Joe Cada

Cada

Chad Holloway

Brought to you by the WSOP-C Playground, hosted by Playground Poker Club and partypoker LIVE. The long-awaited return to Canada of the WSOP Circuit takes place from August 23rd to September 3rd and will not only feature an $1,100 Main Event with a huge $2,000,000 Guaranteed Prize Pool, but also other favorites such as the Colossus, Monster Stack, and High Roller.

Joe Cada WSOP Main Event Final Table Profile

Seat:8
Chip Count:23,675,000 (6/9)
Hometown:Shelby Charter Township, Michigan
Age:30
Twitter:@cada99

Joseph Cada was born on the 18th November 1987, in Shelby Charter Township, Michigan USA, and is a professional poker player who is most famous for winning the Main Event in the 2009 World Series of Poker tournament, the youngest Main Event winner. He is also a member of Team Poker Stars. Joe Cada, 21, is barely old enough to gamble, but, if he beats Darvin Moon on Monday in the final hands of the World Series of Poker, he'll not only win it big and get the coveted bracelet, he'll. Joe Cada is a professional poker player from Michigan, best known as the winner of the Main Event at the 2009 WSOP. Born in 1987, Cada began playing online poker around age 16. Although he was too young to play in casinos in the United States while he was younger than 21, he could in Canada and could also play online. Joseph Cada was born on the 18th November 1987, in Shelby Charter Township, Michigan USA, and is a professional poker player who is most famous for winning the Main Event in the 2009 World Series of Poker tournament, the youngest Main Event winner.

After Day 1C of the 2018 World Series of Poker Main Event, which started players with 50,000, former champ Joe Cada bagged up just 16,500. He was near the bottom of the counts. Obviously, you can call it a comeback as he now finds himself at the final table.

'I don't know if I would have been as patient back then. I was a little bit more patient this year.'

'It was a lot more of a grind this time,' Cada told PokerNews. 'I knew that it was a long eight days and I felt like I had room to come back. I had 9K at one point in this tournament and I just grinded a short stack. I was like maybe one-fifth of average almost the entire tournament. I just had to pick my spots and try to shove on people that were raising too much and just try to pick up some hands.'

Joe

It marks the second time he’s been in this spot as nine years ago, he topped a field of 6,494 players to win the 2009 WSOP Main Event for $8,547,044. At the time, he was 21 years and 11 months old, and became the youngest player in WSOP history to win the Main Event. Not only that, he did it by besting a final table that included Phil Ivey, Jeff Shulman, and Darvin Moon. Vertical roulette wheel.

'It feels unreal. What other feelings are there?' Cada said after returning to the final table. 'We'll see how it turns out. I don't know..cards..you never know.'

An online poker player before striking it big, Cada, born November 18, 1987, still resides in Shelby Charter Township, Michigan.

'It was a lot more of a grind this time.'

He made headlines earlier this summer for two reasons. First, he bested a 363-player field to win the 2018 WSOP Event #3: $3,000 NLHE Shootout for $226,218 and his third bracelet. His other gold hardware came back in 2014 when he took down Event #32: $10,000 NLHE 6-Handed Championship for $670,041.

The other headline he grabbed was around Father’s Day, which is when he put his father, Jerry Cada, into the $1,000 Super Seniors Championship. The story was heartwarming as not long before Jerry spent over a month in a coma after suffering a stroke. During his recovery, Joe spent time teaching his dad the poker ropes. Joe was on his dad’s rail, but now it’s time for the father to root on son once again.

As for playing it out in the coming days as opposed to the defunct November Nine break, Cada's all about it.

'I like it better. I'd rather just get this thing over with and see where it lies. The three months..you toss and turn a lot thinking about where it's going to end.'

HOW HE GOT HERE

DayEnd-of-Day Chip CountRank
1c16,5003,252/3,470
2c93,8001,032/1,655
3211,000672/1,182
4559,000249/310
52,965,00056/109
68,850,00019/26

KEY HANDS

One of Cada’s pivotal hands came with 15 players remaining in Level 34 (200,000/400,000/50,000) when he three-bet jammed for 6.875 million holding ace-six suited. The initial raiser, Frederik Jensen, called with ace-ten and Cada was in trouble. Fortunately for him, the board ran out with three hearts, including one on the river, to give him new life.

Cada on the hand: 'I don't know if I would have been as patient back then. I was a little bit more patient this year. I mean I got lucky with that ace-six of hearts but honestly, if I didn't ship that, for the next two hours, I wouldn't have won a hand. I would have just been blinded out. He actually made a really good call with ace-ten. That's a tough spot there. I got lucky with that and I was able to get in some really good situations where I was able to run my stack up.'

