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WSOPE 2018: Bharath Janardhan Finishes 29th in €1,650 Mixed PLO/NLHE, Madhav Gupta Makes Day 2 in King’s Trophy Event

October 22 turned out to be a busy day at the 2018 World Series of Poker Europe (WSOPE) which saw four events running alongside each other. Starting with the €1,100 Monster Stack that crowned a winner in Timur Margolin, the other events that were playing out simulataneously were the €1,650 Mixed PLO/NLHE, €2,200 Pot-Limit Omaha 8-Handed and WSOPE King’s Trophy Event.

Indian challenger Bharath Janardhan, who had fought hard to make Day 2 in the €1,650 Mixed PLO/NLHE, sadly busted out early on in the day. He had some consolation though, as he collected €2,564 (₹2.16 Lakhs) from his 29th place finish in the event. The day ended with Israeli pro Netanel Amedi (1,882,000) topping the eight survivors with the largest stack.

Hong Kong’s Anson Tsang (931,000) bagged the overnight chip lead among 35 survivors in the €2,200 Pot-Limit Omaha 8-Handed. Not too far behind, Ilya Bulychev (748,000) and Quan Zhou (480,000) bagged the next largest stacks.

Another popular event at the 2018 WSOPE, the €2,250 buy-in King’s Trophy Event registered 75 entries on its opening flight. The top 35 runners, including Baadshah Gaming co-founder Madhav Gupta (38,500) have made it through to Day 2, while Israel’s Dor Mey Tal (251,500) holds the chip lead. The second starting flight of the event is slated on October 23.

€1,650 Mixed PLO/NLHE

42 players returned for Day 2 action with all eyes on the €86,956 grand prize and the WSOP gold bracelet.

India’s Bharath Janardhan, who had consolidated to a stack of 72,000 at the end of Day 1, was seated along with Romain Lewis, Julien Sitbon, Chris Ferguson, Anthony Zinno, Majid Ejlal Noubarian and Richard Toth. Early in the day, Janardhan lost a big three-way pot that he played against Toth and Lewis, which brought his stack down to 40,000. Shortly after Roman Cieslik busted out as the bubble boy at the start of level 17, Janardhan hit the rail in 29th place for €2,564 (₹2,16,600).

Bharath Janardhan
Bharath Janardhan

Some other big names who posted a score at the event include Yunsheng Sun (10th for €5,954), Jean-Noel Said (11th for €4,777), Day 1 chip leader Laszlo Bujtas (13th for €3,930), Anthony Zinno (15th for €3,319), Roland Israelashvili (18th for €2,878), Chris Ferguson (23rd for €2,878), Chris Back (31st for €2,564) and Siarhei Chudapal (37th for €2,350).

Richard Toth (9th for €5,954) bubbled the eight-handed final table bringing the days play to a close.

Israel’s Netanel Amedi (1,882,000) will be leading the eight-handed final table coming into the final day but he has Norbert Szecsi (1,792,000) and Shaun Deeb (1,247,000) breathing down on him.

Netanel Amedi
Netanel Amedi

Final Table Chip Counts

1. Netanel Amedi – 1,882,000

2. Norbert Szecsi – 1,792,000

3. Shaun Deeb – 1,247,000

4. Vittorio Castro – 697,000

5. Van Tiep Nguyen – 546,000

6. Julien Sitbon – 423,000

7. Samuel Albeck – 379,000

8. Jaroslav Peter – 271,000

€2,200 Pot-Limit Omaha 8-Handed

The €2,200 Pot-Limit Omaha 8-Handed kicked off with only 10 players but the field size quickly expanded to a 187-player strong turnout, smashing the €200,000 guarantee easily. With the event collecting a prize pool of €358,853, the winner will add a glittering €91,730 to his bankroll.

After a hectic day on the felts, only 35 players managed to make the cut for Day 2 where Anson Tsang (931,000) from Hong Kong commands the lead with the largest stack.

Anson Tsang
Anson Tsang

Following Tsang on the leaderboard are Ilya Bulychev (748,000) and Quan Zhou (480,000).

With the top 29 places assured payouts, many poker stars are still in contention for the title including Anton Johansson (205,000), Chris Ferguson (171,000), Anthony Zinno (166,000), Ihar Pliashko (120,000) and Roland Israelashvili (113,000), along with Shaun Deeb (208,000), who will be returning to the featured table on Day 2 in his bid to win a fifth WSOP bracelet.

