Venetian Poker Room No Limit

Attention Poker Rooms: Get your Real-Time Live Action on PokerAtlas! Join PokerAtlas; Sign In. Venetian Casino. 3355 Las Vegas Blvd. Las Vegas, NV. Up to 10 tables Game Holdem Limit No Limit Min Buy-in $200 Max Buy-in $1,000 Players Per Table 9. Stakes Blinds $2/$5 Straddle UTG and button may straddle. Rake House Rake.

Venetian poker room no limit Cost of a ParachainIn absolute terms of DOT tokens, parachain venetian poker room no limit slots are free: DOT tokens required to secure s slot are only held on deposit, to be returned once its tenure as a parachain is over. Nov 17, 2017 Eric Baldwin outlasted a field of 345 entries to win Event 31: $1,600 No-Limit Hold’em $400,000 Guarantee for $114,585. The final hand came down to Baldwin and Chris Moorman, with Baldwin having a lead of roughly 6,300,000 to about 600,000.

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6. Vegas Poker Comps
Overall
97

Availability
96

Tournaments
99

Comfort
93

Staff
94

Comps
80



(Click photo to enlarge.)

Overview
The largest poker room in Las Vegas can be found at Venetian. They are able to host a number of popular tournament series throughout the year thanks to their staggering 52 table room. The tables are by no means packed together either. Space and comfort is a cornerstone of this poker room, as is the scent of soapy-perfume the casino sprays into the air. Many regard Venetian's poker room as the best in Vegas.

Game Availability
The $1/$2 no-limit games here are very popular and offer players the chance to buy-in for more than the standard 100 big blinds (a $300 max buy-in is permitted). They also will frequently run some $4/$8 and/or $8/$16 mixed games making them a great poker room for anyone looking for some unique action. Additionally, for anyone looking to play pot-limit Omaha, Venetian might offer your best bet at finding a game; their $1/$2 PLO game features a min/max buy-in of $200/$1000, so the game can play pretty high.

Tournaments
Venetian is the top poker room in Vegas for daily tournament offerings. They run events each day at noon and 7:00 pm. The buy-in for these events vary, typically between $120 and $150. On the weekends, the buy-ins get as high as $500 for the noon event on Saturday. Venetian also plays host to a number of tournament series throughout the year including the Deep Stack Extravaganza, a thrice-yearly series of approximately 45 tournaments with buy-ins ranging from $150 to $2,500. These events are incredibly popular for lesser-bankrolled players when the WSOP is running across town at Rio.

Comfort
One small criticism of this poker room is that the room is so big if you are seated near the middle of it there can sometimes be poor access to a television. Live poker can be a boring grind at times, so it's nice to be seated closer to a TV. They spare no expense offering players complimentary Fiji water. You can even get Dr. Pepper and root beer in this poker room which is located just steps off of Las Vegas Blvd. Things can get kind of crazy when a DSE event is running as they start adding poker tables to the main casino area. The poker room offers free WiFi access.

Staff
The staff at Venetian is generally nice and helpful. They are used to dealing with a high volume of players and therefore tend to be pretty efficient at all times.

Comps
Players receive $1 an hour in comps which can be redeemed for any Venetian food service. At $2/$5 stakes and higher, $1.50 in hour in comps are awarded. Players also receive a $10 food voucher when buying into a tournament at Venetian which is a decent perk. Their Grand Lux Cafe is arguably the best 24-hour dining option on the Vegas Strip.

Footnote
This is one of the few poker rooms in Vegas that does not collect an extra rake for jackpot promotions. Depending on one's perspective, this can be a nice quality as one is not opting into buying a lottery ticket every time they pay rake.


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Venetian Poker Room No Limit

Valentyn Shabelnyk Wins 2019 Card Player Poker Tour Venetian Main Event

Posted: Tue, Dec 24, 19, 12:39 AM

Valentyn Shabelnyk has won the 2019 Card Player Poker Tour Venetian DeepStack Extravaganza Poker Series $3,500 buy-in no-limit hold’em main event. The 29-year-old poker pro from Kiev, Ukraine earned $136,080 after topping a field of 160 entries in this $500,000 guaranteed event. This was his second title at Venetian Las Vegas this month, having won a $100,000 guaranteed $400 buy-in tournament on December 1.