They're playing tight and I'm raising into the two chip leaders. There's no reason why I can't have a straight or two pair there.'

In another big hand, Cada executed a three-barrel bluff against Alex Lynskey, who had flopped top pair on a king-high board. Cada’s river shove sent his Australian foe into the tank and eventually, he folded. Cada’s brazen bluff lit up the Twitterverse and showed that he was willing to put it all on the line for another shot at the title.

'It was just situational. I was lucky enough for a jack or a queen to come off because that was the only way I was going to continue with the bluff,' Cada said of the hand. 'That board's my range. They're playing tight and I'm raising into the two chip leaders. There's no reason why I can't have a straight or two pair there. It's so hard to have any bluffs besides an ace, which I did but it's not often. It's just situational.'

If Cada were to win the Main Event, he would join the ranks of Johnny Moss, Doyle Brunson, Johnny Chan, and Stu Ungar as repeat winners. Similarly, a fourth bracelet would put him in a company that includes Michael “The Grinder” Mizrachi, Brian Rast, and Amarillo Slim, just to name a few.

Finally, Cada is the first Main Event champ to return to the final table since 1995 winner Dan Harrington went back-to-back in 2003-04.

Cada has a favorable position at the table. The two big stacks are to his right, and the two short stacks are to his direct left. Cada has the experience and knows how to close the Main Event out, which just might be the edge he needs to make poker history.

Joe Cada Poker

2018 WSOP Main Event Final Table Seating

SeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Artem MetalidiUkraine15,475,00026
2John CynnUnited States37,075,00062
3Alex LynskeyAustralia25,925,00043
4Tony MilesUnited States42,750,00071
5Nicolas ManionUnited States112,775,000188
6Aram ZobianUnited States18,875,00031
7Michael DyerUnited States109,175,000182
8Joe CadaUnited States23,675,00039
9Antoine LabatFrance8,050,00013

Joe Cada - Biography & News - News Break

There is 1:23:57 remaining in Level 36 (300,000/600,000, with a 100,000-ante).

2018 WSOP Main Event Final Table Payout

PositionPrize
1$8,800,000
2$5,000,000
3$3,750,000
4$2,825,000
5$2,150,000
6$1,800,000
7$1,500,000
8$1,250,000
9$1,000,000

2018 WSOP Main Event Final Table Stats

PlayerWSOP CashesWSOP BraceletsCareer EarningsBiggst CashGPI Ranking
Joe Cada333$10,779,041$8,546,435849th
Alex Lynskey140$1,769,666$426,663525th
Artem Metalidi250$2,131,437$350,806567th
John Cynn160$944,786$650,0003,926th
Antoine Labat20$194,789$52,84213,662nd
Aram Zobian100$110,444$47,0001,946th
Michael Dyer20$95,020$65,905179,657th
Tony Miles50$54,333$18,00016,766th
Nicolas Manion10$16,739$9,85032,585th
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    Joe Cada

After another nine levels of play, day 1B of the Card Player Poker Tour $5,000 Venetian main event is a wrap and 2009 World Series of Poker main event champion Joe Cada headlines the top stacks of the 147 survivors.

Cada surged to the top of the stacks near the end of the day with a crucial double up when his pocket queens held up against AK on a 3329 board. The four-time WSOP bracelet winner finished with 161,400, good for fifth from the day 1B field.

Ghattas Kortas bagged 185,000 and finished with the biggest stack from Wednesday. Javier Zarco (182,400), Peter Braglia (182,100) and Ubaid Gada (163,200) round out the top stacks.

Joe Cada's Extremely Eventful Poker Career - Upswing Poker

Zarco, a top pro from Spain with more than $2.4 million in tournaments earnings, had the second-best score of his career at the Venetian when he finished runner-up in a $3,500 no-limit hold’em event in 2017 for $557,804.

No deposit cash bonus. The 147 players that made it through day 1B, will join yesterday’s 33 day 1A survivors, bringing back at least 180 players for the start of day 2. They will all be chasing Barry Hutter, who holds the overall chip lead after finishing day 1A with 196,600.

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There were 93 entries on day 1A and another 354 entries on day 1b, which brings the total field size thus far to 447 entries, already passing the $2 million guaranteed prize pool. Registration and re-entry is still open until the start of the day’s fourth level, so it’s likely that the field will grow beyond the current total. Starting Thursday, levels will be increased to 75 minutes.

