• Justin Schwartz SVT569 GPID is a unique identification number, assigned to each individual player, that will be used in the future in order to register for most poker tournaments around the world.
  • Justin Schwartz poker tournament results, including recent cashes, lifetime winnings, WSOP and WPT stats.
  • Main information regarding Justin Schwartz’s poker career Schwartz began to play poker at 13 in spite of the fact that his parents disapproved of this. However, when Schwartz became a champion at a major online competition at the age of 17, Justin’s mother changed her attitude towards his son’s passion for poker.
March 19, 2013 11:36 am

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Justin Schwartz has won the Foxwoods Poker Classic Main Event, after defeating a field of 192 players over three days to capture the title, and collect the $112,582 first place prize.
A whole slew of talented pros were attracted to the $2,325 buy-in event in Mashantucket, Connecticut to create a prize pool worth $433,007. By the end of Day 1 that field had been cut in half and by the end of Day 2 that number had been reduced further to 30 players, with Justin Schwartz fourth overall in chips.
On Day 3 the money bubble then burst with Aaron Smith collecting $4,806 for his 21st place finish, and amongst those notable names also cashing in at the tournament but falling short of the final table was Peter Campo in 20th ($4,806), Stefanski in 17th ($5,672), Lawrence Allen in 14th ($6,754) and Olanyk in 10th ($8,227).
As the final table of nine got underway, Justin Schwartz was the table leader on 1.6 million in chips, and eventually managed to make it through to heads-up phase of the competition holding a 4.282 million to 1.486 million lead over tough competitor Ryan Eriquezzo. Amongst Ryan Eriquezzo’s list of accolades is victory last year at the $1,600 WSOPC Atlantic City for $191,194, followed in July with a prestigious win at the $10k WSOP National Championship for $416,051.
However, after a tough heads-up battle at the Foxwoods Resort Casino, Ryan Eriquezzo found his tournament life on the line hoding 5-5 to Schwartz’s 10-10. Unfortunately for Eriquezzo, the board then rolled out 10-3-3-2-3 to relegate him to a runner-up finish worth $69,541, while Justin Schwartz was crowned the 2013 Foxwoods Poker Classic champion.
The final table payouts were as follows:
1 Justin Schwartz $112,582
2 Ryan Eriquezzo $69,541
3 Martin Koschik $50,229
4 Mike Lavoie $36,849
5 Fred Kulikowski $27,539
6 Nick Petrangelo $20,914
7 Raj Patel $16,152
8 John Dibella $12,687
9 Rob Brown $10,137

Justin Schwartz Poker Died

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Fourteen players remain on Day 7 of the 2015 World Series of Poker Main Event. Daniel Negreanu, for the fourth day running, has a seat at the feature table. Chip leader Joe McKeehen, Justin Schwartz, and four others surround the Poker Hall of Famer. There are two open seats at the table, but there is not an empty seat in the house. The Thunderdome is at capacity and all eyes are on Kid Poker.

Schwartz

There are other characters, but the feature table might as well be Daniel Negreanu and six others to those watching live and following online around the globe. They’re watching to see history, to see Negreanu make the final table and punch his ticket for the November Nine. Since the two table redraw though, there have been some tense moments. Negreanu has to protect and maneuver his short stack and has done so for 45 hands.

Justin Schwartz Poker

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Daniel Negreanu, the fans watching and following online, and the other players still in the Main Event don’t realize it, but Hand 46 will decide the tournament. Joe McKeehen is about to flop a set of sixes, Justin Schwartz is about to flop a set of threes. The next Main Event champion is about to be crowned.

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***

The cards are exposed and The Thunderdome erupts. McKeehen is called a “disgusting human,” Negreanu is heard saying, “Sick one.” off-camera, and Justin Schwartz declares that he doesn’t do handshakes. While the crowd moans and groans for maybe one of the biggest coolers in Main Event history, Schwartz quietly tells McKeehen, “You better win this f****** tournament.”

McKeehen quickly smiles and, for a split second, you almost expect him to say, “I’m going to.” He doesn’t, but McKeehen and Schwartz seem to have an unspoken understanding. Schwartz knows that he was likely the only player capable of stopping, even slowing, McKeehen. McKeehen knows that, too.

As Schwartz exits the Main Event in 14th place, Alexander Turyansky, who correctly folded pocket queens against both sets, innocently tells McKeehen, “I was scared of you.” Little does Turyansky know, it’s only going to get scarier.

***

When Hand 46 begins, Joe McKeehen has just under 28 million chips. When the hand concludes, McKeehen is up near 38 million and he moves above 40 million before the Day 7 dinner break. Play resumes with 13 players remain and McKeehen is behind 134 big blinds, equal to the combined stacks of his five table mates. Four players hit the rail over the next 87 hands, Daniel Negreanu included, and McKeehen bags over 63 million for the final table. McKeehen has nearly a third of the chips in play and more than double the stack of his nearest competitor.

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How did Joe McKeehen more than double his stack from Hand 46 on? Ruthless aggression, made possible by the elimination of Justin Schwartz. Outside of Daniel Negreanu, the feature table post-Schwartz was about as inexperienced as it gets on Day 7 of the Main Event. Add that inexperience, pay jumps worth Super High Roller buy-ins, and the fact that six of the eight smallest stacks left in the tournament surrounded McKeehen and it is not hard to see why Schwartz’s elimination was so consequential.

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With stealthmunk dismissed, McKeehen turned the usually marathon-esque journey to the November Nine into a drag race. McKeehen had the green light and he sped towards the checkered flag. He waited more than three months to officially cross the finish line, but that was just a formality.