2017 Winamax Poker Open Dublin

Main Event
Day: 3
Event Info

2017 Winamax Poker Open Dublin

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
aq
Prize
€92,000
Event Info
Buy-in
€550
Prize Pool
€112,843
Entries
1,069
Level Info
Level
34
Blinds
250,000 / 500,000
Ante
50,000

Otto Richard Wins 2017 Winamax Poker Open Dublin for �92,000

Level 34 : 250,000/500,000, 50,000 ante
Otto Richard - Winamax Poker Tour Dublin Champion
Otto Richard - Winamax Poker Tour Dublin Champion

Otto Richard has won the 2017 Winamax Poker Open Dublin Main Event. He saw off the second largest Winamax Poker Open field in history, a total of 1,069 players, to take home �92,000 and the much-coveted trophy.

Richard, who is from Paris but lives in Brighton, was the oldest player at the final table at 33 years of age. A former Magic: The Gathering player, he moved to poker in 2006 and now boasts a poker CV with more than $200,000 in live tournament winnings in the space of eleven years.

Despite re-entering in Day 1A after, according to him, twice trying the same bluff, Richard rode a chip lead that started at the final two tables all the way to the title and prize money.

PositionNameCountryPrize Money
1Otto RichardFrance�92,000
2Sonny FrancoFrance�67,000
3Lozano ManzanaresSpain�45,000
4Adrien DecramerFrance�32,500
5Teunis KooijNetherlands�23,000
6Jason TompkinsIreland�16,000

The bust outs began early today, with Jonathan Barusta, Guillermo Sanchez and Day 1B chip leader Laurent Decauwert heading to the exit.

At this stage, Matthieu Vincendeau was still in control of proceedings as chip leader on the feature table, but it wasn't long before Teunis Kooij took over at the head of the leaderboard.

This was in part due to his elimination of Jean-Robert Autran, whose attempted hero-call all in for his tournament life with pocket threes on a {7-Diamonds}{8-Spades}{8-Hearts}{9-Hearts}{q-Clubs}{a-Diamonds} was met with the {a-}{8-} of Kooij.

Kooij was then superseded by Otto Richard at the top of the leaderboard, after Richard too a chunk from the Dutchman, and then eliminated Tony David Nadau to get the tournament down to two tables.

Most of the eliminations from two tables down to one occurred on the outer table, with Kooij and Richard the beneficiaries of the eliminations of Matthieu Martin and Knut Berntsen.

Berntsen suffered somewhat of a cooler in his elimination, getting {a-Clubs}{7-Clubs} in against the {6-Hearts}{6-Clubs} of Richard. There was an Ace on the flop and turn for Berntsen, before the six on the river sent him to the rail.

Start of day chip leader Vincendeau was eliminated in 8th place when he ran into the Kings of Sonny Franco, and the unofficial final table was set.

The tournament lost its last two remaining Irishmen - Michael O'Sullivan and Jason Tompkins in 7th and 6th place respectively, followed by Kooij in 5th.

By this stage Sonny Franco had begun to challenge Richard for the chip lead, helped in part by an audacious stone-cold five-bet flop bluff into Adrien Decramer before Decramer departed in 4th.

It wasn't long before the tournament lost its final non-Frenchman, Lozano Manzanares, who was eliminated after getting his chips in against Otto Richard drawing dead on the turn, and Richard took a more than 2:1 chip lead into the heads-up match.

The pivotal moment came on a {a-Spades}{a-Hearts}{5-Clubs}{4-Hearts}{4-Spades} board with Richard moving all in and Franco snap-calling. Franco had a house with {a-Clubs}{2-Spades} but Richard had an even bigger one having flopped aces full of fives with {a-Diamonds}{5-Hearts}. It was only a matter of time then for Richard to close it out, when his Ace-Queen held for him to take down the tournament.

Tags: Adrien DecramerJason TompkinsJean-Robert AutranJonathan BarustaKnut BerntsenLaurent DecauwertLozano ManzanaresMatthieu MartinMatthieu VincendeauMichael O'SullivanOtto RichardSonny FrancoTeunis KooijTony David Nadau