The first High Roller of the 2023 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure wrapped up today with $100,000 PCA Super High Roller, an event that saw three players taking home seven figures after an ICM chop between Isaac Haxton ($1,082,230), Seth Davies ($1,078,347) and Adrian Mateos ($1,095,903). The players agreed to play out the tournament turbo-style, and in the end, it was Haxton who took home the shimmering golden trophy.
Haxton has had as good of a start to the new year as anyone could hope for as on Jan. 20 he took down a PokerGO Cup $50,000 high roller in Las Vegas for $598,000. Less than a week later, the American takes home nearly double that after getting through the field of 49 runners and navigating a six-handed final table on Day 3.
“I don’t think I’ve ever won two tournaments in a row before, and these are pretty good ones to do it in,” Haxton told PokerNews in a winner’s interview. “So yeah, I’m feeling great. This is a fantastic start to the year.”
Only seven places paid in the Super High Roller that marked the return of the legendary PCA stop, and those who found a return on their $100,000 investment included Spain’s Juan Pardo (4th – $522,900) and Canada’s Mike Watson (5th – $404,100), Daniel Dvoress (6th – $320,900) and Timothy Adams (7th – $249,600), who fell on Day 2 shortly after securing the minimum cash.
$100,000 PCA Super High Roller Final Table Results
Place | Player | Country | Prize | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1st | Isaac Haxton | United States | $1,082,230* | |
2nd | Seth Davies | United States | $1,078,347* | |
3rd | Adrian Mateos | Spain | $1,095,903* | |
4th | Juan Pardo | Spain | $522,900 | |
5th | Mike Watson | Canada | $404,100 | |
6th | Daniel Dvoress | Canada | $320,900 | |
7th | Timothy Adams | Canada | $249,600 |
*Denotes three-handed ICM deal
Where It All Began
An accomplished high stakes professional who had $30.5 million in Hendon Mob-reported earnings heading into the event, the 37-year-old got his live poker start right here in The Bahamas.
Back in 2007, a younger, longer-haired Haxton finished second in the PCA WPT Championship for $861,789, his first-ever live cash. Many poker fans will remember an epic clip of Haxton bluffing Ryan Daut as his dark brown hair waved in the wind during an outdoor heads-up battle that only could’ve taken place at the height of the Poker Boom.
The runner-up finish was a sign of PCA results to come for Haxton, who had two small first-place finishes at PCA before his latest victory.
“I’ve done quite well here in The Bahamas, and it feels fantastic to add another score to the list,” said Haxton. “I like being here, like playing these tournaments, and yeah, I feel great about it.”
From Chip Leader to Next Out, Twice
The four hours of play on Day 3 can only be described as swingy as Day 1 and Day 2 chip leader Watson went out in fifth after a colossal bluff against Pardo that left him as the short stack before he called off with king-ten to be dominated by the ace-ten of the eventual champion.
The bluff-catch gave Pardo a dominant four-handed chip lead but it was short-lived as the Spanish pro doubled up Davies before losing even more to the Oregonian. Just an hour after taking the huge chip lead, Pardo was out in fourth when his ace-queen was pipped by the Big Slick of Haxton.
Haxton managed to pick up all the right hands at the right time. Earlier in the day, he was at risk of busting in sixth when he was all-in against Dvoress. Luckily for him, it was only a small risk as he had pocket aces to crush the ace-king of Dvoress, who fell shortly after in sixth.
“To be honest, I had in a lot of ways the kind of uneventful final table,” Haxton said. “I didn’t play that many interesting post-flop spots or anything like that. I just got great hands. My opponents got slightly worse ones, and I got all the chips. That’s how it goes sometimes.”
But Haxton couldn’t sun-run forever, and he doubled up Mateos twice during three-handed play to even things out. The three agreed to an ICM chop that left the Spanish crusher taking home the biggest portion of the $4,753,980 prize pool and Davies picking up his biggest career live cash by a few pips (his previous best was ($1,020,000).
“I think Seth and Adrian are both really great players, so once we got to even stacks, I was perfectly happy to chop it up. When I had the big chip lead, I thought, you know, I have an advantage there from the chip lead that isn’t fully captured by the same calculation, and it’s hard to agree on a number,” Haxton said.
He added, “So we didn’t really even discuss it up until that point. I think basically everyone’s on the same page about that. It’s really difficult to chop three-handed when stacks are very different because it’s hard to reach an agreement about what everybody’s position is worth. But then once it got to equal, I think, yeah, we’re all just happy to lock $1,000,000 each and call it a day.”
Haxton, who played the entire event in an N95 mask, has been relatively inactive on the live circuit in recent years, primarily out of caution of the coronavirus, but he said he plans on adding more stops to his schedule.
“I’ve been quite cautious about COVID since that started, but I expect that in 2023 I will be back at quite a lot of the major tournaments,” he said.
That wraps up the PokerNews live reporting team’s covering of the exciting $100,000 PCA Super High Roller to kick off the 2023 PCA. Be sure to check out the team’s coverage of all the other exciting events taking place here in The Bahamas.