$1,650 No-Limit Hold’em Purple Chip Bounty Level 9: 500/1,000 with a 1,000 BB ante Players Remaining: 51 of 153
Level 9 is underway, which closed registration on the $1,650 no-limit hold’em purple chip bounty. There are 153 entries in the field, which generated a prize pool of $153,000 and another $76,500 up for grabs in bounties.
The top 20 spots will finish in the money. A min-cash is worth $2,142 and the winner will take home $41,120 when play wraps up tomorrow.
Day 2 of the RRPO Championship is moving right along and we have a popular game for those who missed out. Event 14 is a $1,650 Purple Chip Bounty event with a $100,000 guaranteed prize pools and a $500 cash casino chip waiting for those who knock someone out.
They’ll start with 20,000 stacks out front and the first eight levels will last 30 minutes. Late registration and unlimited re-entries are available until the start of Level 9 and levels will increase to 40 minutes for the duration. They will continue through the grind it out and knock players out until Day 1 comes to an end after Level 17. Those still with chips will return tomorrow at 2pm.
$100,000 Guaranteed Prize Pool
Players begin with 20,000 in chips
Single ante will be paid from the big blind for the entire table
Levels 1-8 last 30 minutes; Levels 9+ last 40 minutes
Late registration/re-entry available until start of Level 9
Day 1 will end after Level 17 or Tournament Director discretion
2018 Seminole Hard Rock Poker Open Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Hollywood, Florida Event #14 $50,000 Super High Roller $1,000,000 Guarantee Entries: 25 Prize Pool: $1,225,000 August 8-9, 2018
The Seminole Hard Rock Poker Open Super High Roller is always a highlight event on the schedule and the $50,000 buy-in tournament did not disappoint. We had 25 entries take a shot and Elio Fox outlasted them all to win the title for $500,000 while extending his summer hot streak.
The Super High Roller had a $1,000,000 guaranteed prize pool and the players piled it up to $1,225,000 by the time registration closed. They battled it out across two tables for most of the tournament, made it down to the final table late on Day 1, and three players returned for Day 2 to play it out for the title.
But making the final table did not lock up any money with five spots being paid. High Roller regular Bryn Kenney was the unfortunate bubble player when he ran pocket nines into the queens of Giuseppe Iadisernia.
Chris Hunichen was going to play this tournament one way or another and he put himself in at a discounted cost. We hosted a Super High Roller satellite on Tuesday and he won his way into the tournament along with Ian O’Hara. Hunichen rode that satellite seat to a fifth-place finish for $100,000.
Ali Imsirovic was the chip leader for most of the latter parts of Day 1 but ran into a tough spot. The former Seminole Hard Rock Poker Showdown trophy winner went out in fourth place for his third payout of the year over $100,000.
Day 1 then came to a close with only three players remaining. Businessman and WSOP Europe Super High Roller champ Dan Shak had the lead coming back with Fox only one small blind behind. Seminole Hard Rock regular Iadisernia rounded out the last three and he was the shortest.
Iadisernia went out early on Day 2 when he could not pair his live cards and the heads-up match for the title did not last long.
Fox took the lead early and knocked Shak out in second place when his turned Broadway straight bested Shak’s two pair. Shak earned $305,000 for two days of work at the table while Fox walked away with $500,000 plus the big SHRPO Super High Roller trophy.
This result continues a great summer for Fox with four tournament wins since the start of the WSOP. He kicked things off by winning his second WSOP bracelet in the second tournament of the series and followed that up by winning the Aria $10K, the Aria $25K High Roller, and the WPT Gardens $25K Six-Max High Roller.
The biggest score for Fox this summer wasn’t even a win; he finished second to Nick Petrangelo in the $100,000 WSOP High Roller for nearly $1.8 million. Now he can add another trophy to his mantle and another $500,000 to his bankroll.
Congratulations to Elio and a special thanks to all of our Super High Roller players. It was a well-played, talented field and worthy of the big buy-in.
