World Cup of Cards 2017

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    • Event 1: Grand Prix Canada
    • Event 2: $220 Shootout
    • Event 3: $110 Roll the Dice Mixed
    • Event 4: $330 6-Max Bounty
    • Event 5: $110 Big Ante
    • Event 6: $110 Single Rebuy
    • Event 7: $330 PL Omaha
    • Event 8: $550 8-Max Freeze
    • Event 9: $220 Survivor
    • Event 10: $1,100 50/50 Bounty
    • Event 11: $140 Crazy Pineapple 8-Max Bounty
    • Event 12: $330 PL Omaha Hi-Lo
    • Event 13: $1,650 CPPT World Cup of Cards
    • Event 14: $330 Mix Max
    • Event 15: $330 Survivor
    • Event 16: $160 Strangers in the Night
    • Event 17: $110 Crazy Pineapple 8-Max
    • Event 18: $110 Mixed PLH & PLO 8-Max
    • Event 19: $5,300 5K 8-Max Re-entry
    • Event 20: $1,100 Playground1000
    • Event 21: $150 Women’s Event
    • Event 22: $220 Roll the Dice Mixed Game
    • Event 23: $1,100 6-Max
    • Event 24: $330 Mega Stack Turbo
    • Event 25: $110 Limit Hold’em
    • Event 26: $10,300 High Roller 6-Max
    • Event 27: $220 Deepstack Turbo
    • Event 28: $2,200 Canadian Poker Championships
    • Event 29: $220 Seniors 50+
    • Event 30: $660 Big Bounty
    • Event 31: $330 5-Card PLO 8-Max
    • Event 32: $5,300 5K 8-Max
    • Event 33: $165 Freeze
    • Event 34: $550 Roll the Dice Mixed Game
    • Event 35: $110 Crazy Pineapple 8-Max
    • Event 36: $330 8-Max Bounty
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2017 World Cup of Cards News

WCC Leaderboard Challenge Overall Winners

2017/09/14 - 18:25 by

After more than 4 weeks of tournaments and 75 unique “scoring events” in the 2017 World Cup of Cards, we have our top 10 in the Leaderboard Challenge!

The top prize this year was impressive – a $10,000 Caribbean Poker Party package. In addition to this, and the weekly PowerFest prizes, the next 9 players on the Leaderboard Challenge final standings page will receive prizes as outlined below.

Without any further delay – the results:

William Blais
  • 1st place: William Blais – 1,472.60 points – $10,000 Caribbean Poker Party package
  • 2nd place: Jonathan Patrick Marrie – 1,350.36 points – $1,050 Caribbean Poker Party Final seat
  • 3rd place: Paul Scott – 1,085.08 points – $1,050 Caribbean Poker Party Final seats
  • 4th place: Shawn Daigle – 1,042.24 points – $109 Caribbean Poker Party Semi-Final seat
  • 5th place: Matthew Wilkins – 989.94 points – $109 Caribbean Poker Party Semi-Final seat
  • 6th place: Andrew Watt – 932.72 points – $109 Caribbean Poker Party Semi-Final seat
  • 7th place: Dustin Melanson – 882.18 points – $109 Caribbean Poker Party Semi-Final seat
  • 8th place: Rong Xu – 848.02 points – $109 Caribbean Poker Party Semi-Final seat
  • 9th place: Jason Conforti – 821.96 points – $109 Caribbean Poker Party Semi-Final seat
  • 10th place: Arthur W – 809.72 points – $109 Caribbean Poker Party Semi-Final seat

William Blais took a lead early in the WCC and didn’t seem to let up all event, playing in a ton of events and performing very well overall! In second place was Jonathan Marrie. Jonathan was 200 points behind first place yesterday and made up half of the distance in a single day with his terrific result in the Canadian Poker Championships. In the end, though, William kept his lead and took down the amazing first prize.

In almost all cases we know the winners’ partypoker ID and will award the prizes asap. If there are any questions or you don’t see your prize in your account, please write us at info@playgroundpoker.ca.

Congratulations!

Kevin Rivest claims the throne in the Canadian Poker Championships!

2017/09/14 - 3:33 by Playground Poker

The Canadian Poker Championships has come to a close after an exhilarating journey, in which players from all over the world and of all calibers of play gathered together to compete for the lion’s share of a $2,000,000 prize pool.

Part of the World Cup of Cards at Playground Poker Club, this $2,000 + $200 NL Hold’em Re-entry event was composed of a healthy mix of recreational and professional players. With so many Phase 1 feeders, for which players were able to satellite into for as little as $2.20 on partypoker, this tournament gave the opportunity for any player to join the field and play for life-changing money, regardless of their bankroll. Over 336 entries were booked into Day 1 for $220 or less (spawning from 2,801 Phase 1 buy-ins), and an additional 563 direct buy-ins were made, bringing the total number of entries up to 899.

