Following a raise to 4,944 by Joao 'Naza114' Vieira from early position, Artur 'mararthur1' Martirosian three-bet to 22,800 in the big blind and Vieira came along to see the flop. Martirosian continued for 16,137, Vieira raised to 52,000 with 151,890 behind and called the shove of his opponent.
Vieira Portuguese
- Joao Vieira is only 29 years old and missed the entirety of the poker boom, but that hasn't stopped him from climbing to the top of Portugal's all-time money.
- Following a raise to 4,944 by Joao 'Naza114' Vieira from early position, Artur 'mararthur1' Martirosian three-bet to 22,800 in the big blind and Vieira came along to see the flop.
Joao Vieira put his last 140,233 into the pot and Fedor Holz hooked him up with a call. 2019 World Series of Poker Event #77: $3,000 Limit Hold'em 6-Handed: 27 th: $4,571: 2019 World Series of Poker Event #70: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em 6-Handed: 1 st: $758,011: 2019 World Series of Poker Event #60: $1,500 Pot-Limit Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better: 37 th: $5,588: 2019 World Series of Poker Event #43: $2,500 Mixed Big Bet: 32 nd: $3,767: 2019.
Joao 'Naza114' Vieira:
Artur 'mararthur1' Martirosian:
Artur 'mararthur1' Martirosian:
The turn and river were blanks and Vieira doubled.
One hand later, Martirosian was all-in with the and paired up against the of Ivan 'zufo16' Zufic on a board of .
Joao Vieira has won the 2019 World Series of Poker $5,000 six-max no-limit hold’em event. The 29-year-old Portuguese poker pro defeated four-time bracelet winner and 2009 WSOP main event champion Joe Cada heads-up after outlasting a record field of 815 entrants. For the win, he earned his first gold bracelet and the top prize of $758,011. The massive score brought Vieira’s lifetime live tournament earnings to more than $3.3 million.
“In Portugal we say that the finals are meant to be won. As soon as you get heads-up, it doesn’t matter if it’s Joe Cada, John Doe… it doesn’t matter,' said Vieira. 'At that point I’m just trying to compete, trying to do the best I can. I made a big hand right away, and as soon as I took the lead, I tried to close the deal.”
In addition to the money and the bracelet, Vieira was also awarded 1,824 Card Player Player of the Year points as the champion of this event. This was Vieira’s first title and fourth final-table finish of the year. The win was enough to see him climb into 23rd place in the 2019 POY race, which is sponsored by Global Poker.
Vieira came into the final table of this prestigious event as the chip leader, having held the top spot on the leaderboard since late on day 2 of this four-day tournament. It took only two hands for the first elimination to take place. WSOP bracelet winner Barry Hutter got the last of his short stack in with second pair, only to find he had run into the top pair of Jamie O’Connor. Hutter hit two pair on the turn to take the lead, but O’Connor prevailed when the river paired the board to counterfeit Hutter. He earned $110,127 as the sixth-place finisher.
O’Connor scored his second knockout of the day when he picked up K-Q in the big blind and called the all-in of short-stacked small blind Olivier Busquet. The World Poker Tour winner was in rough shape, with his K-4 offsuit dominated. Both players flopped a king, but O’Connor’s superior kicker secured him the pot. Busquet hit the rail in fifth place ($154,112).
France’s Pierre Calamusa got his last 12.5 big blinds into the middle with A-7, only to run into the A-K of Vieira. Calamusa was in rough shape, but surged into the lead when the flop came down 874. The 4 on the turn kept Calamusa ahead, but the K on the river gave Vieira the better pair. With that Calamusa busted in fourth place ($219,468), while Vieira strengthened his hold on the top spot of the leaderboard.
Jamie O’Connor finished in third place. He got his chips in with A4 up against the KQ of Vieira. The board ran out 954Q9 to give Vieira a winning pair of queens. O’Connor took home $317,956 for his impressive run in this tournament.
While Vieira had earned the most recent knockout, it was Joe Cada who took the chip lead into heads-up play. It took only a few hands for Vieira to turn the tables, though. He won a sizable pot with a rivered straight to take more than a 2.5-to-1 lead.
In the final hand Vieira raised to 600,000 from the button with AK. Cada three-bet to 1,950,000 holding AQ. Vieira shoved all-in, and Cada called for around 6.3 million total.
The board came down J9675. Vieira’s ace-king high was sufficient to take down the pot and eliminate Cada in second place. The Michigan-based poker pro fell just short of securing his fifth WSOP bracelet but did earn $468,488 for the fifth-largest score of his career.
Here is a look at the payouts and POY points awarded at the final table:
Place | Player | Payout | POY Points |
1 | Joao Vieira | $758,011 | 1,824 |
2 | Joseph Cada | $468,488 | 1,520 |
3 | Jamie O’Connor | $317,956 | 1,216 |
4 | Pierre Calamusa | $219,468 | 912 |
5 | Olivier Busquet | $154,112 | 760 |
6 | Barry Hutter | $110,127 | 608 |
Vieira Portugal
For more coverage from the summer series, check out the 2019 WSOP landing page, complete with a full schedule, results, news, player interviews, and event recaps.
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$5,000 No-Limit Hold'em Six Max Coverage: