Manig Loeser
2021年12月12日Register here: http://gg.gg/x7zda
Manig Loeser finished in second place for $128,000 when he got all in against Jordan Cristos on the Qc7c5d flop. Loeser had Qd7dTc4c against the Kc5c9s6h of Cristos. Cristos bet 600,000 and Loeser reraised the pot. Cristos said all in just in case and turned his hand over. ’I got this one,’ Cristos said. Manig Loeser has won 0 bracelets and 0 rings for total earnings of $1,656,288. See all events where they placed in-the-money.
*Manig Loeser Poker
*Cached
After battling through two Day Ones and922 entries, the Main Event of the European Poker Tour’s stop at the Casino deMonte Carlo has ended. In what was a stirring battle after a three-way chop forthe money, Germany’s Manig Loeser emerged as the champion in defeating China’sWei Huang and Hungary’s Viktor Katzenberger to take home the title.
AnUphill Battle
To say that Loeser had an uphill battle towinning the title would be a huge understatement. Nicola Grieco of Italy heldthe chip lead at the start of the six-handed final table, with Katzenbergerholding down the second place slot. Huang was is the third post position asLoeser held the fourth position at the start of the festivities. If it weren’tenough, former World Champion Ryan Riess was in fifth (and with a sizeablestack of chips) and the short stack at the table, Luis Medina, still had enoughchips (1.105 million) to give one pause before attacking.
Medina tried to make some inroads to moveup the leaderboard, but he instead never gained any traction on the day. Itwould take slightly more than two hours for his departure to come, however, andit would come at the hands of Loeser. Medina got in a race with the German, hisA-3 off suit against Loeser’s pocket sevens, and there was no saving Ace on the9-8-2-4-10 board to change the situation. As Loeser moved up the leaderboard,Medina headed to the rail with his sixth-place finish.
If it took a while for the firstelimination to come, it would seem like a lifetime before the next one. Riess,who was now on the short stack, would get a key double through Huang to get healthieras Grieco was headed in the opposite direction. It seemed as if every move thatGrieco made was the wrong one and, two hours after Medina’s elimination, Griecowould find himself on the brink of that same fate. But he would fight back too,doubling up twice to get back to a respectable stack.
For more than six hours the remaining fivemen battled it out, with Loeser quietly sneaking out to the lead, Griecoregaining his momentum and the rest looking to catch up. In fact, the playerswould head to the dinner break with just the elimination of Medina under their belt.Once the players came back from their sustenance, however, they would up theintensity in the game.
ActionRamps Up Following Dinner Break
Loeser didn’t lose a bit of momentum fromthe dinner break, racking up the first hand back at the table. On the button,Loeser pushed all in with a suited Ace and got Riess and Huang to get out ofthe way. Two hands later, he would punish Katzenberger for limping in on thebutton by raising Katzenberger’s limp out of the big blind (it turned out hehad the goods with pocket Queens). Those hands would push Loeser over the tenmillion mark in chips and would separate him from the pack as the eliminationscame.
Nine hours after Medina had beeneliminated, the next man to walk away from the EPT Monte Carlo final tablewould be determined. Grieco would shove his stack with Big Slick and Loeser, inthe big blind, actually stated, “I’m gonna gamble,” before making the call witha miserly 8-7 off suit. Loeser got everything he could ask for in the 8-7-3flop and, once the Jack on the turn was dealt, Grieco was drawing dead, packinghis backpack, and heading to the rail in fifth place.
Riess was the next to go at the hands ofHuang. Hovering in the “push or fold” zone, Riess decided to push in the smallblind against Huang. Huang, knowing that Riess would be pushing with mostanything, made the call. Riess’ Q-3 was surprisingly leading Huang’s J-6pre-flop, but that’s why they deal the cards after that point.
