Negreanu Picks Off Alex Foxen
Alex Foxen opened to 50,000 from under the gun and action folded to Daniel Negreanu in the big blind, and he called.
The dealer spread the [QdTd3d], and Negreanu checked. Foxen continued for 30,000, and Negreanu called.
The turn [2d] hit the felt and action checked through.
The river [Jh] completed the board, and Negreanu checked. Foxen bet 80,000. Negreanu used a time extension and called.
Foxen tabled [Ac9c] for ace-high, and Negreanu tabled [QhTc] for two pair to rake in the pot.
Player | Chips | Change |
---|---|---|
Alex Foxen | 950,000 |
-405,000 ![]() |
Daniel Negreanu | 860,000 |
50,000 ![]() |
Updated Chip Counts
The players are currently on a 10-minute break, and play will resume shortly.
Player | Chips | Change |
---|---|---|
Alex Foxen | 1,355,000 |
355,000 ![]() |
Ali Imsirovic | 1,120,000 |
-270,000 ![]() |
Daniel Negreanu | 810,000 |
85,000 ![]() |
David Coleman | 785,000 |
-465,000 ![]() |
Sergi Reixach | 720,000 |
-10,000 ![]() |
William Ichioka | 290,000 |
-70,000 ![]() |
Sean Winter Eliminated by Sergi Reixach
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Sean Winter opened to 195,000 with 5,000 behind. Sergi Reixach was in the small blind and called.
Reixach accidentally revealed [As2c] thinking Winter was all-in.
The flop fell [Ac9c4s], and Winter tossed in his last 5,000. Reixach called, and Winter tabled [Jx9x]
The board ran out [8s] on the turn, and when the [8h] hit the felt on the river, Winter was eliminated in seventh place.
Player | Chips | Change |
---|---|---|
Sergi Reixach | 730,000 |
300,000 ![]() |
Sean Winter | Busted |
-310,000 ![]() |
John Hennigan Eliminated by Daniel Negreanu
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Daniel Negreanu opened to 45,000 from early position, and John Hennigan moved all-in for 165,000 next to act. Action folded back to Negreanu, and he called.
Hennigan: [2d2c]
Negreanu: [QsJs]
The board ran out [KsJd3dAc7d], and Negreanu flopped a jack to eliminate Hennigan in eighth place.
Player | Chips | Change |
---|---|---|
Daniel Negreanu | 725,000 |
390,000 ![]() |
John Hennigan | Busted |
-305,000 ![]() |
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