- Bahamas Atlantis Poker Tournament 2019
- Atlantis Bahamas Poker Tournament 2019
- Atlantis Bahamas Poker Tournament 2019
- Bahamas Poker Tournament 2019 Winner
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Our marquee international tournaments where winners enter the illustrious Champions Club™ and have their name etched on the coveted Champions Cup™. The PokerStars Players No Limit Hold'em Championship is a $25,000 buy-in poker tournament and an event truly for the players. The inaugural PokerStars Players No Limit Hold'em Championship took place in the Bahamas in January 2019 and became the largest $25,000 buy-in poker tournament in history.
The PokerStars Caribbean Adventure is no more.
After 16 years, most of it spent being one of the premier live stops on the international poker scene, PokerStars has opted to discontinue the event, according to reporting from PocketFives.
The relevant sentence comes at the bottom of the linked piece, in a quote from PokerStars Marketing Director Eric Hollreiser.
'It’s no secret that after 15 successful years, the PCA [prior to last year’s PSPC] has been losing momentum and there’s been increasing player criticism of the location,” Hollreiser said. “As such, we will not be returning to Paradise Island in 2020.'
History of the PCA
PCA began as a partnership with the World Poker Tour, taking place on a cruise ship in 2004 and hosting a field of 221 players. Poker legend Gus Hansen would ship the inaugural event, then a $7,500 buy-in, for $455,780.
The next year the PCA moved to its famous home at Atlantis Resort, the sprawling and opulent set-up that occupies almost half of Paradise Island.
Over the years there, the series would eventually evolve into becoming part of PokerStars' European Poker Tour, with the buy-in goosed up to $10,300. It would eventually stand as one of just a few remaining $10K main events on the overall live schedule, although the buy-in was dropped to $5,300 for a couple of years, including the one year the event was rebranded as PokerStars Championship Bahamas in 2017.
The PCA peaked in terms of prizes awarded in 2009, when little-known Canadian Poorya Nazari won a monstrous official first-place of $3 million, although it was widely reported thata deal had been struck at some point before the finish. In terms of entries, the PCA Main Event peaked during the two following years when 1,529 and 1,560 turned up, respectively.
The Main Event was far from the only big draw at PCA. It also hosted some of the first and biggest $100K events in poker before that was just another tournament in the procession of high rollers. The $25K High Roller was also usually one of the most well-attended on the calendar.
Declining Attendance
While the PCA for years could count itself a premier live poker stop, it had fallen on somewhat hard times in recent years.
After attendance peaked in 2011, the lack of online satellites available to North American players contributed to a large attendance drop back to 1,072 in 2012 — about two-thirds of the previous year's total. As the poker environment became tougher and edges shrank, the attractiveness of an expensive stay on an island resort went down as well.
A further drop of about 20 percent — from 1,031 to 816 — in 2015 convinced PokerStars brass to try lowering the buy-in to the aforementioned $5,300. The move did little, as a bump of about 100 entries just meant the prize pool dropped massively, awarding its first winner's prize below seven figures since 2005.
Things only got worse the following year, and 2018's return to $10,300 saw attendance drop in the number of entries to 582, a level not seen since 2005 as well.
The PCA received a major shot in the arm in 2019 when the PokerStars Players No-Limit Hold'em Championship was announced. While the landmark event would run alongside the PCA Main Event, the lure of the most lucrative $25K in history was enough to bring out plenty of grinders and push Main Event attendance back up to 865 for Chino Rheem's victory.
However, that always looked to be temporary fix given that the PSPC was thought to be a one-off and certainly looked unlikely to be repeated every year. With the news that the event will move to Barcelona for 2020, it was confirmed that there would be no similar life raft to keep the 2020 PCA afloat, and PokerStars opted to end the long-running event rather than risk continued decline.
Barring a reboot some time down the road, that means Rheem will go down as the final PCA Main Event champion, closing the books on one of poker's longest-running and most lucrative tournament series.
