Wynn Poker Classic 2019 Results
- Wynn Poker Classic 2019 Results Horse Racing
- Wynn Poker Classic 2019 Results Payouts
- Wynn Poker Classic 2019 Results 2019
- Wynn Poker Classic 2019 Results 2020
Table Of Contents
The inaugural Wynn Winter Classic $5,300 buy-in Championship Event – the biggest buy-in tournament the venue has held in over five years – crushed its $1.5 million guarantee as 557 entrants created a $2,740,440 prize pool.
After a marathon 16-hour final day, it was longtime poker pro Michael Rocco, 30, besting 2018 World Series of Poker third-place finisher Michael Dyer in heads-up play to win the title outright for $540,800.
It was Rocco’s long-awaited signature win and a new career-high score passing his previous best of $423,440 for finishing third in the 2014 World Poker Tour LA Poker Classic. He also finished third in the 2017 PCA $25K High Roller for $409,020.
2 - 22 Dec 2019: The Wynn Winter Classic: 23 Sep - 13 Oct 2019: 2019 The Wynn Fall Classic: 30 May - 16 Jul 2019: The Wynn Summer Classic: 24 Apr - 5 May 2019: The Wynn Signature Series: 19 Feb - 17 Mar 2019: The Wynn Classic: 12 Feb 2019: Ohana Invitational: 16 - 27 Jan 2019: The Wynn Signature Series: 28 Nov - 10 Dec 2018: Wynn Signature. Wynn Poker Classic 2019 Results, download jocuri cu poker gratis, gambling age limit in singapore, casino roulette madrid.
Bob Shao of Texas won the Wynn Fall Classic’s main event in October, receiving $223K. Eugene Tito of Los Angeles scored $165K for second and Ping Liu of Michigan earned $140K for third. The $1,600 event had 1,024 entrants, resulting in a $1.5M prize pool. The series hosted a $3,200 event with a. Coverage of the poker series 2019 Wynn Winter Classic, including results, chip counts, poker videos, and photos. 2019 Wynn Classic - $1,600 No-Limit Hold'em $1 Million GTD - Poker tournament results, including winners and their payouts and winnings.
'After spending the time learning new things I feel like I have a different approach to playing.”
“I feel very tired and very good at the same time. It was a long day,” Rocco said after the win. “I’ve never won a big tournament. My three biggest scores prior to this were third place. So, I’ve always gotten down there but never been able to close it down. Now I feel like I’m in a pretty good place compared to where I’ve been before.”
Rocco credits a recent trip to Africa in helping his honing his game: “I’ve tried to relearn how to play poker better. I was studying every day for 8-10 hours, which I’d never done before. I was playing bad for a really long time and I just didn’t realize it. After spending the time learning new things I feel like I have a different approach to playing.”
He continued: “There’s so much work to do if I want to be where the best players are. I still have so many leaks compared to them. If I want to play at the highest level I have to keep working every single day … Now, moving forward, I need to work way harder. If I want to play the high rollers, which I do, I just have to try as hard as I can.”
Final Table Results
Place | Player | Country | Prize |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Michael Rocco | USA | $540,800 |
2 | Michael Dyer | USA | $353,242 |
3 | Ben Farrell | UK | $239,789 |
4 | Louis Salter | UK | $168,312 |
5 | Joe Kuether | USA | $124,690 |
6 | Matt Yorra | USA | $96,738 |
7 | Tomas Soderstrom | Sweden | $77,006 |
8 | Adam Hendrix | USA | $63,852 |
9 | Josh Bergman | USA | $53,987 |
Day 3 Action
Day 3 saw 31 players return to action and it didn’t take long for action to heat up. Among those to fall on the way to the final table were PCA champ Galen Hall (10th - $45,987), Ankush Mandavia (11th - $45,987), Kahle Burns (12th - $39,474), Shannon Shorr (15th - $34,325), two-time bracelet winner Barry Shulman (17th - $29,848), Justin Bonomo (25th - $19,797), Ryan Leng (28th - $17,290), Daniel Strelitz (30th - $17,920), and Matt Glantz (31st - $17,290).
At the final table, Josh Bergman was the first to fall after running pocket tens into Matt Yorra’s aces, and then the short-stacked Adam Hendrix followed him out the door after his king-five went down to Joe Kuether’s king-deuce after a deuce appeared on the flop.
The next-shortest stack was Sweden’s Tomas Soderstrom, and he took his leave in seventh place after jamming with jack-nine suited and failing to get there against Dyer’s ace-ten. Soon after, Yorra bowed out in sixth after losing a race with pocket nines to Dyer’s Big Slick.
Kuether then lost a race with ace-ten to Ben Farrell’s pocket sevens to finish in fifth place, and then it was time for Louis Salter to go after losing ace-eight to Farrell’s ace-jack all in preflop.