Top 10 Chip Counts At The End of Day 1

1. Anson Tsang – 931,000

2. Ilya Bulychev – 748,000

3. Quan Zhou – 480,000

4. Ludvig Sterner – 388,000

5. Aaron Duczak – 307,000

6. Daniel Rezaei – 302,000

7. Gisle Olsen – 288,000

8. Ryan Riess – 259,000

9. Hokyiu Lee – 258,000

10. Eemil Tuominen – 225,000

WSOPE King’s Trophy Event

One of the featured events on the schedule, the 2018 WSOPE King’s Trophy Event that has a €2,500 buy-in and a €1 Million, hosted its first starting flight on Monday. A total of 75 entries were clocked in on the opening flight with 35 among them bagging a stack for Day 2. Israel’s Dor Mey Valley (251,500) carries the largest stack among the day’s survivors.

Dor Mey Tal
Dor Mey Tal

India`s Madhav Gupta (38,500) was seen in action at the event and made it through to Day 2. Though extremely short, Gupta is still very much in the running, He shared the news on Facebook. “Super short bag for Day 2 of the King’s Cup. Bad last two levels, but a bag nonetheless!

Madhav Gupta
Madhav Gupta

Vladimir Geshkenbein (250,000) and Andrei Konopelko (237,000) round out the top three stacks coming into Day 2, while Andrey Ivlev (32,000), Maria Lampropoulus (64,000), Aleksei Ivanov (82,500), Gudmundur Sigurjonsson (126,500), and Luca Marchetti (127,500) are the other top guns who will be returning back on Day 2.

Top 10 Chip Counts At The End of Day 1A

1. Dor Mey Valley – 251,500

2. Vladimir Geshkenbein – 250,000

3. Andrei Konopelko – 237,000

4. Guoliang Wei – 216,000

5. Tareq Ahmad Ahmad Yar – 179,000

6. Grzegorz Adam Idziak – 144,000

7. Ricardo Andres Chauriye Rabah – 143,000

8. David Anthony Hudson – 134,000

9. Bernd Werner – 134,000

10. Yang Zhang – 129,000

Keep following all the latest updates from WSOPE 2018 right here on PokerGuru!

Image/Content Courtesy: wsop.com

WSOPE 2018: Dhawal Lachhwani Among Top Stacks With 14 Remaining in €1,100 Monster Stack, Manish Goenka Finishes 29th For ₹2.60 Lakhs

After a busy four days on the felts, the 2018 World Series of Poker Europe (WSOPE) €1,100 Monster Stack NLHE is treading fast towards the finish line. Day 2 played out with 165 players coming in from three starting flights. Bagging up chips at the day’s conclusion were 14 finalists led by Luiz Ferreira Filho (cover image), who holds a stack of 4,350,000.

Always the ones to remain in the forefront, Team India have been running well through this series. Three Indian challengers, Dhawal Lachhwani (1,650,000), Manish Goenka and Bharath Janardhan jumped in on the action through different starting flights and reached Day 2. While Lachhwani is among the top stacks with 14 remaining survivors who will resume play on Day 3, Goenka ended his run in 29th place for €3080 (₹2,60,721). Janardhan however, failed to cross the money line and busted empty-handed.

Looking at how the starting flights had run out, Day 1A ended with 30 players out of 148 who entered, while Day 1B saw 204 entries come in and 56 among them making it to Day 2. The final flight i.e. Day 1C attracted 314 hopefuls and 80 made it to Day 2.

In all, the event attracted 666 entries creating a total prize pool of €639,027. The payouts were announced right as Day 2 began, with the top 100 runners assured a minimum €1,605. The winner will add an impressive €134,407 to his bankroll, in addition to winning the coveted WSOP gold bracelet!

Day 2 Recap

Day 2 of the event kicked off with China’s Quan Zhou, who was chip leader of the Day 1A with 519,500, holding the overall chip lead. Following him in stacks were Day 1C chip leader, Oleg Netaliev who held 472,000, and Frank Rohrmueller with 399,500.

A number of Indian challengers were seen entering through the three starting flights and three of them, Bharath Janardhan, Manish Goenka and Dhawal Lachhwani advanced to Day 2. While Janardhan had ended Day 1A with a stack of 126,500, the other two had entered on Day 1C and on Day 2, Goenka returned with 210,500 and Lachhwani with a stack of 167,000.