The money bubble burst at the very end of Day 2, with Leo Hackenbroch and James Rubin sharing 162nd place money due to simultaneous eliminations in hand-for-hand play. The other 161 runners locked in a payout, and 145 were left to bag onto Day 3, lead by Sebastien Labbe.

Through the 8 hours of play in Day 3, it was Winnipeg pro Patrick Serda who bagged the chip lead, fresh from a High Roller win online the day before. Former chip leader Sebastien was still near the top of the leaderboard, having bagged a second place stack onto the final day.

21 players returned to the felts on Wednesday for the closing chapter of the CPC, and play took off with a fury, sending 5 players to the rail in less than half a level of play. As the day progressed, the action slowed down considerably with the pay jumps becoming increasingly interesting.

When the final table was formed, Patrick and Sebastien were still occupying the top 2 spots on the leaderboard. Julian Volpe (9th place: $20,000) was the first casualty, and his last chips were claimed by Sebastien. Poker wizard Mike Leah took over the chip lead during 8-handed play after finding a key triple-up when his stack was beginning to dwindle.

Kevin finished off Sean Gomez (8th place: $26,000) after Darren Keyes took a big bite out of him with Ace-King over Pocket Queens, and Patrick Serda (7th place: $35,000) followed him to the rail shortly after.

With those hands, Kevin became the chip leader as play reached 6-handed play, even after Maurizio Lo Russo doubled through him with Ace-King over Pocket-Kings. He regained some chips by eliminating Sebastien Labbe (6th place: $50,000) before seceding the top spot on the leaderboard to Darren, who eliminated Maurizio Lo Russo (5th place: $75,000) with an Ace-high flush over King-high flush.

4-handed action continued for the better part of two levels, where we saw some resilient short stacks fend for their tournament lives. It was finally Mike Leah (4th place: $110,000) who broke the cycle, moving in his last few big blinds with Ace-Nine and being bested by Kevin’s King-Jack.

Another level and a half went by before the next elimination took place, and it was Joel Giguere (3rd place: $156,000) who bit the dust in a two-part process. He first saw his flopped bottom two pairs be out-drawn by the pair and flush draw of Darren before going down with King-Seven versus the Ace-King of Kevin.

This led to heads-up play between Darren Keyes (479 million) and Kevin Rivest (387 million), who struck a deal before beginning the duel. Darren locked in $303,675 in the ICM deal, while Kevin secured $280,325, leaving an additional $56,000 and the champion’s trophy for the eventual winner. The played back and forth for around 3 levels, with each player holding a considerable lead at some point. Darren started off strong and nearly had Kevin on the ropes, but Kevin kept his composure and managed to regain the lead after winning a string of hands.

Holding a 2-to-1 chip lead, Kevin min-raised to 33M from the small blind, and called Darren’s 3-bet all-in of 232M. Kevin was in the lead with Ace of Clubs 10 of Clubs versus Queen of Clubs Jack of Diamonds, and improved to a flush on the 2 of Clubs King of Clubs 5 of Hearts King of Spades 5 of Clubs board to bring the Canadian Poker Championships to a close. He secured the additional $56,000 set aside in the deal, bringing his total payout up to $336,325, and was awarded the stunning CPC champion’s trophy!

Congratulations!

Canadian Poker Championships winner: Kevin Rivest – $336,325.00

Runner-up: Darren Keyes – $303,675.00

Last hand of play:

The Champion: Jiachen Gong

2017/09/13 - 22:55 by

Event #32 in the 2017 World Cup of Cards has come to a close in a very abrupt manner, and after just a single hand of Heads-up action, Jiachen Gong has been crowned Champion of this $5,000 + $300 NL Hold’em 8-Max Re-entry tournament.

Jiachen was the prohibitive chip leader following his elimination of Louis Boutin, but throughout the whole tournament – indeed, the entire World Cup of Cards – Senthuran Vijayaratnam had more than proven his chops as a creative and skilled player, so anything was possible when play got heads up.

But it was on the first hand that all of the chips got in the middle and the cards were flipped on their backs.

Senthuran: Ace of Spades 10 of Clubs
Jiachen: 6 of Spades 6 of Clubs

For the second hand in a row Jiachen was ahead with a baby pair when the chips were wagered, and for the second hand in a row he’d have to win the flip to get the desired result!

The flop brought fireworks. The window card was the Ace of Clubs which seemed to put Sen in the lead – but the middle card on the flop was the 6 of Hearts – just as Jiachen had requested. The third flop card was the 5 of Diamonds and Jiachen’s flopped set was now way in front. The Queen of Clubs Jack of Hearts on the turn and river were blanks and just like that, in two flips the tournament was over!

Event #32 Champion: Jiachen Gong, $80,000.00

Final hand of the tournament

2nd place: Senthuran Vijayaratnam, $48,000.00

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