And so it is all over. Within the early hours of this morning the last hand of the sector Series of Poker Main Event in Las Vegas came to an end. After ten days of play the "November Nine" are actually known, a minimum of by name. Their backgrounds and possibilities of success after they return in November will now be pored over by the media, filling that point between now and that moment when one in all them wins the primary prize of $10 million.
It's a record setting final table, featuring players from six nations. It features a first Brazilian player to succeed in the general table in Bruno Politano, who will return because the short stack, but with certainly one of poker's booming nations railing him every step of ways. It also includes a Dutch player for the second one year in succession. Jorrt van Hoof will return because the chip leader with greater than 38 million.
Perhaps most notable is the inclusion of Mark Newhouse, who becomes the primary player to succeed in a second November Nine, and the primary back-to-back finalist since Dan Harrington in 2004.
Newhouse finished ninth in 2013. When he began the principle event this year he tweeted that he had no plans to complete ninth a second time. He is also right.
For followers of the ecu Poker Tour the name Martin Jacobson will stand out.
Jacobson is an EPT regular, with multiple final table appearances at the tour, including two runner-up finishes, and because the highest earner on the final can be a number of the favourites.
The full line up is as follows:
Seat 1 - Billy Pappaconstantinou, 29, Greece - 17,500,000Seat 2 - Felix Stephensen, 23, U.s.a. - 32,775,000Seat 3 - Jorryt van Hoof, 31, Netherlands - 38,375,000Seat 4 - Mark Newhouse, 29, America - 26,000,000Seat 5 - Andoni Larrabe, 22, Spain - 22,550,000Seat 6 - William Tonking, 27, U.s. - 15,050,000Seat 7 - Daniel Sindelar, 30, U.s. - 21,200,000Seat 8 - Martin Jacobson, 27, Stockholm - 14,900,000Seat 9 - Bruno Politano , 31, Brazil - 12,125,000
They each face a return trip to Las Vegas to play the general table on 10 and MARTINMAS. While the winner will receive a guaranteed $10 million, there is a further $18 million to be awarded for the opposite eight places, with the ninth place finisher already guaranteed $730,725.
1st place - $10,000,0002nd place - $5,145,9683rd place - $3,806,4024th place - $2,848,8335th place - $2,143,1746th place - $1,622,0807th place - $1,235,8628th place - $947,0779th place - $730,725
But for now the sector Series is at an end. The tables was dismantled and removed, the banners was packed away for one more year, and the Rio is returning to the way it looked some eight weeks ago.
Thanks to everyone who has read our coverage from Las Vegas during that point. As always it is a privilege to be here and to be granted permission to observe it first-hand. It will be a really perfect final table.
Stephen Bartley is a PokerStars Blog reporter. Photos by Joe Giron and Jayne Furman/Poker Photo Archive
Read More... [Source: PokerStarsBlog.com :: World Series of Poker]
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