Other notables to bag big stacks on day 1B include Trung Pham, Bryan Piccioli, David Williams, Kahle Burns, Hafiz Khan, Tony Gargano, and JC Tran. Freddy Deeb, Kristen Bicknell, Lily Kiletto, Lauren Roberts, Paul Volpe, John Phan, Will Givens, Will Kassouf, Brian Yoon and Ankush Mandavia also put chips in a bag at the end of the night.

Chance Kornuth, Anthony Zinno, Ryan Phan, Matt Stout, Chris Hunichen and Ludovic Geilich were among the notables who failed to finish the day with chips. They all still have time to take another shot at this event if they choose to.

Complete Day 2 Chip Counts:

RankNameChip CountTableSeat
1 Barry Hutter 196,600 49 4
2 Ghattas Kortas 185,000 15 6
3 Javier Zarco 182,400 59 3
4 Peter Braglia 182,100 49 6
5 Ubaid Gada 163,200 5 9
6 Joe Cada 161,400 6 1
7 Trung Pham 159,200 3 3
8 Bryan Piccioli 158,100 50 6
9 Ruman Meman 154,500 21 2
10 David Williams 152,400 6 7
11 Robert Heidorn 143,300 16 6
12 Thomas Boivin 140,800 19 2
13 Pavlo Veksler 133,600 62 6
14 Pfizer Jordan 131,700 18 1
15 Kahle Burns 128,500 49 2
16 Hafiz Khan 125,000 50 1
17 Jerry Robinson 124,200 5 1
18 Nabil Mohamed Abdien 123,000 29 6
19 Andrew Crookston 122,100 50 7
20 Joe Hindman 121,900 62 2
21 Jules Dickerson 120,000 15 3
22 Ran Ilani 119,600 17 4
23 Kristina Holst 119,200 29 4
24 Tony Gargano 118,600 62 7
25 David Quang 118,300 28 3
26 Richard Tuhrim 109,800 14 9
27 Xi Xiang Luo 107,000 61 6
28 Yuliyan Koler 104,100 13 2
29 Antti Halme 101,900 16 7
30 Derek Gregory 101,200 1 4
31 J.C. Tran 100,400 4 9
32 Anatolii Zyrin 99,700 21 3
33 Bertrand Grospellier 98,100 1 2
34 Chun Li 94,500 59 1
35 Freddy Deeb 92,200 17 9
36 Zachary Donovan 88,700 19 1
37 Igor Yaroshevskyy 88,300 29 2
38 Paul Fontan 88,100 20 2
39 Adam Owen 86,300 20 4
40 Uri Reichenstein 85,700 4 1
41 Eyac Revah 82,000 13 1
42 Nicholas Zautra 81,900 18 3
43 Aaron Been 81,700 31 3
44 Kristen Bicknell 81,600 4 4
45 Hassan Tahsildar 81,000 15 1
46 Michael Tureniec 80,600 57 9
47 Jordan Fisch 80,000 13 7
48 Andrey Pateychuk 79,800 4 6
49 Lily Kiletto 78,000 29 3
50 Liran Twito 77,000 5 2
51 Lauren Roberts 75,600 28 1
52 Paul Volpe 74,700 20 6
53 Ryan Remington 74,400 28 2
54 John Phan 71,800 1 6
55 Michal Mrakes 71,200 19 3
56 Haim Gabay 70,800 51 2
57 Marton Czuczor 70,700 6 6
58 William Givens 70,000 19 4
59 William Kassouf 68,400 13 6
60 Brian Yoon 68,200 16 3
61 Benjamin Reinhart 65,200 51 4
62 Ankush Mandavia 65,000 16 1
63 Algirdas Saveikis 64,300 28 4
64 Anthony Spinella 63,500 20 3
65 Anthony Utnage 63,000 17 1
66 Angie Tran 62,800 51 7
67 Sergi Reixach 62,300 20 9
68 Laszlo Molinar 62,300 51 9
69 Usman Siddique 62,200 31 4
70 Carl Davis 61,900 30 3
71 Sergio Aido 61,600 6 2
72 Julien Sitbon 61,500 31 9
73 Alex Lynskey 61,400 29 9
74 Justin Zaki 61,300 4 7
75 Daniel Neilson 61,100 6 9
76 Anton Wigg 60,600 14 2
77 Koray Aldemir 60,100 28 9
78 Steve Bierman 60,000 3 4
79 Ben Palmer 59,400 5 6
80 Brendan Buckner 58,800 30 6
81 James Carroll 58,700 2 7
