Super Seiji Captures Another PokerStars Titans Title

Super Seiji Captures Another PokerStars Titans Title

Cast your mind back to November 14, 2022. PokerNews published an article detailing the PokerStars $5,200 Titans Event victory for Brazilian sensation Rodrigo "seijistar" Seiji. Seiji walked away with $93,118 that day. He then won the same tournament in July 2023 for $82,083. Fast-forward to the present and Seiji has done it again, taking down the Titans Event and padding his bankroll with $72,956 after a heads-up deal.

Sixty-one entrants created a $305,000 prize pool in this weekend's $5,200 Titans Event, an impressive turnout considering the world and its wife are currently in France for the PokerStars European Poker Tour (EPT) Paris festival. It seems not every superstar has descended on the French capital, judging by the talent on show in this online event.

The Titans Event's compact field meant only the top nine finishers saw a return on their $5,200 investment. This meant Goliaths of the online poker world logged off empty-handed. They included Damian "pampa27" Salas, Samuel "uropan" Vousden, Michael "imluckbox" Addamo, and the unfortunate bubble boy, Pascal "Pass_72" Lefrancois.

$5,200 Titans Event Final Table Results

RankPlayerCountryPrize
1Rodrigo "seijistar" Seiji SirichukBrazil$72,956*
2drew.derzhUkraine$71,025*
3dujo123Canada$46,182
4ULOSEMFKR!!Estonia$34,590
5Andras "probirs" NemethHungary$25,908
6Jonathan "Proudflop" ProudfootIreland$19,405
7David "MissOracle" YanNew Zealand$14,534
8Christian "WATnlos" RudolphAustria$10,886
9Thomas "WushuTM" MuehloeckerAustria9,508

*reflects a heads-up deal

The finalists breathed a sigh of relief when they saw Thomas "WushuTM" Muehloecker bust in ninth, a finish good for $9,508. Muehloecker has been one of the most consistent tournament grinders live and online for several years, so having a player of his caliber on the sidelines is welcomed by anyone facing him.

Christian "WATnlos" Rudolph and David "MissOracle" Yan were the next high-profile casualties relieved of their stacks. Those two superstars walked away with $10,886 and $14,534, respectively.

Sixth place went to Jonathan "Proudflop" Proudfoot, a player who was formerly the number-one-ranked online poker tournament player in the United Kingdom. Proudfoot's latest deep run rewarded him with $19,405, which takes his online winnings past $11.3 million.

Andras "probirs" Nemeth saw his Titans Event end prematurely in fifth place, a finish worth $25,908 to the Hungarian grinder. Estonia's "ULOSEMFKR!!" joined the ever-growing list of busted players when they ran out of steam in fourth ($34,590), with the tournament progressing to heads-up when Canada's "dujo123" was eliminated in third ($46,182).

A near-$19,000 was the difference between first and second place, and neither Seiji nor "drew.derzh" seemed overly keen to battle over such an amount. They agreed upon a deal that removed almost $10,000 from first and given to the runner-up. "drew.derzh" was the official second-place finisher; they scooped $71,025. Seiji got his hands on $72,956 and another Titans Event title.

Other PokerStars Results

Aside from the Titans Event, "Ansel21" was the biggest winner at PokerStar courtesy of binking the $530 Bounty Builder High Roller for $31,745. There was also an impressive victory for Ramiro "ramastar88" Petrone, who triumphed in the $1,050 Sunday High Roller for a $26,169 score, which included bounty payments.

EventEntrantsPrize PoolChampionPrize
$530 Bounty Builder High Roller357$178,500Ansel21$31,745*
$1,050 Sunday High Roller97$100,000Ramiro "ramastar88" Petrone$26,169*
$109 Sunday Warm-Up1,130$113,000tomfoxpoker$17,955
$109 Sunday Fenomeno1,069$106,900andredos$17,443
$215 Sunday StacKOsaurus393$78,600Gremio CEM$15,598*
$1,050 Sunday Cooldown30$30,000ZLbIDeNb_PrO$13,649*
$1,050 Sunday Supersonic31$31,491RE AMARAL$13,159
$109 Sunday Cooldown928$92,800Schubertam$13,118*
$215 Sunday Supersonic280$57,332soydelmillo$10,940
$109 Sunday Starter561$56,100kardash1972$9,903

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How many decks are used in poker?

In most popular poker variants, such as Texas Hold'em and Omaha, a standard deck of 52 playing cards is used. Each deck contains four suits (hearts, diamonds, clubs, and spades) and consists of 13 ranks (Ace, 2 through 10, and the face cards: Jack, Queen, and King).

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