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EdmondDantes says

Very nice finish, Adam. Impressive stuff.

09/29/07

Anonymous says

It was certainly a good monetary score. Sorry it couldn't include a bracelet. Congrats, Adam. Very well done.

09/29/07

jackbobby says

I played in this one too. Went heads-up with a 2-1 chip lead at my first table and flopped trips and called my opponents all-in. He rivered a flush. Two hands later I pushed with KK and he turned over AA. I would have taken the $36k prize for 3rd. Good showing. You playing in today's main event?

09/30/07

Anonymous says

I watched some of the final table. My buddy got knocked out right away. I think it was you who took him out. Nice score, man!

09/30/07

Mr_Taterhead says

Nice score. Congrats.

09/30/07

Anonymous says

Rough final table. Excellent score tho, congrats!

10/01/07

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Disappointing WCOOP Final Table

A_Junglen I played the PLO and Triple Shoot-out WCOOP events on PokerStars today. I was looking forward to both.

In the Pot-Limit Omaha tournament I busted fairly quickly. The structure was such that it forced players to gamble early. I ended getting my money in with Aces and the nut flush draw vs. a set. I missed my draw and was busto within an hour. Oh well.

Over at my shootout table it looked like it was going to be a very tough table. BelowAbove, Andy McLeod, Twisted Echo, and myself were all at the same table.

The shootout format is pretty fun.

This tournament was capped at 742 entrants, so it started with 81 tables of 9 players each. Once each table yielded a winner the remaining 81 players were divided into 9 players at the 9 remaining tables. Then of course once each of the 9 tables had a winner they merged to create the final table.

I managed to win my first table, despite it featuring several players with great results.

My 2nd table was VERY soft. Despite the table being very weak, it was still no lock for me to win. Remember, in a shootout you must win in order to advance. I played a very patient game and picked good spots to accumulate chips without risk and found myself heads-up facing a roughly 3.5:1 deficit in chips (my 6k to his 21k).

My strategy was to get heads-up and the structure allowed a lot of play - so I felt confident about my chances once I reached that goal.

I chipped up to around 8k vs 19k, then this hand came up.

Link to Hand

Once again I had made a great "hero call" vs my opponent. After this hand I had a marginal lead, and all the momentum. I ended up finishing my opponent off when he stacked off with an overpair vs my top two pair.

On to the final table!

The final table started off very well for me. I was picking up some hands and quickly built up my starting stack of 3k to 3.6k. Players generally played VERY tight (rightly so) because of the ridiculous payout jumps. 9th place paid around $3.5k and 1st place paid $75k. Tell me that's not ridiculous?

Anyways, I ended up flopping a set and doubled up, which gave me the chiplead. With 5 players left I was the clear favorite and very confident in my chances of winning the bracelet.

To be honest, this was the first time the title truly meant more to me than the money. 1st was "only" $75k but winning a World Championship of Online Poker Event is recognized feat. I have enough money....but lack any major titles.

At any rate I ended up losing a sizeable pot when my opponent outflopped me with his AQ vs my AK. After that I just couldn't get anything going. I still had a playabe stack, but the opponent to my right would constantly out-flop me. Whenever I'd pick up a big hand I'd open the pot and everyone would fold.

Once with Kings I raised the pot, BB called and the flop was QT9. Not exactly a dream flop, as it was obviously draw heavy. BB checked, I c-bet 825 or so into the pot of 1150 and he called. Turn was an 8 completing a straight for any jack. BB checked, I checked behind. River a was T, making the board QT98T. BB checked, and with no value in betting I checked behind.

He tabled J7 for a straight and I lost the minimum - but it's obviously frustrating when your opponent runs like god when we're playing for top 3 prize money and a WCOOP title.

I ended up busting out in 3rd place, getting it AIPF with A9 vs TT. I'm pretty pissed off at myself with how I played the last 30 minutes or so of this tournament. Having both of my opponents 3 handed catch every flop and run insane vs. me resulted in my demise. In retrospect I certainly could've played better, but I really couldn't catch a break 3 handed. My last hand was the one and only time that I was all-in (without the nuts) at risk for elimination. Again, I failed to get lucky in this kind of situation.

3rd Place Paid $36,500


Still a nice finish, and after taking a month off of playing online MTT's it's nice to know I can still crank out a big score when I'm focused.

Thanks for the support everybody.


-Adam Junglen