Meanwhile, Madhav Gupta, Rakesh Lalwani and Shravan Chhabria entered the event on Day 1B but failed to make it past the opening day. All three fired another bullet on Day 1C, along with Goenka and Lachhwani, but without success.

In fact, Lalwani was the first one to be eliminated on Day 1C and went out to Maksym Lavrov, who hit a set on the flop.

Lachhwani’s Day 2 run was remarkable and he kept a steady stack through the better part. With only 45 players left in the field, Lachhwani coolered Stoyan Obreshkov and sent him packing to the rail in a hand where he held against Obreshkov’s . Both players flopped two pairs on the flop , but Lachhwani’s hand was superior and while the turn was of no help for him or Obreshkov, Lachhwani improved to a full house on the river to eliminate Obreshkov. As the day was drawing to a close, Lachhwani chipped down on losing a hand to Mario Llapi’s pocket kings, but finally bagged a stack of 1,650,000 for the final day.

Dhawal Lachhwani
Dhawal Lachhwani

Meanwhile, Janardhan’s bracelet hopes ended with his elimination early on Day 2 and he returned to the rail empty-handed.

Goenka performed fairly well through Day 2 and scored a crucial double up that saw him sail past the bubble. Holding , Goenka clashed with Karim Alleg who tabled . The board ran and Goenka paired both his cards to double up on Alleg.

However, Goenka’s tournament run ended in 29th place and he bowed out of the tournament after he was confronted by Aleksei Ivanov in a hand where both players moved all in heads-up. Ivanov was at risk with his trailing Goenka’s . However, he hit a straight draw on the flop and completed the straight on the turn and Goenka was then drawing dead, hoping for a king on the river, which never came. The river gave Ivanov a double-up on Goenka. Goenka was eliminated and pocketed €3080 (₹2,60,721) for his efforts.

Manish Goenka
Manish Goenka

The King’s Casino regular and co-founder of The Indian Poker Series (TIPS) later shared his elimination hand on social media, “Busted 29th in the WSOPE Monster Stack…,” wrote Goenka on Facebook.

Christian Thiry (17th for €4,455) and Yang Zhang (18th for €4,455) were among the latter eliminations of the day while the last player to be shown the door on Day 2 was Daniel Smiljkovic (15th for €5,513) who, despite flopping a pair of kings was busted by Michal Mrakes’ queen-high straight.

Trailing Filho in stacks are 2018 WSOP $2,500 NLHE winner Timur Margolin (4,110,000) and Raul Henriquez (2,810,000). Interestingly, Filho’s father Luiz Ferreira (510,000) has also managed to advance to Day 3, while €1,100 Turbo Bounty Hunter champion Mykhailo Gutyi (1,275,000) is among the big stacks.

Luiz Antonio Duarte Ferreira Filho
Luiz Antonio Duarte Ferreira Filho

Top 10 Chip Counts At The End of Day 2

  1. Luiz Antonio Duarte Ferreira Filho – 4,350,000
  2. Timur Margolin – 4,110,000
  3. Raul Henriquez – 2,810,000
  4. Andrei Konopelko – 2,360,000
  5. Alexandre Viard – 2,180,000
  6. Amar Begovic – 1,660,000
  7. Dhawal Lachhwani – 1,650,000
  8. Henrik Brockmann – 1,335,000
  9. Mykhailo Gutyi – 1,275,000
  10. Sebastian Ulrich – 1,240,000

Keep following all the latest updates from WSOPE 2018 right here on PokerGuru!

Image/Content Courtesy: wsop.com

Heads-Up: Baadshah Gaming CEO Madhav ‘Maddy’ Gupta In A Tell It All Conversation On How The Present Numbers Game is Not Sustainable

Madhav ‘Maddy’ Gupta (cover image) is a popular name in the Indian poker industry and has been the driving force behind the Pride Poker Room (now re-christened to Baadshah Gaming Live) onboard Casino Pride, Goa for almost eight years now. Last year, Gupta floated the online site Baadshah Gaming. Gupta managed to bring Casino Pride onboard the online venture. The Casino Pride group bought a 30% stake in the site that offers multiple skill games like poker, rummy and fantasy cricket featuring a singular wallet across games.

Gupta resurrected the tournament action at Casino Pride by hosting the inaugural Baadshah Gaming Live Tournament series last month. The series attracted a modest yet strong turnout of poker players from across the country who were all praise for the structure and hospitality of Maddy and the Baadshah Gaming team.

