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Justin Gavri High Stakes Poker

Table Of Contents

  • Raising with Junk
  • Salomon Wants Peter's Chips
  • Gavri's Time to Shine
  • Past High Stakes Poker Season 14 Episode Recaps

Justin Gavri's lengthy run of bad luck on High Stakes Pokeris now officially over after the high roller crushed it again during Monday's 11th episode of Season 14 on PokerGO.

Gavri, who had replaced Daniel Negreanu as the unluckiest player in High Stakes Pokerhistory, has been on a tear in recent weeks. He was joined in the $500/$1,000 game by the same cast of characters that appeared on last week's show. Alan Keating and Rick Salomon both began play with well over $1 million. Vinny Lingham, Nikhil "Nik Airball" Arcot, Gavri and Peter Wang went to battle with six-figure stacks.

PlayerChip Stack
Alan Keating$1,400,000
Rick Salomon$1,300,000
Justin Gavri$683,000
Vinny Lingham$552,000
Nik Airball$435,000
Peter Wang$300,000

Raising with Junk

Peter Wang Poker
Peter Wang

Last week's episode featured the largest pot in High Stakes Poker history, with Keating taking it down for over $1.4 million. There would be no pot during Episode 11 that would even come close to matching that pot size. But there were a number of juicy hands, one of which occurred right off the bat.

The first pot of the day involved some mediocre hands playing aggressively. Lingham limped for $1,000 with A9before Gavri, on the button with 96, raised to $4,000. Peter had 85in the big blind and three-bet to $20,000, only receiving a call from Lingham.

The flop came out 9JQ, giving both players a flush draw, but it left Peter drawing thin. Peter's $30,000 wager earned a call before the 3fell on the turn, no help to either player. Peter went for a massive bet of $125,000, enough to convince the best hand to fold.

Peter would pick up pocket aces on the next hand and face a four-bet to $65,000 from Nik Airball, who was holding ace-queen. An all in bet would ensue, enough to force Airball to get rid of his cards without seeing a flop.

Salomon Wants Peter's Chips

Rick Salomon High Stakes Poker
Rick Salomon

Peter's hot start stalled in a $311,500 pot against Keating, who had 66on a board of 227910. That was a stronger hand than ace-high, and both players checked the river, and the small pair took down the 300 big blind pot.

Salomon, who was in for a $4,000 straddle with 99, then decided it was his time to get some money from Peter's stack. Gavri was the initial raiser to $12,000 with AJ, but Peter three-bet to $35,000 with AQ. All that did was encourage Salomon to move all in, which forced Gavri's hand into the muck.

Peter, however, doesn't like to fold, especially with a strong hand such as ace-queen. He called off for $218,000 total, creating a pot of $451,000. Two boards were to come, and the first showed 68KJ8, clean for the pocket nines. The second board went K4944, which granted Salomon the rights to the entire pot. Peter, who lost the largest pot ever on High Stakes Pokerlast week, bought back into the game hoping for his luck to turn around.

Gavri's Time to Shine

Justin Gavri Poker
Justin Gavri

Midway through the episode, Gavri finally picked up a big hand — KK— in the first of two straddle positions. Lingham limped on the button with QJ. Salomon then raised his AQto $25,000 from the small blind.

Gavri made it $85,000 to go, only getting called by Salomon. The flop came out 2J10. Salomon, on a gutshot straight draw, check-called a $100,000 wager before the 6appeared on the turn. There would be no check-call this time as Gavri's $275,000 induced a fold.

Gavri would give some chips back with 10-high when Keating called off a $65,000 bet on the river with ace-high. But Gavri would soon make up for that loss, and then some.

He limped from the small blind with 109before Peter raised to $11,000 from the big blind with AA. Nik Airball, the straddler, called with 66.

The flop showed 9J5, close to perfection for Peter, who had an over pair and the nut flush draw to boot. He bet $15,000 and earned a call only from Gavri, who flopped middle pair, a hand that would drastically improve on the 9turn. He check-called a bet of $45,000 with trips, and would avoid the flush on the 4river. Gavri would check-call a $90,000 bet to take down a $334,000 pot on a bad beat.

The episode concluded with Gavri holding A10and dodging Lingham's nut flush draw and Peter's open-ended straight draw on a board of 103272to win a $518,000 pot.

"Beautiful way to close. He had a huge night," High Stakes Pokercommentator Nick Schulman said of Gavri.

Gavri's stack had surpassed $1.1 million when the episode wrapped. Episode 12 airs next Monday at 5 p.m. CT on PokerGO with mostly the same players in action.

Past High Stakes Poker Season 14 Episode Recaps

  • Episode 1: Jared Bleznick Takes Brutal $450K Bad Beat in High Stakes Poker Season 14 Opener
  • Episode 2: Recreational Player has a Horrific Session on High Stakes Poker
  • Episode 3: High Stakes Poker Pot Cracks $600K on Brutal Bad Beat
  • Episode 4: Is this the Weirdest Played Hand Ever on High Stakes Poker?
  • Episode 5: Best Hand Folds What Would Have Been Nearly $1M Pot on High Stakes Poker
  • Episode 6: Alan Keating Makes Brilliant Call to Win $900K Pot on High Stakes Poker
  • Episode 7: Phil Hellmuth Quits Game After Two Coolers on High Stakes Poker
  • Episode 8: Scott Seiver Goes for the Double Check-Raise in Six-Figure 'High Stakes Poker' Pot
  • Episode 9: Rick Salomon Blasts Off With Six-High on High Stakes Poker
  • Episode 10: Can Keating Dodge a Flush to Win Largest Pot ($1.4M) in High Stakes Poker History?

To watch past episodes of High Stakes Poker, visit PokerGO.

*Images courtesy of PokerGO/Antonio Abrego

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