The Partouche Poker Tour (PPT) was a series of poker tournaments held at casinos owned and operated by the Partouche group in France. The tour operated on a three-tiered structure, with two levels of satellites eventually feeding into the Main Event held at the Palm Beach casino in Cannes.

Satellites with a €125 buy-in were held every Tuesday and Thursday from November to July, with winners earning a place in the next round of Super Satellites. Players could also have entered a Super Satellite directly for a €1,075 buy-in. Each of the six Super Satellites, held at a different Partouche casino, was limited to 500 entrants, with the top 50 finishers at each event earning entry to the Main Event.

The Main Event consisted of the 300 Super Satellite ticket winners, plus other players who pay the €8,500 buy-in. As of 2010, the Main Event was held in September, with the competitors playing until the nine-player final table is reached, at which point the tournament adjourns. In a format similar to that of the World Series of Poker Main Event, the final nine players returned in November to play until a champion was crowned.

In 2012, Patrick Partouche, CEO of the Partouche group, announced that the tour would not return in 2013.[1]

Main Event results edit

2008 edit

Final Table
Place Name Prize
1st   Alain Roy €1,000,000
2nd   Claudio Rinaldi €511,100
3rd   Antonin Teisseire €335,000
4th   Stephane Bazin €225,500
5th   Philippe Narboni €156,500
6th   Jean-Philippe Rohr €123,000
7th   Brice Cournut €100,500
8th   Michel Abécassis €78,500
9th   Gus Hansen €58,000

2009 edit

Final Table
Place Name Prize
1st   Jean-Paul Pasqualini €1,000,000
2nd   Cédric Rossi €606,700
3rd   Gianni Giaroni €357,200
4th   Michel Janvier €262,400
5th   Wesley Pantling €211,800
6th   Hassan Fares €155,800
7th   Michael Tureniec €133,600
8th   Mika Puumalainen €118,700
9th   Henri Kettunen €102,300

2010 edit

Final Table
Place Name Prize
1st   Vanessa Selbst €1,300,000
2nd   Raphael Kroll €800,000
3rd   Fabrice Soulier €500,000
4th   Tommi Etelapera €360,000
5th   Ibrahim Raouf €300,000
6th   Soren Konsgaard €240,000
7th   Cyril André €187,500
8th   Tobias Reinkemeier €130,700

One of the players who had made the final table, German player Ali Tekintamgac, was disqualified from the tournament for cheating. This was not the first time he had been caught cheating; earlier in 2010 at the European Poker Tour stop in Tallinn, he was found to have used colleagues posing as bloggers and journalists to signal his opponents' hole cards.[2]

The 2010 main event also sparked a controversy, after the tournament staff was accused of making dubious rulings in favor of local players. Danish poker pro Mickey "mement_mori" Petersen and American poker pro Michael Binger reported a hand featuring a French and an Italian pro player Mustapha Kanit, whereupon the floorman ruled in favor of the French player even though he had thrown his hand into the muck.[3][4][5]

2011 edit

Final Table
Place Name Prize
1st   Samuel Trickett €1,000,000
2nd   Salman Behbehani €600,000
3rd   Oleksii Kovalchuk €379,760
4th   Ilan Boujenah €300,000
5th   Roger Hairabedian €230,000
6th   Mustapha Kanit €190,000
7th   Aleksander Dovzhenko €160,000
8th   Alexandre Coussy €130,000
9th   Mads Wissing €100,000

2012 edit

Final Table
Place Name Prize
1st   Ole Schemion €1,172,850
2nd   Karen Sarkisyan €693,494
3rd   Aaron Lim €417,499
4th   Dan O'Brien €341,991
5th   Marcello Marigliano €267,492
6th   Fabrice Touil €223,498
7th   Dan Smith €178,496
8th   Tomeu Gomila €139,499
9th   Tom Alner €105,404

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ Chad Halloway, "Patrick Partouche Announces End of Partouche Poker Tour Amid Controversy", PokerNews, September 6, 2012
  2. ^ "Teemu" (2010-11-06). "Partouche Poker Tour: Ali Tekintamgac disqualified from today's final table". HighStakesDB.com. Retrieved 2010-11-06.
  3. ^ Barnwell, David Michael (2010-09-07). "Cheating scandal strikes at Partouche Poker Tour Cannes". Poker.org. Retrieved 2011-08-02.
  4. ^ Newell, Jennifer (2010-09-10). "Poker News Nuggets 09/08: Raymer on LNCC Board, Good and Bad from Partouche". Pokerworks.com. Retrieved 2011-08-02.
  5. ^ "Michael Binger revient sur l'incident au Partouche Poker Tour" (in French). PokerActu.fr. 2010-09-07. Retrieved 2011-08-02.

External links edit