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Nacho Grande Argentina’s Jose Barbero has emerged as the biggest star on the LAPT after back-to-back victories BY BRAD WILLIS IT’S WINTERTIME IN LIMA, PERU, and fog is rolling in off the Pacific Coast. It drifts over the Larcomar Mall—a collection of chain restaurants and shops—such that the Chili’s and TGI Friday’s look like they are on a foggy London street corner instead of looking out over the cliffs of Miraflores. The winter fog here is hardly a surprise. It’s so common that many Peruvians fashion nets to capture the airborne moisture for clean drinking water. It’s a haze so beautiful and occasionally spooky that it’s one of the first things you notice when you stand on the street in front of Lima’s Atlantic City Casino. The police presence on the streets of Miraflores is hard to miss. Revolver-strapped officers stand in bunches on every corner. Walk down an alley, and you’re bound to find a large panel van packed with riot police, although there’s never a hint of violence, which either means the police are superfluous or performing their duties perfectly.
It seems, at least for this week, that everything that matters is happening within a two-block radius of the Atlantic City Casino. As the tournament begins, Jose Barbero, a man most people call “Nacho,” is sitting at the end of a table with a wry smile on his face. It’s a look that gives away neither happiness nor bemusement. It is simply the way Nacho presents himself. It is the smile of a man who is singlehandedly claiming the Latin American Poker Tour (LAPT) for the people of Central and South America.
When the LAPT kicked off in 2008, it seemed to have everything.
It boasted the biggest prize pools in the region, trips to fabulous
locales, and some of the softer games the touring pros could hope to
find. For a long time it lacked just one important thing: a
Latin-American winner. This in itself was no great tragedy, but neither was it an ideal situation. It was enough to encourage the newly minted president of the LAPT David Carrion to comment recently, “We would like to see an increasing number of local players participate in LAPTs.” Carrion joined the LAPT at the beginning of Season Three, which promised both new luxury destinations and bigger fields. When the first event ended in Playa Conchal, Costa Rica, however, Carrion still had only Ortiz to claim as a true Latin-American champion. That would change a few months later when the man named Nacho traveled to Punta del Este, Uruguay.
Like many top modern poker pros, Nacho Barbero got his start in
the card game Magic: The Gathering. In 2003, he was Argentina’s Magic
champion. The following year, he moved to France, a trip that would
forever change his life. There he met fellow Magic pro Gabriel Nassif,
who had returned from the United States with an exciting discovery.
Everyone Nassif encountered in his Magic circles was playing online
poker. Nassif loaded up an online game of $5/$10 Limit Hold ’Em and
showed Barbero how it worked. Barbero was smitten. “I was so depressed that I was almost crying,” Barbero said. “It was a lot of money for me.” Losing that much money playing a simple card game was inconceivable to him. “I could not sleep at all that night,” he recalled. “I will remember this all my life.” Like Ortiz, the only Latin-American LAPT champion through more than two seasons of the tour, Barbero hails from Argentina. He grew up in a city outside Buenos Aires and lived the life of a typical kid. High-stakes poker didn’t figure into his daily routine, and until he found Magic, the idea that he could make money playing cards didn’t compute. Despite what seemed at the time a life-changing loss in France, Barbero persevered. He knew he was smart enough. He knew he had the talent. He knew he could translate his talents for one game to success in another.
“The majority of the situations in poker come heads-up, and you
have to try to get into your opponent’s mind and get a good read,” he
said. Within a few years, Barbero favored no tour. He went where the money was. Whether it was making a final table at the World Series of Poker, winning a PokerStars Caribbean Adventure side tournament, or final-tabling a stop on the LAPT, Barbero seemed content to go anywhere and capable of winning anything.
The tournament in Punta del Este accelerated his rapid ascent.
He won the big Season Three LAPT event there for nearly $280,000. That
stop this past February gave him his first main event title. It also
gave the LAPT another Latin-American champion. Barbero and the LAPT only had to wait a few months for the answer.
As the event in Lima wound its way through the first day and
into the second, people began to whisper about a very intriguing
possibility: There was a chance that both previous Season Three
champions would end up at the final table of LAPT Lima.
The EPT has gone though six seasons and never had a repeat
winner, but after only 10 events on the LAPT, there was a good chance of
that happening. Magnifying the drama of the possibility, it had the
potential to occur in the second-biggest LAPT main event in its
three-season history. Both Sulaiman and Barbero had navigated though a
minefield of 384 players to make it to Day Three. Even two weeks after his win, he was still overcome by the magnitude of his achievement. “It feels almost like a dream. I know it is going to change my career as a poker player.”
Within just a few months, Barbero had pocketed more than half a
million dollars in LAPT money. In all, his live tournament winnings are
pushing ever closer to a million bucks. All of a sudden, the guy who not
so long ago couldn’t afford to lose $800 didn’t really have to worry
about money. Instead, he could focus on what his back-to-back wins meant
for the game and his people.
Barbero isn’t overstating it. While many good players have come
from Latin America, until recently, few have been very well-known.
Outside of Costa Rican godfather Humberto Brenes, most North Americans
would be hard-pressed to name a single Latin-American poker pro.
“He will certainly be our flagship player until someone overcomes his feat,” David Carrion said. “I feel that this is just the beginning of a bright future for Nacho.” By the time the final river card had fallen in Peru, the police had captured Joran van der Sloot and the fog had lifted some from the Miraflores coast. Every camera was now focused directly on Back-To-Back Barbero, and everyone seemed to have a question for him. The reporters shouted in Spanish and English. They all wanted to know what Barbero planned to do after winning his second LAPT title. The wry grin appeared on Barbero’s face again. With a trademark twinkle in his eye, he said, “The best thing that could happen? I would win my third.” Brad Willis is a freelance writer and tournament reporter based in Greenville, South Carolina.
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