Chino Rheem

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He eliminated them all one by one to add another seven-figure score to an already lustrous poker career, and is now the reigning PokerStars Caribbean Adventure Main Event champion. The Atlantis Resort in the Bahamas had one man stealing the spotlight today: David 'Chino' Rheem. The 38-year old from Los Angeles, California conquered an 865-player strong field and scored the second biggest cash of his career collecting $1,567,100. The win also moved Rheem over the $10 million in lifetime winnings mark on Hendon Mob.

Runner-up was Daniel Strelitz, who was the last player to fall to the Rheem-onslaught. Strelitz received $951,480 for finishing second, nearly topping his WPT win from 2017. Scott Wellenbach's dream run ended in third place ($671,240). Before that, Pavel Veksler of the Ukraine finished fourth ($503,440), Vicent Bosca of Spain was fifth ($396,880) and Brian Altman finished in sixth place ($297,020).

'Things just went my way. Nature ran its course and obviously, it was fun.'

'It's an honor,' was the first thing Rheem said after winning the coveted tournament. 'I'm very grateful to even have the opportunity to come here and play, and I'm blessed to be able to win it.'

For those watching the final table, it was a treat. Each player at the table seemingly enjoyed themselves, engaging in banter. Rheem, as always, had the highest word and was perhaps the catalyst to get the others out of their shells. The American didn't want to highlight the banter too much afterwards.

'Things just went my way. Nature ran its course and obviously, it was fun.'

“Chino” Rheem’s figures: He won $2,617,440 at the WSOP tournaments until 2017, where he won 30 times and played at 6 final tables A little over $4,000,000 won during the WPT tournaments, where he has 3 titles, 4 final tables and 8 wins.

Despite his checkered past, it's clear that Rheem knows his way around the poker table given his sheer endless list of poker accomplishments. But winning the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure Main Event, the fifth seven-figure ship of his career, is perhaps his most crowning achievement. When asked about the secret recipe behind his success, Rheem simply had two words to say.

  1. Now, that trio has company in the form of Chino Rheem, who won his third WPT title after besting a field of 342 entries in the Seminole Hard Rock Poker.
  2. 'Chino' Rheem (born April 15, 1980) is a poker player from Los Angeles, California. In November 2008, Rheem finished in seventh place at the 2008 World Series of Poker Main Event, cashing for $1,772,650.
  3. David 'Chino' Rheem hails from Los Angeles, California. His first major tournament cash came at the 2005 World Series of Poker. That same year, Rheem also cashed in the main event.
  4. Chino Rheem, the reneging degen Chino Rheem fits that description almost perfectly, an extremely talented who is about as trustworthy as a bag of rattlesnakes with a hole in it. Last year, English pro Alex Goulder outed Rheem on Twitter for lying about his partypoker LIVE Barcelona bustout.

'Be lucky.'

Rheem also spoke some kind words about his rail, featuring Noah Boeken and Michael 'The Grinder' Mizrachi, among others. 'It's a special feeling. It feels good, it means a lot,' Rheem said to PokerNews. 'To be honest, it means a lot to me to do it for the people that were there for me. That's what means a lot.'

'It's a really good feeling.'

Chino Rheem

2019 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure Main Event Final Table Results

PlaceWinnerCountryPrize (in USD)
1David 'Chino' RheemUnited States$1,567,100
2Daniel StrelitzUnited States$951,480
3Scott WellenbachCanada$671,240
4Pavel VekslerUkraine$503,440
5Vicent BoscaSpain$396,880
6Brian AltmanUnited States$297,020
7Mihai ManoleRomania$208,920
8Marc-Andre LadouceurCanada$146,840

Scott Wellenbach Playing for Charity

While Rheem was the one to claim the spotlight at the end of the day, the story of the tournament belonged to Scott Wellenbach. Wellenbach, a 67-year old Buddhist text transcriber from Halifax, NS/Canada won his way to the event via a $500 online qualifier and vouched beforehand to donate all of his winnings to charity, no matter the outcome. Wellenbach played a strong tournament throughout, but the crowd favorite saw his Cinderella story come to an end two spots short of the victory.

'The poker gods were smiling, I'm sure.'

'A real rollercoaster of emotions. Ups and downs and at the moment, I'm feeling a bit disappointed,' a deflated Wellenbach said directly after busting out. 'I did have some hopes for playing a little better.

'It's a bit of a bittersweet moment,' he added.

Despite his disappointment, the Canadian was ecstatic about making nearly $700K for a good cause. 'Going into the tournament, if you would've said: 'How's third place?' I would've said 'unbelievably good.' I'm sure in a few days, it'll sink in and I'll be happy with the outcome. At the moment though, I feel like I could've played better. Certain things didn't go my way as well. I gotta say I was extremely lucky I was getting certain cards in certain situations. So the fact that things went a little odd today, in no way balances the scale, I was very lucky, very fortunate.

'The poker gods were smiling, I'm sure.'

You can watch the PokerNews interview with Wellenbach below:

Video: https://www.pokernews.com/video/scott-wellenbach-donates-more-than-600-000-to-charity-11828.htm

2019 PCA Main Event Final Table Action

Yesterday, the first skirmishes at the final table promised a dynamic and interesting finish to the event, and the six remaining players followed up on that promise. At 1 p.m., they gathered to play down to a winner. It became a feast for the neutral poker fan, with raises, three-bets, the occasional shove and a lot of table banter keeping viewers entertained throughout. The six kept each other in balance for over 50 hands, with only Rheem distancing himself slightly from the pack.

That all changed when Strelitz was the first player to get called on an all-in shove. Holding pocket threes, Strelitz was up against Wellenbach's ace-jack. After the ace fell on the turn, the three came on the river to keep Strelitz' hopes alive. The very next hand, Altman raised up ace-three of diamonds, Rheem three-bet pocket queens from the blinds and Altman moved in. Rheem snapped him off and forced the accomplished U.S. pro on a trip to the payout desk after the queens held up. (6th - $297,020).

Things settled down after the slow burst and the five once again battled it out for more than 50 hands before the next player fell. It was Vicent Bosca, the high-stakes cash gamer from Xatia, Spain, who suffered a case of the 'too many outs' syndrome. Bosca had raised with ace-jack of diamonds and flopped the nut flush draw and gutshot on a queen-ten-three flop. Rheem check-raised all in with five-three and Bosca called. The turn brought the ten, bumping Bosca's outs even further, but the river was a blank and he was gone in fifth ($396,880).

Rheem then turned on the thumbscrews and started three-betting a ton to put ICM pressure on his remaining three opponents. In the span of just under an hour, he finished off his remaining adversaries one by one. Veksler was the first to go after losing ace-queen against pocket sixes and became fourth for $503,440.

Shortly after, Wellenbach (3rd - $671,240) followed, losing king-queen to Rheem's ace-ten. Wellenbach flopped a king, but Rheem caught a runner-runner straight to get to the heads-up. Starting the heads-up match with a 5:1 lead, Rheem finished off Strelitz (2nd - $951,480) after just seven hands. In the final hand, Strelitz open-shoved a little over twenty bigs with ace-deuce of spades, and Rheem snap-called him with pocket fives. The board ran out clean to give Rheem his fifth knockout of the day and a deserved championship.

That's all for eleven days of PokerNews coverage from the PokerStars Players Championship and PokerStars Caribbean Adventure from the Atlantis Resort in the Bahama's. Until next time!

Video: https://www.pokernews.com/video/pca-main-event-champion-chino-rheem-11829.htm

Want to read back about all of Rheem's hands and how eliminated each opponent? Relive the hand-for-hand coverage of the PCA Main Event final table in the PokerNews Live Reporting section.

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  • Tags

    PCAPokerStarsBrian AltmanChino RheemDaniel StrelitzPavel VekslerScott WellenbachVicent Bosca
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    David RheemDaniel StrelitzScott WellenbachBrian AltmanPavel VekslerVicent Bosca
16:50
09 Apr

Serial scammer David “Chino” Rheem has allegedly been up to his old tricks, English pro Alex Goulder taking to Twitter to accuse the Californian of scamming his backers by lying about how he bust out of the 2018 partypoker LIVE MILLIONS Grand Final €1,100 Open Event in Barcelona.


Rheem’s previous when it comes to lying to and not paying his backers is legendary, to the point where it’s unbelievable to many how he actually has people willing to put up money for him.

PokerTube has previously covered Rheem’s scams in some detail, and the 2+2 forum has more than one thread devoted to his legendary money problems and cheats, the most recent catchily titled ‘Chino Rheem SCUM part two (more scams)’.

That thread, started by Bill Molson, a poker high-roller of Canadian beer company fame who loaned Rheem $20k in a transfer, which was accidentally doubled by PokerStars to $40k. Despite Rheem cashing for some $150k in the event, he still hadn’t repaid Molson a year later, prompting the Canadian to go public in the hope that others wouldn’t share the same fate.

“Chino has an art of scamming people. He is very charming, and makes you feel really ****ty if you don't lend him money. He makes you feel really guilty, and convinces you 100% that he'll pay you back tomorrow...etc...” wrote KMPoker in the 2+2 thread.

Rheem was also caught on camera being screamed at in a viral poker video in 2011, his accuser shouting: 'You owe the whole ****ing city of Las Vegas money - you're a bitch,” which pretty much summed up what most people think about Rheem, and shows the down-side of poker-staking.

His latest alleged attempt to hoodwink investors in his poker adventures is still short of details, but Doug Polk tried to ensure that Rheem was at least aware of the accusations…


…while Mike Dentale was hopefully being a bit tongue in cheek when he tweeted…

For those wondering what possible benefit there could be to Rheem chucking his entire stack away with a dubious 4-bet, others were on hand to explain…


Chino Rheem Korean

…which roughly translates as:

“When you sell 150% + and the bubble approaches happen things I guess 😊🐷 “

Chino Rheem

Backers might not be best pleased to find this out, hence the apparent lie from Rheem as to how he bust out.

Chino Rheem Broke

PokerTube have contacted both Goulder and Rheem for further comment.