We sat down with Gupta on the last day of the event and had a candid tete-a-tete about the response to the debut event and the current poker scene in the country both online and live. Gupta unabashedly puts his heart out and his take on the present scenario truly depicts that the current number game is not sustainable.

Here are excerpts from the conversation.

 

Hello Madhav, thank you for speaking with PokerGuru and congratulations on the success of the debut Baadshah Gaming Live Event. Afterthoughts and plans ahead?

So, at Baadshah Gaming we are very proud and excited to have hosted our inaugural event. The online space had our attention for a while and we of course come from a rich heritage and a background of live events. The way we see poker and ourselves in the market is like a mix between a bank and a hotel. We provide great service and make sure there is security for both the game play and the cash outs.

And that was the basic reason behind partnering up with Pride. We are not just a random website. We literally have ships anchored in the water, and we are going nowhere. We at Baadshah are truly a click and mortar business. That’s what we have showcased in the Baadshah Gaming LIVE series. This is the first of many.

We found that there isn’t much scope for new entrants in terms of players in the current market. The buy-ins are getting incredibly expensive and so is the skill difference between the old and the new lot. We are very happy with the support we got. There were many people who had stopped playing poker but came for this. That’s because it was at Casino Pride and because of the years of service that the Pride has provided.

We will have two types of events going ahead. One will be of this kind with ₹60-65K cumulative buy-ins. The idea is that with travel and accommodation overheads, we expect their total expense for the trip to be under ₹1 lakh.

Then we will have a second series which will be for your regulars and high stakes players. That will be our High Roller series with cumulative buy-ins of ₹3-4 lakhs. There, we will have more fun events like more re-buys and re-entry events. There will be an OFC, PLO and a big high-roller event with a buy-in of about ₹1 lakh.

In our experience, people usually have ₹50K expenses in a week playing online and that brings the total expense to roughly ₹26 lakhs in a year. At ₹26 lakhs if you want to have 1000 entries, 80% of the field will lose their money. That means 800 people will have to be developed next year to fund just current growth and not a growth per say. Where are these 800 players coming from? They aren’t.

Today of course you have closed groups where action is bought and sold but that’s not new money in the poker liquidity. That’s old money which is re-circulating. If new staking sites like StakeKings come to India, that may bring new money in the market but as far as the current scene is concerned, we believe that expenditures are too high. Of course, guarantees sound incredibly attractive and that’s what gets a player in, but at ₹26 lakhs, a player needs to win at least one title of one of the big guaranteed events every year to just break even.

We all know that tournament poker is incredibly high variance and therefore, it will take a couple years and you need to consistently make multiple scores to make any real money. I’m not as worried about the 200 that make the money. I’m more worried about the 800 that don’t make and how do they continue to fund it.

So, there will always be a difference between live and online. Live requires a certain level of dedication where you need to take three or four days out of your program, schedule, of work to travel to a different city, sit and play at the player end. In case of online, of course you can sit at home and play and that makes it a lot easier as well.

 

So, that was going to be our next question, while the Baadshah Gaming Main Event was going on, several huge events were taking place online. We saw many players more inclined towards those high value events. What’s your take on that? What do you think the future of poker in India will be, Live or Online?

There will always be a mix of both live and online. I don’t think that the categorisations will be that simple. I don’t think that any one will close and the other will be the only option, there will be both. There are players who like to play live and there are players who like to play online.

That subset is not always the same. It seems to be the same today because the entire market is small, so players who want to play a lot; end up doing both. But as you look at some more mature markets like America or even sort of Western Europe or even Eastern Europe for that matter, you have dedicated players who play only live and only play online as well and that’s always going to be this situation.

The market is so big, there will always be a room for companies that are operating outside the black and white. So, there will always be cash sites too, there will always be those unraked home games where the buy ins are in cash.

But we don’t ever see that kinds of field (like online) in a live poker tournament in the country. And do we have the locations to host such huge field events?

Are online guarantees currently bigger than live? Yes, they are but that doesn’t mean that this will always be the case. I think that over a period of time, certain brands will come up that will be able to pull in the bigger numbers. In terms of space requirements, of course it is sort of chicken and egg situation, but as requirement goes up, the operators will have an ability to give more space.

Take Baadshah Gaming Live Tournament this time for instance. Previously, when we used to do events at the Pride Poker Room 3-4 years ago, we used to keep ten odd tables. For this event we actually re-built the entire third floor to have 26 tables. Once you start factoring in day 1 A/B/C, you can start getting the 700-800 entry mark.