Things looked great for Riess on the A-A-Qflop as his two pair rocketed him to an almost insurmountable lead. Just how “insurmountable?”According to odds calculators, Riess would have won the double 94% of the time.This was that 6%, unfortunately for Riess, as a ten on the turn brought Huang’schances up to 25%. The King on the river completely changed the futures for theplayers as Huang, now the proud owner of a Broadway straight, scooped the pot andRiess was out in fourth place.Manig Loeser Poker
The final trio of players – Loeser, Huangand Katzenberger – would play for two more hours before settling in fordiscussions on a deal with their chip stacks all roughly equal. After an hourof discussion, they decided on the following deal:
Huang: €552,056
Katzenberger: €529,707
Loeser: €527,716
The threesome left the trophy and a €78,061bonus on the table to play for and went to decide a champion.
FromThree to One
Huang would step out to an early lead, butLoeser quickly caught up and passed him. On a big hand with Katzenberger,Loeser was all in with pocket threes against Katzenberger’s A♣ J♣ and survivedwhen the Queen high board had nothing for Katzenberger. Loeser took the leadagain with that hand while Katzenberger, down to just over a million in chips,would succumb to Huang on the next hand in third place.
Loeser had a 3.5 million chip lead over Huangat the start of heads up and, save for one hand where Huang eked into the lead,dominated the play. On the final hand, the twosome saw a J-9-5 rainbow flop,with Huang’s K-8 leading Loeser’s Q-8. That changed on the ten turn, however,as Loeser caught his straight and moved into the lead. Loeser didn’t slow playhis hand and, after Huang moved all in with only the gut shot straight draw (riverQueen would have given him a better straight), Loeser was more than happy tocall with his made hand. The audience was breathless in anticipation of the river,which fell with an Ace to end the 16-hour marathon with Manig Loeser as thewinner.Cached
1. Manig Loeser, €603,777*
2. Wei Huang, €552,056*
3. Viktor Katzenberger, €529,707*
4. Ryan Riess, €265,620
5. Nicola Grieco, €206,590
6. Luis Medina, €152,800
7. Rustam Hajiyev, €109,510
8. Timothy Adams, €78,030
(* – indicates three-way deal) Table Of Contents
The flagship event of the 2019 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo®Casino European Poker Tour (EPT) festival has come to a conclusion and a new champion has been crowned in the €5,300 Main Event at the Monte-Carlo Sporting.
Throughout two starting days and the following four days, a field of 922 entries has seen a new winner emerge on the ever-popular poker tour and it was Manig Loeser that lifted the trophy for the winner shots in the third-biggest EPT Main Event in the principality of Monaco on the French Riviera.Final Table Result 2019 EPT Monte-Carlo Main EventPlacePlayerCountryPrize (in EUR)Prize (in USD)1Manig LoeserGermany€603,777*$676,8902Wei HuangChina€552,056*$618,9063Viktor KatzenbergerHungary€529,707*$593,7724Ryan RiessUnited States€265,620$297,7455Nicola GriecoItaly€206,590$231,5766Luis MedinaPortugal€152,800$171,2807Rustam HajiyevAzerbaijan€109,510$122,7558Timothy AdamsCanada€78,030$87,467
*reflects deal of the last three players
Loeser went heads-up against Wei Huang from China, who narrowly missed out on becoming the first-ever EPT champion for his home country. Huang was railed by Haoxiang Wang, Yan Li and Pete Chen, his roommate Wang having come close to winning an EPT Main Event in Barcelona last year only to also finish in second place. You can read more about their story on the PokerNews homepage.
Down to the last three players, Loeser and Huang cut a deal with Viktor Katzenberger and left €78,061 and the elusive EPT trophy up for grabs. All three remaining players secured themselves a big portion of the €4,471,700 prize pool, and it was Loeser that received the most of it for a top prize of €603,777 and his second major victory on the live poker circuit. According to his Hendon Mob profile, Loeser currently sits in 10th place in the German all-time money list and will cross $10 million in cashes.
While most had expected a rather short day with six players remaining, it took a total of 273 hands to play down to a champion. Five-handed play lasted for more than nine hours (including breaks) and the final day also featured Luis Medina, Nicola Grieco and 2013 WSOP Main Event champion Ryan Riess, who once again went deep in one of his European exploits.
