22-YEAR-OLD POKER PRO WINS POKERSTARS CARIBBEAN
ADVENTURE
16 January 2009
$3 million first prize the biggest yet in young
gun's pro career
"It hasn't sunk in yet. It feels unbelievable, surreal.
I can't believe it's happening," was the reaction from
22-year-old Canadian poker pro Poorya Nazari over the
weekend, immediately after winning the PokerStars
Caribbean Adventure main prize of $3 million after
coming out tops on a roster of globally respected poker
aces. Nazari's win includes a sponsored seat in the
European Poker Tour Grand Final in Monte Carlo later
this (2009) year, which will be his first trip to
Europe.
And the Richmond Hill, Canada player did it all on $33 -
he qualified for the PCA through a $33 rebuy turbo
tournament - a series of aggressive, quick-paced
Internet games. 746 of the players who started in the
main event this year had won their seats online at
Pokerstars qualifiers.
The 22 year-old biochemistry graduate was one of 1 347
entrants in the $10 000 buy-in, NLHE event - an entry
field that broke the records for a poker tournament held
outside the United States and created a total prize pool
of more than $12.5 million.
Played at the spectacular Atlantis Resort in the
Bahamas, this year's PAC saw every final table player -
Nazari, Tony Gregg, Benny Spindler, Alexandre Gomes,
Pieter Tielen, Dustin Dirksen, Daniel Heimiller and
Kevin Saul - collect six figure or bigger prizes.
Team PokerStars Pro and 2008 WSOP bracelet winner
Alexandre Gomes started the final table action as the
chip leader, with Nazari in second lead. Gomes
subsequently busted out in fourth place in the first few
hours of aggressive, adventurous play. The game slowed
somewhat following the first burst of activity, and it
was a further four and a half hours of tough, gruelling
poker before the heads up was decided.
Nazari faced Tony Gregg in the final minutes of a highly
entertaining tournament, with the young Canadian holding
a massive chip advantage of 17.7 million chips against
Gregg’s 9.2 million. It was all over in a mere four
hands. Gregg collected $1.7 million for his second
placing, with third placed Benny Spindler taking home
$1.1 million.
Nazari graduated in biochemistry from McMaster
University only late last year, but he has been playing
poker successfully for some time and is especially adept
in the Internet environment, playing at Poker Stars.com
and winning enough for the game to be his main source of
income for several years.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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