Jogue com responsabilidade. As apostas podem causar dependência.

18+

2018 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo©Casino EPT

Feature Coverage
Dias: 8

Sinclair Leaps from $50 Buy-ins to $100K in Whirlwind Year

Jack Sinclair
Jack Sinclair

Jack Sinclair quit his job in January 2016 to give full-time professional poker a try. After an "OK-ish" year, he set a modest goal for 2017: win $50,000 playing poker.

Safe to say, he's aiming a little higher now.

Sinclair has basically lived every tournament poker player's dream over the past year as he's gone from grinding $50 buy-ins online to playing $100Ks live. It's been a whirlwind of a year for the 27-year-old British pro, and it all started with some casual browsing on PocketFives.

Online poker was going decently enough for Sinclair since he had left his job as a freelance sound engineer to try to play for a living. He'd been playing recreationally since he was a 21-year-old university student and then continued as an enthusiast for the next few years, occasionally even sneaking in sessions at work.

However, he was in the midst of a big downswing as he clicked through some profiles on PocketFives in November, when he saw a blurb that interested him on the profile of Philipp "philbort" Gruissem.

"The bort always knows the board," it read. "I'm giving final table coachings. Just write me at Skype."

Sinclair did as the ad suggested and the two hooked up for a session. He said "it wasn't groundbreaking or anything" but Gruissem did say he felt Sinclair was likely beating the games he was playing, which were tournaments up to $50.

That was good for Sinclair to hear, and a week or two later, he read another ad online that would change the course of his career permanently. Gruissem and his roommate in Malta, it seemed, sought another roomie so they could fill their house and avoid eviction at the hands of a spiteful landlord.

Philipp Gruissem
Coaching from Philipp Gruissem jumpstarted Jack Sinclair's career.

"I guess they were pretty desperate because they took me," Sinclair said with a laugh.

Sinclair moved to the island nation of about 450,000 in February 2017. While the move would prove successful for Sinclair, Gruissem couldn't say the same.

"The funny thing was they actually did get kicked out anyway," Sinclair said. "The landlords were just using that as an excuse."

In any case, the three found new digs and settled in. That's when the groundbreaking stuff happened for Sinclair.

"Living with Phil was insane," Sinclair said.

Sinclair soaked in some knowledge from the German legend, who counts more than $14 million in live and online cashes among his accomplishments. The aspiring Brit quickly improved and tried his hand at live tournaments for the first time in a big series back home in England. He booked his first cash, for £7,500, and a live poker career was officially under way.

For his part, Gruissem downplayed his role in Sinclair's improvement, crediting Sinclair's abilities.

"He's very talented," the German said. "He has many traits that are good for a poker player. He just needed some confidence to play for some bigger stakes. He needed a confidence boost more than knowledge of the game."

After shipping back to Malta, Sinclair returned to his cozy online grind. He was set to do so for the summer until another Malta-based grinder, Anton Morgenstern, suggested they head for the World Series of Poker and share a room.

Sinclair played his second live series. To say it went well would be a laughable understatement. After a couple of small cashes, the unknown Brit made a run to the final table of the Main Event, his first $10K, finishing eighth for $1.2 million.

Jack Sinclair
Jack Sinclair at the WSOP Main Event final table.

More firsts followed. In August, Sinclair played his first €25K, at the German Poker Championships. He wasn't sure about firing, but a backer who takes pieces of Sinclair regularly prodded him to hop in.

"I didn't feel too good about putting up a bunch of money having never played one before," Sinclair said. "I kept telling him, 'You've got to take another 10 percent. You've got to take another 10 or I won't play.'"

"All right, but you have to win it," came the response.

No problem. Twenty-seven eliminations later, Sinclair locked up €250,000. That led to his next first.

"So, you're going to play the One Drop, right?" the same buyer said, referencing the upcoming €100K buy-ing at WSOP Europe.

"No thanks," Sinclair laughed. "There's no way I'm playing a €100K."

Luckily for Sinclair — as it would turn out — the buyer didn't give him a choice.

"I paid the deposit," he said. "You're playing."

His first €100K didn't quite measure up to his first $10K or his first $25K. This time, he barely snuck over a min-cash, but it was still another €177,616 in the winnings column.

Roughly $270,000 more has followed, and one year after his first live score, Sinclair counts $2 million in cashes. He called himself "truly blessed" in a tweet looking back on his tremendous year.

Jack Sinclair
Jack Sinclair rocketed up the stakes in the past year.

"It's awesome for me to see him successful," Gruissem said. "It's good for the vibe, it's way more positive."

Perhaps some of that vibe is rubbing off on Gruissem. While he's had a fantastic career, big results have been a little harder to come by lately as he hasn't had a seven-figure year since 2014. However, he's in the midst of a deep run in the Main Event, carrying the flag for the Malta house — he and Sinclair remain roommates — into the final 50 runners.

"I should coach myself," he joked. "My students seem to be doing better than me. All my students have been winning. Maybe [coaching] is a better job for me."

Certainly for Sinclair, responding to that quirky ad from "the bort" proved to be a life-changing decision. Not many are lucky enough to rocket from $50 buy-ins to $2 million in cashes in a year's time, but with the help of his mustachioed roommate, Sinclair has become of the fortunate few.

He cleared his 2017 goal by $1.7 million, so he's going to have to recalibrate visions for his future.

"I had to come up with new goals," he allowed. "It's been pretty crazy."

€25k Update: Final Table Reached; Bonomo Leads

Justin Bonomo & Erik Seidel
Justin Bonomo & Erik Seidel

Erik Seidel opened to 35,000 on the button. Zachary Clark three-bet all in from the small blind and Aleksander Uskov moved all in from the big blind, both with around ten big blinds. Seidel, who came back from the break with around 90,000 in chips had chipped up significantly since play resumed after the dinner break.

