The timing for the Grand Final in Brazil could
not have been better. In a country that needs no excuse for a party,
there's no better excuse for a party than Carnival, and it arrived
alongside the Grand Final in full confetti and papier-mache
regalia. It's the biggest week of the year on the Brazilian calendar,
and it came paired with the nation's most prestigious poker tournament. A
total of 367 players paid 4,000 reais apiece for a ticket to LAPT
São Paulo, and the four-day event culminated in Monday's final
table.
The marriage of poker and party brought notables from as far away as
Canada and Northern Europe, and the temptations were even enough to lure
Daniel Negreanu to play. His influence has spread far south of
the equator, and his presence alone put a notable mark on Brazilian
poker. Luckily enough for fans gathered ringside, Negreanu was chatty
and playing mostly fantastic poker, and he picked his way all the way
through the field and into the final eight.
Daniele Nestola began the final table as the big stack and
wasted no time wielding that in a pot that ended the run of Argentina's Juan
Gonzalez. They were playing 12,000/24,000/3,000 when there was a
raise and a flat-call in front of Nestola's small blind and decided to
squeeze in a reraise from 54,000 to 148,000. In the big blind, Gonzalez
four-bet shoved for 549,000 holding
. The other two players folded
out of the way, but Nestola called with
, and the race was on. The board
ran
, and the early quads were the
first sign that the day would belong to Nestola. Gonzalez was the first
player to fall in his wake, earning R$26,340 for eighth place.
The final Brazilian fell in seventh place when Vitor Torres
lost the last of his chips. He's an imposing man at the table, but his
short stack found him shoving
into Felipe Morbiducci's
. The
flop was not at all good news
for the native and was awarded R$35,560 as he left the stage to a warm
ovation.
Negreanu was down in the realm of 20 to 25 big blinds as the blinds
went up in the second level of the day and made it clear that he was
playing for the win. Unfortunately, his first bid for a double went
afoul at the hands of Carlos Ibarra. Negreanu was the preflop
raiser, and Ibarra called in late position to go heads-up to the flop.
When it came
, Negreanu continued out for
102,000. Ibarra wanted to play for 300,000 though, and his raise
effectively put "Kid Poker" to a decision for all his chips. Negreanu
had 575,000 left behind, and he chatted up Ibarra a bit before
committing with
. Ibarra had been working with
though, and Negreanu was two
cards from the exit. The turn
and river
were no use, and Negreanu's
sixth-place consolation prize was R$48,730.
That put Ibarra within striking distance of Nestola's chip-leading
stack, and the two men traded spots a couple of times before Nestola
really began to turn the screws. He found the same
Ibarra had used to tally a
knockout of his own, and it earned him the bounty of Ecuador's Jonathan
Markovits. The latter stuck his short stack in with the respectable
, but he could not overcome
Nestola's rockets, leaving in fifth place with R$64,540.
Morbiducci, from Chile, was the next to run aground at Nestola's
expense when the two got it in with
and
respectively. Morbiducci had
his tournament momentarily extended by the
flop, but the turn
drew Nestola right back into
the lead. The river was the
, and the blank sent the first
of two Chileans off to the exit in fourth place with R$89,570.
Gaspernio Nicolas had been biding his time as the price of
poker had been growing, and he really began to mount a charge during
three-handed play. He overtook Nestola briefly, but his time at the top
was short-lived. Nestola once again found those friendly
in a big pot against Nicolas,
and the Nestola's chip lead began to grow once again as he knocked his
opponent down a notch.
Nicolas managed to take care of Ibarra, the other Chilean, in third
place, but he was still facing an uphill battle. Ibarra's elimination
came when he bluff-shoved his short stack with
on a
flop. Nicolas'
was good enough to send him on
his way, and he earned the first six-figure payout with a check for
R$148,840 and a respectable third-place result.
Nestola and Nicolas agreed to chop R$500,000 of the remaining prize
pool in half and play for the remaining R$39,300, and it didn't take
long at all for Nestola to claim that remainder and the trophy. The
heads-up battle was short and lopsided, and it was a seemingly innocent
limped pot that ended the day. Nicolas flopped top pair with
on the
, and Nestola called a bet with
his
drawing at the open-ender. The
came right on fourth street,
and the rest of the money got in right there. Nicolas was already
drawing dead to the
river, and he
took a quarter-million Reais back home to Venezuela with him.
From start to finish, the whole tournament took just over four hours,
and Nestola was likely headed out for a night of partying
Carnival-style in the streets of São Paulo. He has 289,300 reasons to
celebrate, and he was smiling broadly as he posed for his winner photo
with the winning hand, the trophy, and all the chips.
2012 LAPT Grand Final São Paulo Results
| Place | Player | Prize
(Reais) |
| 1 | Daniele Nestola | 289,300 |
| 2 | Gasperino Nicolas | 250,000 |
| 3 | Carlos Ibarra | 148,840 |
| 4 | Felipe Morbiducci | 89,570 |
| 5 | Jonathan Markovits | 64,540 |
| 6 | Daniel Negreanu | 48,730 |
| 7 | Vitor Torres | 35,560 |
| 8 | Juan Gonzalez | 26,340 |
From Pokernews