Super High Roller results:
1st: Elio Fox – $500,000 2nd: Dan Shak – $305,000 3rd: Giuseppe Iadisernia – $190,000 4th: Ali Imsirovic – $130,000 5th: Chris Hunichen – $100,000
$50,000 Super High Roller $1,000,000 Guaranteed | Structure | Payouts Level 17: 10,000/20,000 with a 20,000 ante
The heads-up battle did not last long. Elio Fox took the lead and then the title in less than fifteen minutes.
Fox was on the button and the board was reading . Shak checked, Fox bet 80,000 and Shak announced all in.
He had 825,000 and Fox quickly called after one quick look at his cards to confirm.
Fox: Shak:
Fox was far ahead with the turned Broadway straight and Shak was looking for four outs. The river could not upgrade his two pair to a boat and the match was over.
Shak earned $305,000 for his runner-up finish and Fox walked to the cage to pick up his $500,000 first place prize. This is the fifth time Fox earned a six-digit payout in the last month including a WSOP High Roller bracelet.
$50,000 Super High Roller $1,000,000 Guaranteed | Structure | Payouts Level 16: 10,000/15,000 with a 15,000 ante Players Remaining: 2 of 25
Heads-up play is underway for the Super High Roller with Dan Shak continuing to lead. They will play out Level 16 and the rest will be 30-minutes long until we have a winner.
Seat 1: Dan Shak – 1,350,000 (90 bb) Seat 3: Elio Fox – 1,150,000 (77 bb)
$50,000 Super High Roller $1,000,000 Guaranteed | Structure | Payouts Level 16: 10,000/15,000 with a 15,000 ante Players Remaining: 2 of 25
Giuseppe Iadisernia was in no hurry to mess with the two bigger stacks and picked his spots trying to move his stack higher. His stack was down to 265,000 when Dan Shak opened from the small blind for a barrel of 25k chips, more than enough to cover Iadisernia in the big blind.
He peeked at his cards and called at risk.
Shak: Iadisernia:
Iadisernia had two live cards but blanked the runout to exit the Super High Roller in third place for $190,000.
Dan Shak – 1,350,000 (90 bb) Giuseppe Iadisernia – Eliminated in 3rd place ($190,000)
$50,000 Super High Roller $1,000,000 Guaranteed | Structure | Payouts Level 16: 10,000/15,000 with a 15,000 ante Players Remaining: 3 of 25
There’s been little action over the first 30 minutes of the restart. Dan Shak extended his lead a bit, Giuseppe Iadisernia is picking his spots carefully, and Elio Fox is driving the action early.
Seat 1: Dan Shak – 1,120,000 (75 bb) Seat 2: Giuseppe Iadisernia – 485,000 (32 bb) Seat 3: Elio Fox – 895,000 (60 bb)
$50,000 Super High Roller $1,000,000 Guaranteed | Structure | Payouts Level 16: 10,000/15,000 with a 15,000 ante Players Remaining: 3 of 25
Day 2 of the Super High Roller is unlike any other Day 2 of the series. The tournament as a whole was one where we knew every player in the field and there are only three players left with a chance at the title.
There were 25 entries in the $50,000 buy-in game and Giuseppe Iadisernia was one of the last ones in. He entered during the dinner break for registration closed (only David Peters entered later) and he’s still here, guaranteed at least $190,000 on his one bullet.
WSOP Europe Super High Roller champ Dan Shak lead the three returning players with two-time WSOP champ Elio Fox only a small blind behind.
Ali Imsirovic and Chris Hunichen already cashed in the Super High Roller, the latter in the game courtesy of a satellite win. But there’s still $995,000 up for grabs between the last three players so this could be a long day for them.
Cards go back in the air at 2pm with hour-long levels and deep stacks.
Seat 1. Dan Shak – 975,000 (65 bb) Seat 2. Giuseppe Iadisernia – 560,000 (37 bb) Seat 3. Elio Fox – 965,000 (64 bb)