Tables of PCA Major Event Winners
Bahamas Atlantis Poker Tournament 2019
Main Event
Atlantis Bahamas Poker Tournament 2019
Year | Buy-In | Entries | Total Prize Pool | Winner | First Prize |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | $7,500 | 221 | $1,657,500 | Gus Hansen | $455,780 |
2005 | $8,000 | 461 | $3,487,200 | John Gale | $890,600 |
2006 | $8,000 | 724 | $5,647,200 | Steve Paul-Ambrose | $1,388,600 |
2007 | $8,000 | 937 | $7,063,842 | Ryan Daut | $1,535,255 |
2008 | $8,000 | 1,136 | $8,562,976 | Bertrand Grospellier | $2,000,000 |
2009 | $10,000 | 1,347 | $12,674,000 | Poorya Nazari | $3,000,000 |
2010 | $10,300 | 1,529 | $14,831,300 | Harrison Gimbel | $2,200,000 |
2011 | $10,300 | 1,560 | $15,132,000 | Galen Hall | $2,300,000 |
2012 | $10,300 | 1,072 | $10,398,400 | John Dibella | $1,775,000 |
2013 | $10,300 | 987 | $9,573,900 | Dimitar Danchev | $1,859,000 |
2014 | $10,300 | 1,031 | $10,070,000 | Dominik Panka | $1,423,096 |
2015 | $10,300 | 816 | $7,915,200 | Kevin Schulz | $1,491,580 |
2016 | $5,300 | 928 | $4,500,800 | Mike Watson | $728,325 |
2017 | $5,000 | 738 | $3,376,712 | Christian Harder | $429,664 |
2018 | $10,300 | 582 | $5,645,400 | Maria Lampropulos | $1,081,100 |
2019 | $10,300 | 865 | $8,390,500 | Chino Rheem | $1,567,100 |
$100K Super High Roller
Year | Entries | Total Prize Pool | Winner | Prize |
---|---|---|---|---|
2011 | 38 | $3,743,000 | Eugene Katchalov | $1,500,000 |
2012 | 32 | $3,136,000 | Viktor Blom | $1,254,400 |
2013 | 55 | $5,724,180 | Scott Seiver | $2,003,480 |
2014 | 56 | $5,433,120 | Fabian Quoss | $1,629,940 |
2015 | 66 | $6,402,000 | Steve O'Dwyer | $1,872,580 |
2016 | 58 | $5,626,000 | Bryn Kenney | $1,687,800 |
2017 | 54 | $5,239,080 | Jason Koon | $1,650,300 |
2018 | 48 | $4,737,600 | Cary Katz | $1,492,340 |
2019 | 61 | $5,918,220 | Sam Greenwood | $1,775,460 |
$25K High Roller
Year | Entries | Total Prize Pool | Winner | Prize |
---|---|---|---|---|
2009 | 48 | $1,200,000 | Bertrand Grospellier | $433,500 |
2010 | 84 | $2,057,998 | William Reynolds | $576,240 |
2011 | 151 | $3,775,500 | Will Molson | $1,072,850 |
2012 | 148 | $3,626,000 | Alex Bilokur | $1,134,930 |
2013 | 204 | $4,998,000 | Vanessa Selbst | $1,424,420 |
2014 | 247 | $6,051,500 | Jake Schindler | $1,192,624 |
2015 | 269 | $6,456,000 | Ilkin Garibli | $1,105,040 |
2016 | 225 | $5,400,000 | Nick Maimone | $996,480 |
2017 | 159 | $3,895,500 | Luc Greenwood | $740,032 |
2018 | 142 | $3,484,800 | Chris Kruk | $836,350 |
2019 | 162 | $3,928,500 | Martin Zamani | $895,110 |
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PokerStars Caribbean Adventure
Raman Gujral has created history by becoming the first Indian player to win a PokerStars Caribbean Adventure event. He shipped Event 32: $1,100 NLHE for $76,760 or ~ ₹55 Lakh. This is his biggest cash ever and a proud moment for all Indian poker fans.
8 Indian embarked on the 14,000 Kilometer journey to the palatial Atlantis Resort in The Bahamas to take part in the 2019 edition of the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure. They were Sumit Sapra, Nikhil Segel, Kavin Shah, Raman Gujral, Sharad Rao, Vivek Singh, Saurabh Sindhwani and Aneesh Nair. They won the elusive PokerStars Platinum Pass worth $30,000 which gave them tickets to the biggest live $25,000 tournament ever; the [BPokerStars Players No-Limit Hold’em Championship (PSPC)[/B] with a final guaranteed prize pool of $26,455,500. Sadly, nobody from the Indian contingent was able to cash in the Championship which paid out the top 181 finishers out of the 1,039 entries.
Atlantis Bahamas Poker Tournament 2019
However, all wasn't lost, Raman Gujral participated in Event #32: $1,100 - All Players Are in The Money and proved his mettle by winning the event which had a total guaranteed prize pool of $393K. He also cashed in the $1,100 PCA National event in 62nd place. Event 32 saw a strong player pool of 406 entries from all over the world and 56 re-entries. The tournament came to a close at level 26 where the blinds were 30K/60K. In his final heads up hand against Ukraine's Artem Zverkhovskyy, Gujral was dealt . The board ran and Gujral's 7-pair proved too good for Artem. The pro from Ukraine cashed for the first time outside the US by coming 2nd for $48,440. His biggest live tournament win came in the $2,000 No Limit Hold'em - Main Event #11 in the 2017 Chicago Poker Classic where he came 2nd for $142,325.
Previously, Gujral cashes a couple of times in Macau and his previous best performance came in the Asian Series Goa High Roller event where he bagged 2nd place for ~INR 4.5 Lakh in 2012.
Here's the official final table payout:
Rank | Name | Prize (in USD) |
---|---|---|
1 | Raman Gujral | 76,760 |
2 | Artem Zverkhovskyy | 48,440 |
3 | Jack Sinclair | 34,740 |
4 | Florian Duta | 27,600 |
5 | Mikhail Sokolovskiy | 21,640 |
6 | Pascal Hartmann | 16,960 |
7 | Wilson Lim Chong Way | 12,740 |
8 | Sean Paul Legendre | 9,060 |
Bahamas Poker Tournament 2019 Winner
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Raman GujralPCA 2019Raman Gujral winsPCAPCA 2019 Event 32Sumit SapraNikhil SegelKavin ShahSharad RaoVivek SinghSaurabh SindhwaniAneesh NairRelated Tournaments
PokerStars Caribbean AdventureRelated Players
Sumit SapraSharad RaoKavin ShahVivek Singh