82 Harsukhpaul Sangha 58,600 19 9
83 Eddy Sabat 57,600 17 6
84 Alexandros Theologis 56,900 13 4
85 Joey Weissman 56,800 17 3
86 Frank Naranjo Bedoya 56,100 49 3
87 Dalton Brinker 55,200 49 7
88 Gianluca Petrone 54,800 61 3
89 Pete Yen Han Chen 54,200 50 2
90 Mitch Garshofsky 53,800 5 3
91 Ralph Wong 53,600 21 6
92 Jack Duong 53,000 16 9
93 Luke Graham 51,600 3 1
94 Ajay Chabra 51,500 19 7
95 Chris Klodnicki 51,300 19 6
96 Daniel Smilskovic 50,600 13 3
97 Danny Noam 50,500 14 6
98 Kainalu McCue Unciano 50,100 4 3
99 Jeremy Ausmus 49,600 17 2
100 Thai Ha 49,600 4 2
101 Jeffrey Tanouye 49,000 18 9
102 Bohbak Jboodi 47,300 29 7
103 Longsheng Tan 47,200 1 9
104 Pierre Neuville 47,000 3 6
105 Matthew Leecy 46,200 1 7
106 Almedin Imsirovic 45,700 14 1
107 Stephen Chidwick 45,600 61 1
108 Phong Nguyen 45,000 50 4
109 Xu Ming Qi 44,500 59 2
110 Adam Zeltser 44,400 62 9
111 Ian O’Hara 42,300 6 3
112 Elio Fox 42,200 20 7
113 Sang Kim 42,000 14 4
114 Javier Gomez Zapatero 41,600 18 2
115 Manig Loeser 41,600 62 3
116 Tamer Kamel 40,900 21 4
117 Yake Wu 40,400 59 7
118 Dong Jun Ji 39,200 51 3
119 Ryan LaPlante 39,000 59 4
120 David Seliktar 37,500 28 7
121 Jin Kyu Park 37,100 16 2
122 Ray Qartomy 36,200 6 4
123 Fan Tao 36,200 3 7
124 Kyle Anderson 36,000 29 1
125 Pierre-Paul Paulin 35,900 2 9
126 Austin Yoo 35,500 21 9
127 David Peters 34,200 30 4
128 Timo Kamphues 33,900 1 3
129 Iverson Cotton Snuffer 33,900 2 1
130 Joseph Elpayaa 33,600 3 2
131 Simon Deadman 33,000 2 4
132 Damien Le Goff 32,700 2 3
133 Joe Kuether 32,600 15 9
134 Dan Dizenzo 32,600 3 9
135 Darren Rabinowitz 32,500 62 1
136 Marvin Rettenmaier 31,700 20 1
137 Ryan Goindoo 31,300 57 7
138 Hon Cheong Lee 30,900 49 9
139 David Jackson 30,000 5 7
140 Ping Lin 29,900 30 1
141 Neil Patel 28,700 18 6
142 Maria Ho 28,600 61 9
143 Justin Young 28,600 57 3
144 Jason Gerber 28,200 61 4
145 Christopher Frank 28,000 1 1
146 Johan Schumacher 27,500 31 6
147 Maxim Lykov 27,300 13 9
148 Lokesh Garg 27,000 21 1
149 Kevin Killeen 26,600 31 2
150 Scott Margereson 26,500 51 1
151 James Calderaro 26,400 30 2
152 Alex Foxen 26,200 5 4
153 Shannon Shorr 26,100 50 3
154 Elliott Smith 25,700 28 6
155 Patrick Eskandar 25,400 61 7
156 Lars Kamphues 24,900 15 7
157 Chris Johnson 24,600 18 7
158 Anson Tsang Yan Shing 24,600 18 4
159 Fabrizio Gonzalez 24,400 57 6
160 Kitty Kuo 24,300 21 7
161 Matas Cimbolas 23,600 59 9
162 Jose Carlos Brito 23,400 30 9
163 Patrick Quinn 23,100 31 7
164 Joonhee Yea 22,700 50 9
165 Ray Pulford 22,400 15 4
166 Nadya Magnus 21,800 17 7
167 Danny Tang 21,400 2 2
168 Carla Sabini 21,100 31 1
169 Chen Dong 19,600 2 6
170 Daniel Wendorf 19,000 59 6
171 Shayna Bott 18,900 16 4
172 Ronnie Bardah 18,400 61 2
173 Robert Peacock 16,700 15 2
174 Adrian Mateos Diaz 16,600 14 3
175 Shane Delaney 15,100 51 6
176 Matt Wantman 15,100 14 7
177 Chris Marshall 14,800 62 4
178 Martin Kozlov 12,800 57 2
179 Vojtech Ruzicka 9,900 57 4
180 Ryan Tosc 7,100 30 7

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