Riess narrowly missed out on becoming the first player to win the World Series of Poker Main Event in Las Vegas and an EPT Main Event. Kevin MacPhee, John Juanda and Adrian Mateos claimed WSOPE Main Event titles in Europe and also have the EPT Main Event trophy to their name.2019 EPT Monte-Carlo Main Event Final Day Action
While Luis Medina ran out of chips rather quickly, the battle of the final five contenders turned into an endurance challenge. Ryan Riess, Wei Huang and Nicola Grieco ended up all in and at risk several times without any player running out of fortune for the next nine hours - including breaks and a 45-minute dinner break – to double when urgently needed.
Riess: ’I got really lucky today to get fourth, to get as far as I did so I’m very grateful.’
Ultimately, start-of-the-day chip leader Grieco had to settle for fifth place. The Italian had clashed with Wei Huang when his move with six-five suited for second pair was called by Huang, who burned all his remaining time banks with ace-five for the same pair and better kicker. Grieco then got it in with ace-king for six big blinds with ace-king on the button Manig Loeser called with eight-seven. An eight and a seven on the flop gave Loeser two pair and Grieco was left drawing dead on the turn hand #198 of the six-handed final table.
Riess had been short several times and cracked aces with pocket sevens to double up. He also called a shove by Manig Loeser on a double-paired jack-high board with ten-high and was good against six-high to double.
However, his run came to a cruel end in 4th place when his queen-trey flopped best against jack-six suited only for Wei Huang to hit a runner-runner straight.
Riess had the following to say to the PokerStars video crew in his interview after the elimination:
“I enjoyed it a lot, I’m super grateful. If you’re not happy when you don’t get first place, you’re always going to be miserable. There’s a lot of luck in tournament poker; I got really lucky today to get fourth, to get as far as I did so I’m very grateful. I’ll be back.”
Down to the last three players, Loeser dominated at the top of the counts and took a commanding lead. That all but changed when Huang made a move with a pair and nut flush blocker on an ace-high river and jammed into the bet of Loeser, who had rivered a seven-high straight with seven-four. Two time banks were invested by Loeser and he folded the best hand.
Huang pulled into a small lead before the next break and the final three players then entered another endurance challenge, as ICM deal discussions lasted for almost an hour before the trio came to an agreement.
Once the cards were back in the air, Loeser won a flip with pocket treys against the ace-jack suited of Katzenberger. The Hungarian, who was railed by fellow countryman Laszlo Bujtas, Marton Czuczor and Andras Nemeth, bowed out shortly after with ace-eight against the ace-king of Huang to set up the duel for the title.2019 EPT Monte-Carlo Main Event Heads-Up
The chip lead changed a few times until Loeser pulled into a comfortable 2-1 lead. In the final hand of the event, Huang jammed a jack-high turn with king-eight for an open-ender and gutshot. Loeser called with queen-eight suited for the queen-high straight and a blank ace on the river brought the tournament to an end at just after 3 a.m. local time.
While the EPT takes a summer break until the grand spectacle in Barcelona in August 2019, the next PokerStars live events are just around the corner with the EPT Open Madrid in late June, followed by the APPT Manila festival at the end of July.
This concludes the PokerNews live updates from Monte-Carlo and the highly anticipated 50th edition of the World Series of Poker in Las Vegas is right around the corner at the end of May 2019.
The Stars Group owns a majority shareholding in iBus Media.