This was the largest live tournament cash in Shabelnyk’s ten years playing the game, although he has cashed for a similar amount in a major online event. In addition to the title and the money, Shabelnyk was also awarded 468 Card Player Player of the Year points as the champion of this event. The 2019 POY race is sponsored by Global Poker.

The third and final day of this event began with 13 players remaining and two-time World Series of Poker bracelet winner Steve Sung in the chip lead. World Poker Tour Venetian champion Ben Palmer was the first player to hit the rail when his pocket fives failed to outrun the pocket sevens of Leo Song-Carrillo. Sung cracked the pocket aces of Nitis Udornpim (12th place – ($9,576) with pocket kings to extend his lead.

Shabelnyk began the day among the shorter stacks, but managed to double up early on with 109 beating out the ace-king of Ekrem Bozkurt. With the eliminations of World Poker Tour champion Dylan Wilkerson (11th – $9,576) and Damjan Radanov (10th – $9,576), the final table was set. Sung remained the leader, with George Wolff sitting on the second-largest stack when nine-handed action began.

Mike Shin got his last chips in with an open-ended straight draw ($12,096) up against the top set of Wolff and failed to improve, taking home $12,096 for his deep run in this event. Tanya Kirk followed him out the door after she ran top two pair into the flopped set of Bozkurt. Kirk was unable to hit the higher full house and was eliminated in eighth place ($15,120).

Leo Song-Carrillo was knocked out when his A8 failed to beat out the pocket tens of Jack Duong. Song-Carrillo secured $19,656 as the seventh-place finisher. Hiroaki Harada got his last chips in with pocket nines against the pocket jacks of Wolff. Harada flopped a set, but Wolff turned a higher one and held from there to send Harada home with $25,704.

Five-handed action lasted for several hours. Wolff earned his second straight knockout with pocket jacks when he picked up the big pair against the AK of Ekrem Bozkurt. The board brought no help for Bozkurt and he was eliminated in fifth place ($32,760).

Shabelnyk first took the chip lead during four-handed action, He won a race with ace-jack against the pocket eights of Wolff to double up and then took down a sizable pot against Sung without showdown to overtake the top spot on the leaderboard. He furthered his advantage by knocking out WSOP bracelet winner Jack Duong in fourth place ($42,840). Shabelnyk limped in from the small blind with pocket kings and quickly called the shove from Duong in the big blind. Duong’s A7 couldn’t come from behind and his run in this event came to an end.

George Wolff got his last chips in with pocket sixes against the pocket nines of Shabelnyk. The board was no help and Wolff was sent packing in third place. The $60,480 he earned in this event brought his year-to-date live earnings for 2019 to over $1.4 million. The 312 POY points he earned for his strong showing in this event were enough to move him into 67th place in the rankings.

With that Shabelnyk took 5,065,000 into heads-up play against Steve Sung, who sat with 1,335,000. Shabelnyk complimented the games of both of his opponents from three-handed action. He told Card Player that he offered to chop with Sung after Wolff was knocked out.

“Once we got heads-up, I asked him if he wanted to chop,” Shabelnyk said after the event was all over. “We were very deep stacked and I didn’t want to waste a lot of time. He said he would look at the [ICM] numbers, but that he would want more. As you can tell, I said, ‘no thanks.’”

Sung was able to close the gap somewhat in the early going, but Shabelnyk still held a solid advantage when the final cards were dealt. The last hand saw Shabelnyk limp in from the button. Sung raised to 200,000 and Shabelnyk called. The flop brought the AJ8 and Sung bet 200,000. Shabelnyk raised it to 525,000 and Sung called. The 6 on the turn prompted Sung to move all-in. Shabelnyk snap-called with AJ for top two pair. Sung Sung held KK. The Q was no help for Sung, who had to settle for $85,176 as the runner-up finisher. The score brought Sung’s lifetime live earnings to more than $6.1 million.

Here is a look at the payouts and POY points awarded at the final table:

Venetian Poker Room No Limit Download

PlacePlayerPayoutPOY Points
1 Valentyn Shabelnyk $136,080 468
2 Steve Sung $85,176 390
3 George Wolff $60,480 312
4 Jack Duong $42,840 234
5 Ekrem Bozkurt $32,760 195
6 Hiroaki Harada $25,704 156
7 Leo Song-Carrillo $19,656 117
9 Tanya Kirk $15,120 78
9 Mike Shin $12,096 39