Level: 34
Blinds: 125,000/250,000
Ante: 250,000
Level: 34
Blinds: 125,000/250,000
Ante: 250,000
Cards are back in the air in Day 4 of the NAPT Las Vegas Main Event.
Sergio Aido open-jammed a stack of 1,425,000 in the cutoff and Jonathan Borenstein called on the button with a bigger stack.
Sergio Aido: K?3?
Jonathan Borenstein: A?10?
The flop of A?9?8? gave Borenstein a near lock on the hand before the K? turn teased Aido with some hope ahead of the 2? river to mark his elimination in the first hand back from dinner break.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Jonathan Borenstein |
4,550,000
2,050,000
|
2,050,000 |
Sergio Aido | Busted | |
|
Sami Bechahed looked down at two black nines in the small blind and raised to 800,000. Ping Liu was in the big and three-bet to 2.4 million with a pair of queens, which Bechahed called.
The 4?9?8? flop gave Bechahed a set and he coyly checked to Liu, who bet 2.2 million with his overpair to the board. Bechahed woke up with an all-in check-raise to 11.8 million and Liu, who had 6.13 million behind, called it off to create a pot of 21.7 million.
Ping Liu: Q?Q?
Sami Bechahed: 9?9?
Liu was looking to catch either a queen or running straight cards, but that failed to happen as the 3? bricked on the turn followed by the 6? on the river.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Sami Bechahed |
25,180,000
11,655,000
|
11,655,000 |
|
||
Ping Liu | Busted |
David Coleman moved all in for 4.45 million from the small blind and Jonathan Borenstein called off for 2.9 million from the big blind.
Jonathan Borenstein: A?8?
David Coleman: A?9?
The Q?K?5? flop kept Coleman firmly in the lead, though there was a 26% chance of a chop. However, the 8? on the turn hit Borenstein and made him a 93% favorite. The 10? river was a brick and Borenstein got lucky to double while Coleman was left with just six big blinds.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Jonathan Borenstein |
6,050,000
2,150,000
|
2,150,000 |
David Coleman |
1,550,000
-2,050,000
|
-2,050,000 |
Level: 35
Blinds: 150,000/300,000
Ante: 300,000
Sami Bechahed moved all in from the small blind and David Coleman called off for 1,875,000.
David Coleman: K?7?
Sami Bechahed: A?Q?
Coleman had two live cards but the 2?4?9? flop took away outs by giving Bechahed a flush draw. The 4? turn was of no consequence, and Coleman missed when the 8? completed the board on the river.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Sami Bechahed |
26,900,000
1,720,000
|
1,720,000 |
|
||
David Coleman | Busted |
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Sami Bechahed |
26,900,000
1,720,000
|
1,720,000 |
|
||
Jonathan Borenstein |
5,925,000
-125,000
|
-125,000 |
On the fourth hand of heads-up play, Jonathan Borenstein moved all in for 3,925,000 from the small blind and Sami Bechahed quickly called from the big.
Jonathan Borenstein: 10?9?
Sami Bechahed: A?10?
Borenstein was dominated and the kicker made the difference after both players paired their tens on the 3?10?K? flop. The A? on the turn left Borenstein drawing dead, and the meaningless7? on the river proved to be the final card of the 2023 NAPT Las Vegas Main Event.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Sami Bechahed |
32,850,000
5,950,000
|
5,950,000 |
|
||
Jonathan Borenstein | Busted |
The PokerStars North American Poker Tour Las Vegas $1,650 Main Event wrapped up at Resorts World Las Vegas on Saturday. The final seven players from a 1,095-entry field returned to battle it out at a live-streamed final table, and after eight hours of play, it was poker dealer Sami Bechahed, whose wife is nine months pregnant, emerging victorious to claim a $268,945 top prize and the first NAPT Main Event title in 12 years!
“(It took) a lot of patience. I don’t know what to say, I’m seriously so shaken,” Bechahed told PokerNews after the win. “It’s surreal to me with this stacked final table with (Sergio) Aido, (Nick) Schulman, (David) Coleman … very good players. I came out on top. It’s surreal.”
Bechahed started collecting live tournament cashes in July 2018 when the French-born poker dealer moved to the other side of the felt. He had already nabbed three six-figure scores in his five-year career and had $941,234 in prior tournament earnings. Two of those came from sub-$400 buy-in tournaments in L.A.; a runner-up finish among 5,302 entries and a victory in a 3,065-entrant field. In addition to that, Bechahed claimed $274,916 for his win in the WSOP Circuit Dallas/Oklahoma Main Event in November of last year.