Pictures courtesy of Neil Stoddart / PokerStars
*TagsAdrian MateosEPT Monte CarloHaoxiang WangJohn JuandaKevin MacPheeLuis MedinaManig LoeserNicola GriecoRyan RiessViktor KatzenbergerWei Huang
*Related PlayersJohn JuandaKevin MacPheeRyan RiessManig LoeserAdrian MateosViktor Katzenberger
Register here: http://gg.gg/x7zda
https://diarynote-jp.indered.space
Manig Loeser finished in second place for $128,000 when he got all in against Jordan Cristos on the Qc7c5d flop. Loeser had Qd7dTc4c against the Kc5c9s6h of Cristos. Cristos bet 600,000 and Loeser reraised the pot. Cristos said all in just in case and turned his hand over. ’I got this one,’ Cristos said. Manig Loeser has won 0 bracelets and 0 rings for total earnings of $1,656,288. See all events where they placed in-the-money.
*Manig Loeser Poker
*Cached
After battling through two Day Ones and922 entries, the Main Event of the European Poker Tour’s stop at the Casino deMonte Carlo has ended. In what was a stirring battle after a three-way chop forthe money, Germany’s Manig Loeser emerged as the champion in defeating China’sWei Huang and Hungary’s Viktor Katzenberger to take home the title.
AnUphill Battle
To say that Loeser had an uphill battle towinning the title would be a huge understatement. Nicola Grieco of Italy heldthe chip lead at the start of the six-handed final table, with Katzenbergerholding down the second place slot. Huang was is the third post position asLoeser held the fourth position at the start of the festivities. If it weren’tenough, former World Champion Ryan Riess was in fifth (and with a sizeablestack of chips) and the short stack at the table, Luis Medina, still had enoughchips (1.105 million) to give one pause before attacking.
Medina tried to make some inroads to moveup the leaderboard, but he instead never gained any traction on the day. Itwould take slightly more than two hours for his departure to come, however, andit would come at the hands of Loeser. Medina got in a race with the German, hisA-3 off suit against Loeser’s pocket sevens, and there was no saving Ace on the9-8-2-4-10 board to change the situation. As Loeser moved up the leaderboard,Medina headed to the rail with his sixth-place finish.
If it took a while for the firstelimination to come, it would seem like a lifetime before the next one. Riess,who was now on the short stack, would get a key double through Huang to get healthieras Grieco was headed in the opposite direction. It seemed as if every move thatGrieco made was the wrong one and, two hours after Medina’s elimination, Griecowould find himself on the brink of that same fate. But he would fight back too,doubling up twice to get back to a respectable stack.
For more than six hours the remaining fivemen battled it out, with Loeser quietly sneaking out to the lead, Griecoregaining his momentum and the rest looking to catch up. In fact, the playerswould head to the dinner break with just the elimination of Medina under their belt.Once the players came back from their sustenance, however, they would up theintensity in the game.
ActionRamps Up Following Dinner Break
Loeser didn’t lose a bit of momentum fromthe dinner break, racking up the first hand back at the table. On the button,Loeser pushed all in with a suited Ace and got Riess and Huang to get out ofthe way. Two hands later, he would punish Katzenberger for limping in on thebutton by raising Katzenberger’s limp out of the big blind (it turned out hehad the goods with pocket Queens). Those hands would push Loeser over the tenmillion mark in chips and would separate him from the pack as the eliminationscame.
Nine hours after Medina had beeneliminated, the next man to walk away from the EPT Monte Carlo final tablewould be determined. Grieco would shove his stack with Big Slick and Loeser, inthe big blind, actually stated, “I’m gonna gamble,” before making the call witha miserly 8-7 off suit. Loeser got everything he could ask for in the 8-7-3flop and, once the Jack on the turn was dealt, Grieco was drawing dead, packinghis backpack, and heading to the rail in fifth place.
Riess was the next to go at the hands ofHuang. Hovering in the “push or fold” zone, Riess decided to push in the smallblind against Huang. Huang, knowing that Riess would be pushing with mostanything, made the call. Riess’ Q-3 was surprisingly leading Huang’s J-6pre-flop, but that’s why they deal the cards after that point.
