$125 Six-Max Ante-Only No-Limit Hold'em
Day 1 Completed
$125 Six-Max Ante-Only No-Limit Hold'em
Day 1 Completed
It took some cajoling, but Patrick Knipple was able to convince his final three opponents to agree to a deal that sent the majority of the prize pool his way, as well as the coveted Run It Up trophy in the $125 Six-Max Ante-Only event. Per the terms of the agreement, Knipple banked $1,200 while Mark Mantis, Joe Madden, and Joe Imhoff got $975 apiece.
Knipple and Mantis were co-leaders when the final table of seven convened, and play progressed very slowly for the most part as the structure was featured mostly very small jumps in the ante size. After Aussie Daniel Levy went bust in fifth, a four-handed battle commenced where nobody went bust for hours.
Finally, Knipple took command when he won a big pot off Mantis, who opened to 9,000 first to act with antes at 5,000. Knipple called on the button and the two saw a flop. Mantis fired out 10,000 and Knipple made it 25,000 to go. Mantis called, and both players checked the
. Mantis bet 25,000 on the
river and was immediately called. He showed
for a missed straight, and Knipple had
.
That pot gave Knipple nearly half of the chips in play and the leverage in deal negotiations. Although Imhoff and Madden were more than eager to take the $975, Mantis took more convincing. Ultimately, he somewhat reluctantly agreed to the terms and both he and Knipple hopped right into the series-ending turbo event.
Level: 15
Blinds: 0/0
Ante: 6,000
Mark Mantis opened to 9,000 first to act, and Patrick Knipple called on the button. Mantis bet 10,000 on the flop, and Knipple made it 25,000. Mantis called, and both checked the
. Mantis bet 25,000 on the
river and got snap-called. He showed
but king-high was no good against
.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
|
270,000
160,000
|
160,000 |
|
45,000
-215,000
|
-215,000 |
Joe Imhoff pushed all in on a flop, and Patrick Knipple said he didn't love it but had to call.
Knipple:
Imhoff:
Knipple was pleased to see both of his cards were live, but the turn and
river bricked off for him.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
|
110,000
-55,000
|
-55,000 |
|
90,000
50,000
|
50,000 |
Level: 14
Blinds: 0/0
Ante: 5,000
Joe Imhoff is short after he attempted to catch a bluff from Mark Mantis, calling 40,000 on the end with the board reading .
"Good call," Mantis said, thinking he was surely beat. "Six."
He showed but it was good, as Imhoff said he had merely a pair of deuces.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
|
260,000
118,000
|
118,000 |
|
40,000
-79,000
|
-79,000 |
There's currently a 4,000 ante with 1,000 as the minimum bring-in.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
|
165,000
65,000
|
65,000 |
|
142,000
42,000
|
42,000 |
|
119,000
59,000
|
59,000 |
|
10,000
-57,000
|
-57,000 |
The most accomplished player at the final table, Aussie Daniel Levy who has more than $160,000 in live cashes, just went bust in fifth.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
![]() |
Busted |
There's currently a 2,000 ante with 500 minimum on the bring-in.
Seat | Player |
---|---|
1 | Javaid Majid |
2 | Patrick Knipple |
3 | Ciprian Tutu |
4 | Mark Mantis |
5 | Adam Johnson |
6 | Joe Imhoff |
7 | Daniel Levy |
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
|
100,000 | |
|
100,000 | |
![]() |
80,000 | |
|
67,000 | |
|
60,000 | |
![]() |
60,000
48,000
|
48,000 |
![]() |
31,000
19,000
|
19,000 |