Ramon Colillas Wins PokerStars NL Hold'em Players Championship ($5.1 Million)
Hundreds of the most accomplished poker players in the world flooded into Atlantis Resort to hunt the incredible value created by the Platinum Pass promotion in the PokerStars NL Hold'em Players Championship, the biggest $25,000 event in the game's history.
In the end though, Ramon Colillas, one of the very players whom they hunted, turned the guns around and made them the pelts on his own wall, emerging atop a field of 1,039 to claim $5.1 million in prize money. That includes $1 million added by PokerStars as the icing on this unprecedented promotional cake.
Now, don't mistake the Spanish player for a fish totally out of water. While he had only around $10,000 in live cashes coming into the event, Colillas counts himself a professional player with half a decade of experience under his belt. The 30-year-old won his Pass grinding out points on a small Spanish live tournament leaderboard, and he's now turned it into the payday of a lifetime.
PSPC Final Table Results
Place | Player | Country | Prize (USD) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Ramon Colillas | Spain | $5,100,000 |
2 | Julien Martini | France | $2,974,000 |
3 | Marc Rivera | Philipines | $2,168,000 |
4 | Scott Baumstein | United States | $1,657,000 |
5 | Jason Koonce | United States | $1,304,000 |
6 | Marc Perrault | Canada | $1,012,000 |
7 | Farid Jattin | Colombia | $746,000 |
8 | Talal Shakerchi | United Kingdom | $509,000 |
Colillas had few expectations after winning his $30,000 package to The Bahamas. He knew he was coming in to face not only fellow Platinum Pass winners, but also some of the world's strongest no-limit hold'em players.
"Only excitement, the best wishes and enjoying my stay," he said.
Anything he actually accomplished in the tournament was gravy, and Colillas whipped together a batch that would have made any meal taste better just by advancing to the final day and final table of eight players, locking up half a million dollars.
PSPC Final Table Action
The last day looked to truly be anyone's game as nobody other than Marc Perrault was very short, and nobody was far enough ahead to feel any real comfort, including chip leader Scott Baumstein.
One clear favorite emerged early on, though. French bracelet winner Julien Martini rocketed ahead of the competition with a hot run early. He got extremely lucky eliminating high-stakes regular Talal Shakerchi with ace-queen suited against aces and then polished off tournament grinder Farid Jattin with ace-king against ace-jack.
Then, he proved it wasn't just the cards doing work for him as he pulled off a monster three-barrel bluff on Marc Rivera, the other Platinum Pass winner at the final table, who was caught in a brutal ICM vise with Perrault sitting on two big blinds.
Martini had high hopes after moving into the big lead, particularly after the beat he delivered to Shakerchi.
"When you win ace-queen suited versus aces in the first orbit, you're saying to yourself, 'This is mine,'" he said.
Martini's position only improved as Perrault, Jason Koonce and Baumstein busted, leaving him three-handed with the two qualifiers and holding 60 percent of the total chips.
Three Players, Two Platinum Pass Winners
Colillas was at one point down to 12 big blinds but doubled through his fellow Pass winner picking off an all-in semi-bluff with flopped second pair and holding against seven immediate outs and then a turned flush draw.
Rivera would soon bust to Martini as well, but Colillas had collected enough chips to get up to 40 big blinds and only a 2-1 deficit, giving himself a fighting chance.
The turning point came just about 10 hands into heads-up play. Martini flopped a flush against just second pair of Colillas, but the miniscule equity of the Spaniard came in as he called two bets and turned trips then rivered a full house. He checked the river and called right away when Martini set him in.
"When he snap-called, I knew he had at least a flush," Martini would say afterward. "It's a big cooler but it happens every day in poker."
Left with barely more than 20 big blinds, Martini ran dry on chips in about 20 hands, playing the Sam Farha role as Colillas turned himself into a modern-day Chris Moneymaker. In fact, Moneymaker himself was on hand to offer congratulations.
"It��s amazing," Colillas said. "I��ve been following poker and poker history from a very young age. I was watching Chris [Moneymaker] on my computer when he made it; So now it��s a dream come true. It means a lot for me."
While $5 million would appear to be a life-changing sum, especially for a guy with a used car worth of live cashes, Colillas doesn't expect much to change for him. He'll play a few bigger tournaments now, including sticking around for the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure $10,300 Main Event, but other than that he said he'll likely be back to grinding his usual stakes in no time.
"It's only about happiness and enjoying the moment," he said.