Things looked great for Riess on the A-A-Qflop as his two pair rocketed him to an almost insurmountable lead. Just how “insurmountable?”According to odds calculators, Riess would have won the double 94% of the time.This was that 6%, unfortunately for Riess, as a ten on the turn brought Huang’schances up to 25%. The King on the river completely changed the futures for theplayers as Huang, now the proud owner of a Broadway straight, scooped the pot andRiess was out in fourth place.Manig Loeser Poker
The final trio of players – Loeser, Huangand Katzenberger – would play for two more hours before settling in fordiscussions on a deal with their chip stacks all roughly equal. After an hourof discussion, they decided on the following deal:
Huang: €552,056
Katzenberger: €529,707
Loeser: €527,716
The threesome left the trophy and a €78,061bonus on the table to play for and went to decide a champion.
FromThree to One
Huang would step out to an early lead, butLoeser quickly caught up and passed him. On a big hand with Katzenberger,Loeser was all in with pocket threes against Katzenberger’s A♣ J♣ and survivedwhen the Queen high board had nothing for Katzenberger. Loeser took the leadagain with that hand while Katzenberger, down to just over a million in chips,would succumb to Huang on the next hand in third place.
Loeser had a 3.5 million chip lead over Huangat the start of heads up and, save for one hand where Huang eked into the lead,dominated the play. On the final hand, the twosome saw a J-9-5 rainbow flop,with Huang’s K-8 leading Loeser’s Q-8. That changed on the ten turn, however,as Loeser caught his straight and moved into the lead. Loeser didn’t slow playhis hand and, after Huang moved all in with only the gut shot straight draw (riverQueen would have given him a better straight), Loeser was more than happy tocall with his made hand. The audience was breathless in anticipation of the river,which fell with an Ace to end the 16-hour marathon with Manig Loeser as thewinner.Cached
1. Manig Loeser, €603,777*
2. Wei Huang, €552,056*
3. Viktor Katzenberger, €529,707*
4. Ryan Riess, €265,620
5. Nicola Grieco, €206,590
6. Luis Medina, €152,800
7. Rustam Hajiyev, €109,510
8. Timothy Adams, €78,030
(* – indicates three-way deal) Table Of Contents
The flagship event of the 2019 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo®Casino European Poker Tour (EPT) festival has come to a conclusion and a new champion has been crowned in the €5,300 Main Event at the Monte-Carlo Sporting.
Throughout two starting days and the following four days, a field of 922 entries has seen a new winner emerge on the ever-popular poker tour and it was Manig Loeser that lifted the trophy for the winner shots in the third-biggest EPT Main Event in the principality of Monaco on the French Riviera.Final Table Result 2019 EPT Monte-Carlo Main EventPlacePlayerCountryPrize (in EUR)Prize (in USD)1Manig LoeserGermany€603,777*$676,8902Wei HuangChina€552,056*$618,9063Viktor KatzenbergerHungary€529,707*$593,7724Ryan RiessUnited States€265,620$297,7455Nicola GriecoItaly€206,590$231,5766Luis MedinaPortugal€152,800$171,2807Rustam HajiyevAzerbaijan€109,510$122,7558Timothy AdamsCanada€78,030$87,467
*reflects deal of the last three players
Loeser went heads-up against Wei Huang from China, who narrowly missed out on becoming the first-ever EPT champion for his home country. Huang was railed by Haoxiang Wang, Yan Li and Pete Chen, his roommate Wang having come close to winning an EPT Main Event in Barcelona last year only to also finish in second place. You can read more about their story on the PokerNews homepage.
Down to the last three players, Loeser and Huang cut a deal with Viktor Katzenberger and left €78,061 and the elusive EPT trophy up for grabs. All three remaining players secured themselves a big portion of the €4,471,700 prize pool, and it was Loeser that received the most of it for a top prize of €603,777 and his second major victory on the live poker circuit. According to his Hendon Mob profile, Loeser currently sits in 10th place in the German all-time money list and will cross $10 million in cashes.
While most had expected a rather short day with six players remaining, it took a total of 273 hands to play down to a champion. Five-handed play lasted for more than nine hours (including breaks) and the final day also featured Luis Medina, Nicola Grieco and 2013 WSOP Main Event champion Ryan Riess, who once again went deep in one of his European exploits.
Riess narrowly missed out on becoming the first player to win the World Series of Poker Main Event in Las Vegas and an EPT Main Event. Kevin MacPhee, John Juanda and Adrian Mateos claimed WSOPE Main Event titles in Europe and also have the EPT Main Event trophy to their name.2019 EPT Monte-Carlo Main Event Final Day Action
While Luis Medina ran out of chips rather quickly, the battle of the final five contenders turned into an endurance challenge. Ryan Riess, Wei Huang and Nicola Grieco ended up all in and at risk several times without any player running out of fortune for the next nine hours - including breaks and a 45-minute dinner break – to double when urgently needed.
Riess: ’I got really lucky today to get fourth, to get as far as I did so I’m very grateful.’
Ultimately, start-of-the-day chip leader Grieco had to settle for fifth place. The Italian had clashed with Wei Huang when his move with six-five suited for second pair was called by Huang, who burned all his remaining time banks with ace-five for the same pair and better kicker. Grieco then got it in with ace-king for six big blinds with ace-king on the button Manig Loeser called with eight-seven. An eight and a seven on the flop gave Loeser two pair and Grieco was left drawing dead on the turn hand #198 of the six-handed final table.
Riess had been short several times and cracked aces with pocket sevens to double up. He also called a shove by Manig Loeser on a double-paired jack-high board with ten-high and was good against six-high to double.
However, his run came to a cruel end in 4th place when his queen-trey flopped best against jack-six suited only for Wei Huang to hit a runner-runner straight.
Riess had the following to say to the PokerStars video crew in his interview after the elimination:
“I enjoyed it a lot, I’m super grateful. If you’re not happy when you don’t get first place, you’re always going to be miserable. There’s a lot of luck in tournament poker; I got really lucky today to get fourth, to get as far as I did so I’m very grateful. I’ll be back.”
Down to the last three players, Loeser dominated at the top of the counts and took a commanding lead. That all but changed when Huang made a move with a pair and nut flush blocker on an ace-high river and jammed into the bet of Loeser, who had rivered a seven-high straight with seven-four. Two time banks were invested by Loeser and he folded the best hand.
Huang pulled into a small lead before the next break and the final three players then entered another endurance challenge, as ICM deal discussions lasted for almost an hour before the trio came to an agreement.
Once the cards were back in the air, Loeser won a flip with pocket treys against the ace-jack suited of Katzenberger. The Hungarian, who was railed by fellow countryman Laszlo Bujtas, Marton Czuczor and Andras Nemeth, bowed out shortly after with ace-eight against the ace-king of Huang to set up the duel for the title.2019 EPT Monte-Carlo Main Event Heads-Up
The chip lead changed a few times until Loeser pulled into a comfortable 2-1 lead. In the final hand of the event, Huang jammed a jack-high turn with king-eight for an open-ender and gutshot. Loeser called with queen-eight suited for the queen-high straight and a blank ace on the river brought the tournament to an end at just after 3 a.m. local time.
While the EPT takes a summer break until the grand spectacle in Barcelona in August 2019, the next PokerStars live events are just around the corner with the EPT Open Madrid in late June, followed by the APPT Manila festival at the end of July.
This concludes the PokerNews live updates from Monte-Carlo and the highly anticipated 50th edition of the World Series of Poker in Las Vegas is right around the corner at the end of May 2019.
The Stars Group owns a majority shareholding in iBus Media.
Pictures courtesy of Neil Stoddart / PokerStars
*TagsAdrian MateosEPT Monte CarloHaoxiang WangJohn JuandaKevin MacPheeLuis MedinaManig LoeserNicola GriecoRyan RiessViktor KatzenbergerWei Huang
*Related PlayersJohn JuandaKevin MacPheeRyan RiessManig LoeserAdrian MateosViktor Katzenberger
Register here: http://gg.gg/x7zda
https://diarynote-jp.indered.space
コメント