Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Matas Cimbolas |
3,400,000
-134,000
|
-134,000 |
|
||
Ben Warrington |
3,400,000
784,000
|
784,000 |
Tamer Kamel |
1,800,000
-44,000
|
-44,000 |
Antoine Saout |
1,050,000
-36,000
|
-36,000 |
Phillip Mighall |
800,000
90,000
|
90,000 |
2014 partypoker World Poker Tour United Kingdom
Ben Warrington raised to 65,000 in the next hand as well. Matas Cimbolas called on the button and Patrick Leonard called in the big blind. The flop was and Leonard led out for 104,000, Warrington made the call and Cimbolas folded. The turn was the and Leonard moved all in.
Warrington checked his cards and quickly said, "I call."
Leonard:
Warrington:
Only the case five could save the number one online player in the world, but the river was the and Warrington's full house won him the pot. Leonard will be disappointed but he's managed to final both the main event and the high roller in Nottingham this week, an impressive performance.
Level: 25
Blinds: 15,000/30,000
Ante: 5,000
Matas Cimbolas won the first hand with a raise to 50,000.
Antoine Saout received a walk in the second hand.
In the third hand Patrick Leonard raised to 50,000 preflop before flop Phillip Mighall made it 137,000 on the button. Leonard gave it some brief contemplation then folded.
For Episode #260 of the PokerNews Podcast, Donnie and Rich are joined by none other than the new World Series of Poker Main Event champion, Martin Jacobson. Topics include Jacobson's final-table preparation, his big win, and the true pronunciation of his last name.
You can subscribe to the entire iBus Media Network on iTunes here, or you can access the RSS feed here. The PokerNews family of podcasts is now available on Stitcher.
The introductions have been done and the final table is underway.
Level: 24
Blinds: 12,000/24,000
Ante: 4,000
Tamer Kamel is a 30-year old semi-professional poker player from the UK.
When he��s not making WPT final tables he can be found running the ICCO Pizzeria in London, where he has his name above the door.
Married, and with a BA (Hons) from Manchester University, Kamel is of Egyptian/Scottish descent. He started playing poker, four years ago, after suffering a career threatening knee injury whilst undertaking a trial for an Egyptian professional football team.
Kamel has earned $720,392 in live tournament earnings, during those four years, and his two biggest scores to date have both come in the UK. In 2013, he finished fifth in the UKIPT High Roller in London for $172,144, and seventh in the EPT London Main Event for $120,311.
The man who ��thanks God everyday for what he has been blessed with,�� would like to use poker as an opportunity to help others in the world who are less fortunate that he is. After recently visiting a friend in Honduras, who does help those who are less fortunate, he vowed to return to help him, and two months later he is in line to win ��200,000.
Kamel cruised to the final table after amassing 1.7m as early as Level 16 when he eliminated three players in a five minute spell he will never experience again. He starts the day third in chips.
Patrick Leonard is one of the most in form poker players in the world.
The 25-year old, former journalist, is the number one ranked online tournament player in the world, after a series of impressive results, playing under the pseudonym pleno1. The young man who cites The Talented Mr Ripley as his favorite movie, is trying to become The Talented All-Round Poker Player, after trying his art on the live tournament scene - and boy has it gotten off to a cracking start. Leonard finishing runner-up to Bryn Kenney in the WPT UK High Roller for ��62,000.
His tremendous success in 2014 has not been lost on the poker media with three nominations at the soon to be held British Poker Swards for Best Online Player of the Year, Breakout Player of the Year, and Performance of the Year - and that��s not including a potential WPT title!
Leonard will start the final table as the second shortest stack.
Ben Warrington has been one of the stand out players of this tournament, and with 109BB he is going to a difficult man to send to the rail.
The 27-year old has been playing poker for a decade, and during that time he has earned over half a million in live tournament earnings, and $2.4m in online tournament earnings. The man known as kidcardiff gave himself that nickname after attending University in the Welsh capital, and in 2010 he climbed to number one in the UK online tournament rankings.
Warrington��s largest live score to date was a fourth place finish at EPT Prague in 2012 for $326,772, and this is his second WPT cash after finishing 22nd in WPT Caribbean in Season XII.