Which Players Have Cashed Biggest in PokerStars 100Ks?

5 min read
Bryn Kenney

Back in 2011, at the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure, PokerStars rolled out a new addition to the schedule that helped shift the landscape of how money is viewed in poker. High roller events had been growing more and more popular and mere $25,000 events weren't cutting it as far as how big some of poker's most affluent wanted to play.

So, tournament officials added a $100,000 event to the schedule. Participation proved solid, with 38 entries in the event. When the dust settled, Eugene Katchalov emerged victorious over PokerStars Team Pro Daniel Negreanu, binking a two-outer with fours against fives to claim the first-place prize of $1.5 million.

The $100,000 series at PokerStars events was officially born, although the next one wouldn't run until the following year's PCA, when it was part of the European Poker Tour. Another �100,000 was added to the EPT Grand Final in Monaco schedule and those two events continued to carry 100Ks every year until the retirement of the EPT at the conclusion of 2016.

Now, the dawn of the PokerStars Championship era has arrived. PokerStars Championship Bahamas is an event that in many ways strongly resembles the old PCA �� as PokerStars' Neil Johnson outlined in an interview with PokerNews �� and one way in which that's true is the familiar 100K that's back on the schedule.

Even so, we thought it would be constructive to look back on the history of the 100K events at PCA and EPT Grand Final and see which players have experienced the most success. Before we get into the numbers, it's important to keep a few things in mind.

One, many of these events permit reentries. Without knowing who entered which tournaments how many times, it's impossible to say who has been the most profitable on a per-dollar basis.

Second, although PokerStars sponsored the Aussie Millions for three years and that event includes a AU$100,000 event, conversion rates put it closer to a $50K than a 100K. Finally, for the purposes of the following chart, cashes have been converted into euros.

For brevity and readability, we separated out the top 10 and put the full list of winners at the bottom of this piece. Here are the players who have accumulated the most money in PCA and EPT Grand Final 100Ks since 2011:

Top 10 Cashers in EPT Grand Final and PCA 100Ks

 PlayerMoney WonWinsTop 3Total Cashes
1Bryn Kenney�2,770,247133
2Max Altergott�2,686,700122
3Igor Kurganov�2,306,600013
4Scott Seiver�2,265,230114
5Ole Schemion�2,108,453113
6Erik Seidel�2,015,000111
7Mustapha Kanit�2,007,817012
8Dan Shak�1,703,824023
9Justin Bonomo�1,640,000111
10Steve O'Dwyer�1,569,222111

American Bryn Kenney finds himself at the top of the list. He's among the most successful players as far as total cashes with three. Only Scott Seiver, with four, has more. And when Kenney has cashed, he has made them count: All three of his scores were top-three finishes. Foremost among them was a win in this very event last year for a little under $1.7 million. He also got third here in 2015 for $873,880 and third at that first event in 2011 for $643,000.

"It's fortunate because I get crushed in all the Main Events; I can't keep it together for five, six days straight," Kenney told PokerNews during the first break of the PokerStars Championship Bahamas 100K. "There's too many bad players around. When the good players come and the big events come, I've always shown up."

Right behind Kenney is Max Altergott, who bested PokerStars Team Pro Jason Mercier heads up at EPT Grand Final back in 2013 for �1,746,400. He also finished third there in 2015 for �940,300. Although Altergott doesn't have quite the same level of success as Kenney, the fact that the euro was a decent amount more valuable than the dollar puts him close to Kenney in total money earned.

Igor Kurganov is third and has the most cashes for any player without an outright win. On the other hand, Erik Seidel has cashed for the most of anyone with just a single cash. He collected �2,015,000 for winning at EPT Grand Final in 2015. That one also had the most entries of any of these tournaments with 71, so Seidel picked a great time to make his one big run.

One player of particular note on this list is Dan Shak, who would be considered by most the only recreational player in the top 10. Although he has yet to win a 100K, Shak has cashed for the eighth-most money in these events, with his most profitable finish being second at the 2014 PCA for $1,178,980.

Kenney registered late for this particular event but still finds himself in the hunt with the second break approaching at the PokerStars Championship Bahamas. While Altergott, Kurganov, Seiver and Ole Schemion skipped this particular tournament, the rest of the top 10 plus Dan Colman have the opportunity to pass Kenney with a win here if Kenney fails to cash.

While Kenney said there's a major challenge to battling through huge fields filled with unpredictable amateurs, he maintains that high roller events are still the most difficult tournaments to conquer. He believes the quality of the players outweighs the quantity of the bigger fields with smaller buy-ins.

"You're playing a lot of deep-stacked pots as opposed to all-in pots in the beginning stages of the tournament," Kenney said. "It's definitely a lot more skill to crush these tournaments than any other ones because this is where anyone who thinks that they're the best in the world shows up to play."

The winner here at PokerStars Championship Bahamas will take home $1,650,300 if there is no deal at the end and the first page of a new chapter of PokerStars 100Ks will be written.

Full List of EPT Grand Final and PCA 100K Cashers

PlayerMoney WonWinsTop 3Total Cashes
Bryn Kenney�2,770,247133
Max Altergott�2,686,700122
Igor Kurganov�2,306,600013
Scott Seiver�2,265,230114
Ole Schemion�2,108,453113
Erik Seidel�2,015,000111
Mustapha Kanit�2,007,817012
Dan Shak�1,703,824023
Justin Bonomo�1,640,000111
Steve O'Dwyer�1,569,222111
Dan Colman�1,539,300111
Dzmitry Urbanovich�1,446,600011
Daniel Cates�1,283,700011
Daniel Negreanu�1,273,203013
Sorel Mizzi�1,231,677012
Fabian Quoss�1,198,005111
Eugene Katchalov�1,150,500111
Roger Sippl�1,126,623011
Joe McKeehen�1,117,371011
Jason Mercier�1,115,700011
Tobias Reinkemeier�1,064,000011
Viktor Blom�980,940111
David Sands�963,379011
Nick Schulman�876,067012
Ali Reza Fatehi�828,500011
Vladimir Troyanovskiy�736,168003
Ankush Mandavia�720,885011
Dario Sammartino�709,500001
Richard Yong�637,600001
Sam Greenwood�634,438002
Bertrand Grospellier�621,000011
Vanessa Selbst�559,070011
Rono Lo�493,340001
Paul Newey�485,300001
Timothy Adams�485,100001
Patrik Antonius�443,000001
Christoph Vogelsang�429,190001
Thomas Muehloecker�427,100001
Antonio Esfandiari�423,301001
David Peters�422,240001
Cary Katz�416,007001
Paul Phua�385,000001
Stephen Chidwick�378,750001
Galen Hall�367,852011
Masaaki Kagawa�354,500001
Fedor Holz�337,500001
Isaac Haxton�329,544001
Matt Glantz�327,457001
Philipp Gruissem�306,535001
Andrew Robl�262,880001
Daniel Dvoress�262,602001
Anthony Gregg�255,574001
Jonathan Duhamel�245,235001
Olivier Busquet�241,000001
Ivan Luca�236,750001
Greg Jensen�218,943001
Mike Watson�218,300001
Kathy Lehne�205,967001
Mike McDonald�159,730001
Jake Schindler�155,583001
Humberto Brenes�153,400001
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