“I came in as the chip leader, so I didn’t have to be intimidated by anybody,” he added. “I have a lot of mad respect for all of them, but I’m here to play poker. I’m mostly playing poker to have fun but I take it very seriously. So, I came here to have fun, play my best game, and got really lucky.”
Place | Player | Country | Prize |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Sami Bechahed | United States | $268,945 |
2 | Jonathan Borenstein | United States | $168,175 |
3 | David Coleman | United States | $120,130 |
4 | Ping Liu | United States | $92,410 |
5 | Sergio Aido | Spain | $71,080 |
6 | Nick Schulman | United States | $54,680 |
7 | Sandeep Pallampati | United States | $42,060 |
Day 4 resumed at 12:30 p.m. PST in Level 30 with blinds of 50,000/100,000/100,000, and there was an elimination in the very first hand! It happened when Sergio Aido raised to 200,000 from early position with two red tens and Ping Liu called from the button with queen-jack suited. Sandeep Pallampati was in the big blind with jack-four suited and opted to call. A jack-ten-four flop had action written all over it, and sure enough, Pallampati got his stack all in with two pair and ultimately failed to get there against Aido’s set.
It took a few hours for the next elimination to occur but happened when four-time bracelet winner Nick Schulman lost a flip with pocket fours against the king-seven of Bechahed.
It was another four hours before the next elimination, and it occurred on the first hand back from the dinner break. That is when Aido open-jammed his short stack from the cutoff with king-three only to have Jonathan Borenstein call from the button with ace-ten. An ace on the flop ultimately led to Aido’s demise in fifth place for $71,080.
Not long after, Bechahed and Ping Liu, who sat first and second in chips respectively, clashed in a huge hand. The former flopped a set of nines on a nine-high board and the latter held pocket queens. The chips went in and Liu failed to get there, falling in fourth place and giving Bechahed a huge chip lead over his remaining two opponents Borenstein and David Coleman, East Coast grinders who happened to be good friends.
Bechahed soon dispatched Coleman in third place and took a nearly 5:1 chip lead into heads-up play against Borenstein. On the fourth hand of their match, Borenstein jammed with ten-nine only to have Bechahed wake up with ace-ten. Borenstein, who earlier this year finished fourth in the Borgata Return for a career-best $368,324, was left drawing dead on the turn and had to settle for second place and $168,175 in prize money.
While Bechahed took down a major poker tournament as a player, don’t expect him to give up his day job.
“I will never do poker full time, ever. I don’t need the stress of the downswings,” he shared. “I like to have my little (dealing) job and it keeps me in the poker. I’m always thinking poker, whether I’m at work or I’m playing.”
Location | Date | Buy-In | Entries | Winner | Prize |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
PCA (Bahamas) | Jan. 5-11, 2010 | $10,300 | 1,529 | Harrison Gimbel | $2,200,000 |
PCA (Bahamas) | Jan. 11-14, 2010 | $25,500 | 84 | William Reynolds | $576,400 |
Venetian (Las Vegas) | Feb. 20-24, 2010 | $5,000 | 872 | Tom Marchese | $827,648 |
Venetian (Las Vegas) | Feb. 23-25, 2010 | $25,600 | 49 | Ashton Griffin | $560,000 |
Mohegan Sun (Connecticut) | April 7-11, 2010 | $5,000 | 716 | Vanessa Selbst | $750,000 |
Mohegan Sun (Connecticut) | April 23-25, 2010 | $25,600 | 35 | Jason Mercier | $475,000 |
Bicycle Casino (Los Angeles) | Nov. 12-17, 2010 | $5,000 | 701 | Joe Tehan | $725,000 |
PCA (Bahamas) | Jan. 8-15, 2011 | $10,300 | 1,560 | Galen Hall | $2,300,000 |
Mohegan Sun (Connecticut) | April 9-13, 2011 | $5,000 | 367 | Vanessa Selbst | $450,000 |
Resorts World (Las Vegas) | Nov. 5-12, 2023 | $1,650 | 1,095 | Sami Bechahed | $268,945 |
Stay tuned as the PokerNews live reporting team will be back on-site at Resorts World tomorrow for continued coverage of the NAPT.
Be sure to check out the NAPT Las Vegas portal in the meantime.