You can always segregate, today we have kept the condense format of 3 or 4 day event structure but that can always be a week or 10 days. International live events continue to get the sort of numbers because they do multiple days and have long schedules.

But that’s more because of the guarantee that attracts players to say a series like the WSOP. Online events on domestic sites currently beat the live guarantees easily. What’s your take?

So, obviously we were super conservative in our guarantees this time as well, it being a sort of a quickly pulled event. Our guarantees will go up as time goes by.

While I don’t want to comment on any particular firm’s marketing strategy or player acquisition approach, we at Baadshah don’t believe that the current guarantees in the online scenario is sustainable.

Yes, your unique entries across these websites may be fairly large but the question is how much has been given away in free tickets, how much is being given to stake players from different firms. You go to your popular action selling sites, and you’ll notice firm owners buying action of players in their own events. That’s something you never see live because its easily recognizable.

There is a veil of secrecy in the online zone that lets you do that and that is a concept, that at the Pride, we have never understood. We do not believe that it is fair for us (as the house) to buy action of any player playing against other players.

We as a site do not do any cash, any credit or any affiliate. We are not here to just make bunch of money for today, so we are not looking at big numbers. In terms of live, we have a current clientele and we will continue to push our live strategy and run the nose bleed games in Pride. But on the online model, our goal is to focus on micro and mini stakes for the foreseeable future. Till we believe that there is enough liquidity in new players and new blood gets in the system and really our plan is to grow them to the next level.

Every other website has a sponsored pro, Baadshah Gaming does not. Any particular reason?

A team pro is supposed to provide three benefits to the firm- the number one benefit is that they add a bunch of credibility to the firm, secondly, to go and advertise for the firm and finally, they should have some feedback for the players and the pro himself can help the players.

When we looked at all three factors, we found currently that as far as Baadshah Gaming is concerned, none of these were being answered. Baadshah Gaming with Casino Pride and its founders already has a credibility angle, you know we have been in operation as a live setup for almost a decade.

As far as the players are concerned, the pros are not providing anything to the players today and are there for their own benefit, so we have a very different approach for the pros.

What we are going to be doing over the pros is and you will hear an announcement from us shortly on this, but we want to build pros from the Baadshah Network itself, players who played on Baadshah Gaming and we want them to be our genuine pros.

Our Baadshah pro will be a mentor both internally and externally. They will help us be honest, keeping their ears on the ground in terms of what the community wants.

You are a veteran of the industry. What has changed in the past 10 years? How will Baadshah Gaming stand out based on your experiences?

A lot, I remember when I started playing we used to play, like we had a group of 6 or 7 of us in Delhi and we were the first table out of Delhi. We started playing live poker, literally for the first couple of months, we used to play with Monopoly money.

Today, we need to promote ethical poker which means ensuring that players are not getting screwed over, and that they are secure. Security and services are the only two things that we are interested in and that is something that we will continue to push on. I see a great future for the game, I think definitely the live and online both are incredibly important for us to ensure that the right kind of players come on board. I mean my monthly marketing budgets are higher than the tech costs for entire Baadshah Gaming. In terms of funding, we looked around and did funding based on 18 months of expenditure with zero revenue. Assume that we get zero revenue for 18 months, by 0, I mean 0. If we get 0 revenue what is the number we need to head for 18 months of expenditure and that we put into the bank on day 1. So, in terms of that, we have been a lot more aggressive, so I know that’s not a concern for us.

The Pride group has 30% stake in Baadshah. How does that help? (Not talking only in monetary terms.)

The Baadshah Gaming’s association with Casino Pride was never about the money because frankly, they have come in as a strategic partner. We could have possibly looked at a better number if we looked outside as a financial partner; given sort of our own background in the industry. With Pride, the main aspect was the credibility that Pride brings, like a I said, we’re not here to be an overnight sensation.

 

Maddy signs off!

Golden Aces Poker League is Coming Back This Week

After the successful inaugural tournament in May’12, Bangalore based tournament organizers – Golden Aces is all set to host their second event. The Golden Aces Poker League will take place from 11th – 14th Oct, 2012 at the Pride Poker Room aboard Casino Pride.

 

Tournament Schedule

DateTimeTournamentBuy-in (₹)
11th Oct9:00pm5K Unlimited Re-Buy + 1 Add-on5000
12th Oct9:00pm10k + 5k Super Bounty15000
13th Oct9:00pm20k Super Deep Stack Main Event20000
14th Oct9:00pm3k Wild Card to the WSOP3000

There’s some more exciting news for players taking part in this tournament. The player who gets awarded the Player of the Year for the Golden Aces Poker League 2012-13 will win an all expenses paid trip to the 2013 WSOP Main Event!