"I guess I call," he said, tabling {a-Spades}{q-Hearts} against Clark's {k-Clubs}{9-Hearts} and Uskov's {a-Hearts}{k-Hearts}.

The board ran out {q-Spades}{j-Diamonds}{5-Clubs}{6-Diamonds}{8-Hearts} sending two players to the rail and meaning that the final table would start eight-handed, on the exact money bubble.

Here is the seating draw and chip counts of the final eight players:

SeatNameCountryChip Count
1Jan-Eric SchwippertGermany90,000
2Bryn KenneyUnited States420,000
3Steve O’DwyerUnited States770,000
4Erik SeidelUnited States1,000,000
5Timothy AdamsCanada440,000
6Nicola GreicoItaly210,000
7Igor KurganovRussian Federation270,000
8Justin BonomoUnited States1,600,000

Justin Bonomo Wins €25,000 Single Day High Roller for €378,000

Justin Bonomo Winner Wins €25,500 Single-Day High Roller
Justin Bonomo Winner Wins €25,500 Single-Day High Roller

First, Justin Bonomo finished fifth in the PokerStars and Monte-Carlo©Casino EPT €100,000 Super High Roller for €401,000. Then he finished fourth in the €50,000 Single Day High Roller for €228,700. However, today he skipped places third and second and took down the €25,000 Single Day High Roller for €378,000.

"It feels great," said Bonomo shortly after clinching the victory. "There have been three High Rollers here in Monte Carlo and I've cashed everyone one, so I don't have a single complaint in the world. It's an incredible streak I've been on."

Here are the final table results:

SeatNameCountryPayout (€)Payout ($)
1Justin BonomoUnited States€ 378,000$453,600
2Steve O’DwyerUnited States€ 273,200$327,840
3Erik SeidelUnited States€ 174,100$208,920
4Timothy AdamsCanada€ 132,100$158,520
5Bryn KenneyUnited States€ 102,000$122,400
6Igor KurganovRussian Federation€ 78,100$93,720
7Nicola GriecoItaly€ 63,000$75,600

Bonomo's streak has seen him win four High Roller tournaments this year alone, to go with his many achievements before that. To win his fourth he had to beat a tough opponent in Steve O'Dwyer heads-up, with O'Dwyer coming off the back of a Single Day High Roller win of his own in the €25,000 event.

"[During heads-up] I just played with my game plan. Steve's a good enough player that I'm going to make very slight adjustments to the mistakes I think he's making, but overall he's playing very well so I'm not going to get too fancy when it comes to that."

The tournament featured the big blind ante as well as a 30-second shot clock, two things which are rapidly becoming the norm not just when it comes to High Roller tournaments, but in other tournaments as well, as we've seen in the EPT Monte Carlo Main Event. Bonomo thinks that these innovations are catching on has proven to be such a success in High Roller tournaments.

"I think what's happening is that there's this competition in the high stakes tournament world, with tournaments being forced to adjust depending on who the best operators are. And what the best are doing is catching on. It's smart to have a big blind ante, it's smart to have a shot clock. Players love it."

With the €25,000 three-day High Roller getting underway tomorrow, how does Bonomo rank his chances of going four-from-four in cashing High Roller events here in Monaco?

"I'm going to try really hard," he said. "The chances are good. It's a re-entry and I'll be there with my A-game!"

Bryn Kenney

Event recap

50 players including 14 re-entries came together to form the €25,000 Single Day High Roller, with names such as Mustapha Kanit, John Juanda, Stephen Chidwick and early chip leader Sylvain Loosli all in action. Bryn Kenney was also in contention for chip leader, and he lead the way by the time the tournament reached two tables, with Steve O'Dwyer not far behind him.

By the dinner break, Bonomo lead the final 10 players with only seven guaranteed a min-cash of €63,000. Soon after they returned, Erik Seidel busted two players in one hand two get the field down to eight, and Kenney dispatched Jan-Eric Schwippert with {8-}{8-} against {a-}{7-} to burst what was a very quick bubble.

Igor Kurganov sent Nicola Grieco to the rail in 7th for a min-cash after his tens held against the Italian's ace-king, but Kurganov would go from eliminating a player to out himself after running ace-king into the kings of Bonomo. By this stage, Bonomo had almost half the chips in play, and he'd reach that mark with the elimination of Bryn Kenney in fifth after Bonomo rivered a flush.

Another river would send Timothy Adams to the rail in fourth. Adams bet the river with two-pair, and called off Bonomo's shove, only to see his opponent had rivered a straight. Incredibly, it was another river that sent Seidel to the rail in third. Seidel bet the river with a pair of jacks, and called off his opponent's all-in, only for Bonomo to have rivered yet another straight.

Bonomo held a 2:1 chip lead going into heads-up and he'd extend it with some well-timed jams to frustrate O'Dwyer. O'Dwyer did manage to double when his dominated queen-three flopped a pair of threes against the queen-jack of Bonomo. However, there was no getting away from it when Bonomo three-bet all in with nines and O'Dwyer called it off with ace-jack.

There wasn't going to be two wins in a week for O'Dwyer who would have to settle for second place; the €273,200 still enough to mean he overtakes Phil Hellmuth Jr. in the all-time US money list. For Bonomo, his third cash of the week takes him over €1,000,000 in cashes here in Monte Carlo.

Justin Bonomo Wins €25,500 Single-Day High Roller
Justin Bonomo

Tags: Bryn KenneyErik SeidelIgor KurganovJustin BonomoNicola GriecoSteve O'DwyerTimothy Adams

Feature Coverage

Dia 8 Terminado