During three-handed play, Dyer doubled through Farrell ace-jack to ace-seven, and then the latter lost the rest of it to the former a short time later busting with queen-four to ace-eight suited. That set up a heads-up match in which Rocco held 17.675 million to Dyer’s 10.2 million.
Dyer got short, managed a double, and then the final hand developed. Rocco had flopped two pair and jammed big on the river. Dyer had nut no-pair with ace-queen and opted to call it off only to see his run come to an end in second place for $353,242.
The Wynn will host its next series – Wynn Signature Series – from January 15-February 2, 2020. The festival guarantees more than $1.3 million in prize pools. Click here for further details.
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Table Of Contents
Wynn Poker Classic 2019 Results Horse Racing
The Wynn Spring Classic $1,600 buy-in NLH $1,000,000 GTD attracted a total of 687 entrants, and after five days of play, Kevin Buck collected the title and $166,837 first-place prize after staging a massive comeback to defeat Justin Bond heads-up.
'I just ran good,' Buck said after the win. 'Made hands at the right time. That was pretty much it.'
Buck entered the final day fifth overall, but he was the big mover from the start soaring up the leaderboard and picking up cards at the right time. Buck doubled into the chip lead when he turned top pair and had to fade James Hundt's flush and straight draw. From there, Buck would find queens in the big blind when Alessandro Siena three-bet shoved the small blind with ace-queen, and when the field was down to the final table of nine, he sat with a 150-big blind stack which was 70 big blinds greater than his nearest rival.
Wynn Spring Classic $1,600 NLH $1M GTD Final Table Results
Wynn Poker Classic 2019 Results Payouts
Place | Player | Country | Prize |
---|---|---|---|
1st | Kevin Buck | United States | $166,837* |
2nd | Justin Bond | United States | $146,837* |
3rd | Nikolaos Platis | United States | $84,310 |
4th | Behzad Teranie | United States | $59,400 |
5th | Peter Vitantonio | United States | $43,900 |
6th | Jerry Xiong | United States | $34,000 |
7th | Hyung Kim | Canada | $27,304 |
8th | Martin Stausholm | Denmark | $22,640 |
9th | Jim Pennella | United States | $19,062 |
* Denotes heads-up deal made
Wynn Poker Classic 2019 Results 2019
Final Table Action
Wynn Poker Classic 2019 Results 2020
Jim Pennella was an early casualty when he lost a race holding ace-king against pocket nines, and Denmark's Martin Stausholm soon followed him in eighth-place when his ace-queen couldn't spike against pocket tens. Hyung Kim lost a pot that left him with an ante, and after he exited in seventh-place, six players headed to dinner break with Buck holding just under half the chips in play.
Jerry Xiong found an ace on the button but ran into the pocket jacks of Buck to fall in sixth place as chips began circling between the final five. Behzad Teranie tripled with aces, then Nikolaos Platis doubled with a straight before Peter Vitantonio ran his king-queen into Teranie's ace-king to fall in fifth place.
Bond found a huge double when he spiked the river to leave Teranie short, and after tripling through, the latter's run would end in fourth place to Bond. Buck and Bond both sat even in chips, but Platis would win a pot with aces to move him to the top. However, just a few hands later, Buck would double through Platis to hold half the chips in play when he caught his wheel on the turn. Platis would lose a race with his pocket fives to Bond's ace-nine to be eliminated in third place.
With Bond holding a slight chip lead over Buck, the two agreed to chop the remaining prize pool after setting aside $20,000 for the winner. Bond immediately took control of the heads-up match as he extended his chip lead to a four-to-one lead at one point as Buck was down to just ten big blinds. Buck, however, found several doubles before clawing back to even, and then into the lead before the final hand.
'I just played my stack. Play what I have, and play it right.'
Buck made runner-runner chips, and after betting the river, Bond check-raised all in. Buck thought for roughly a minute and then made the call as Bond showed his ace-high to fall in second place as Buck was crowned the champion.
'I just played my stack,' Buck said on when he was down to ten big blinds. 'Play what I have, and play it right.'
Buck clawed all the way back to collect the $166,837 first-place prize that includes the Wynn Spring Classic trophy. When asked about the remainder of the Wynn Spring Classic schedule, Buck said he plans to play a bunch of events but will be unable to play the marquee $5,300 Championship event that begins on Monday, March 16.
Congratulations to Kevin Buck, winner of the Wynn Spring Classic $1 million guarantee and the $166,837 first-place prize.
The PokerNews Live Reporting Team will be back at the Wynn Las Vegas to provide exclusive live coverage of the $5,300 buy-in Wynn Spring Classic Championship in a week. So stay tuned to PokerNews.com for all the updates of the Championship event, and see who will be crowned the final winner of the 2020 Wynn Spring Classic.
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