The top 18 players + 3 Wild Card* entries from the Golden Aces Poker League will play a Sit & Go during the finale in May’13 and the winner of that will be crowned Player of the Year. This player will be entitled to the WSOP Main Event package which will include: –

$10,000 buy-in for the WSOP Main Event 2013

Return Air Tickets

Stay for as long as the player is still playing in the Main Event

All event winners at the Golden Aces Poker League will receive a branded watch and the top 3 finishers will also receive trophies along with exclusive Golden Aces merchandise.

For further details, visit www.goldenaces.in. To get in touch with the Golden Aces team, call +91-9900055757 or email them at info@goldenaces.in. Players can also contact the Golden Aces team for travel and stay assistance.

 

Explaining the Wild Card tournament

* Wild Card to the WSOP: The 3 remaining events in the Golden Aces Poker League calendar for the year 2012-13 will feature a new tournament on Sunday called the ‘Wild Card to the WSOP’. The format of which would be ₹3k unlimited rebuy. The player would be entitled to unlimited re-buy up to the first hour of play. They would be given a starting stack of 3000 and blind levels would be set at 15 minutes to the clock. 30% of the prize pool would be awarded to the winner and give him a wild card entry into the top 18 players sit n go for the WSOP Main Event during the finale. Hence three wild card winners will make the final sit n go of 21 players battling it out for the POY and represent India at the WSOP Main Event.

Online Satellite

All PokerGuru members can now win a package to Golden Aces Poker League in Goa for as little as $22 in online satellite on 888 Poker.

 

How to Enter

1. Members will need an 888 Account to enter this promotion. If you do not have an 888 account you can get one here.

2. Golden Aces Online Satellite will be held on 8th October at 10 pm (IST).

3. Locate the tournaments under “All Games” – “Tournaments” – “Restricted” in the 888 Lobby.

4. Buy-in: $22 (Need assistance depositing money online? Refer deposit thread).

 

Refer Screenshot

Note: This promotion is open to INDIAN players ONLY.

Each satellite offers members the chance to win tournament tickets to Golden Aces Poker League.

 

Payout Structure

PlayersTournament Ticket ValuePlaces Paid
5Tournament Ticket of 5KPays 1 Place
10Tournament Ticket of 10KPays 1 Place
15Tournament Tickets of 10K and 5K eachPays 2 Places
20Tournament Tickets of 15K and 5K eachPays 2 Places
25Tournament Tickets 15K and 10K eachPays 2 Places
30Tournament Tickets of 15K, 10K and 5KPays 3 Places
35Tournament Tickets of 15K, 1 of 10K and 2 of 5KPays 4 Places
40Tournament Tickets of 15K, 2 of 10K and 1 of 5KPays 4 Places
45Tournament Tickets of 15K, 2 of 10K, and 2 of 5KPays 5 Places
50Tournament Tickets of 15K, 2 of 10K and 3 of 5KPays 6 Places
55Tournament Tickets of 15K, 3 of 10K and 2 of 5KPays 6 Places

In case of intermittent number of participants the extra amount in the prizepool will be awarded to the next place finisher (min 10 players required for this to apply). E.g in case of 43 participants, the additional (₹3k) in tickets will be awarded to the 5th place finisher.

*Tournament Tickets can be used in any event at Golden Aces Poker League
** Tournament Tickets cannot be redeemed for cash and are non transferable.

Online Rankings

i Top Ranked Poker Players in India
Member Won
Member Won
Member Won
₹1,29,29,197
₹1,25,88,313
₹1,21,00,140
₹1,20,22,333
5.Vinay B Vinay B
₹1,15,16,843
6.M L M L
₹1,14,45,592
₹1,09,13,473
₹1,05,83,948
₹99,75,577
₹99,60,672
Member Profit
Member Profit
Member Profit
₹55,77,649
₹50,59,154
₹47,48,174
₹46,35,740
₹44,93,503
₹43,56,316
₹43,24,686
₹42,41,254
₹41,92,614
₹41,05,805
Member Points
Member Points
Member Points
43,040
36,048
28,827
4.N K N K
28,769
26,548
25,649
24,726
24,446
9.M L M L
23,604
23,352

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