Maxximizing His Profit: Coleman Tops 1,164 to Win 2015 River Poker Series for $775,000

Maxx Coleman

Maxx Coleman has done it, winning the 2015 River Poker Series $2,500 Main Event! Following 70 hands of final table action, Coleman finished atop the remaining 10 competitors to earn a career best $775,000 first-place prize and the right to be called champion.

It was action-packed day of poker at WinStar World Casino, with the cards hitting the air at 12 p.m. local time. Just over three hours after the first shuffle, Coleman defeated Joseph Skinner in second place and excitedly etched his place in poker history. Coleman won the event following a three-way deal with Skinner (2nd - $344,934) and Jake Haller (3rd - $344,934), and he nearly tripled his largest live cash.

Final Table Results

PlacePlayerHometownPrize
1Maxx ColemanDerby, KS$775,000*
2Joseph SkinnerLubbock, TX$344,934*
3Jake HallerMustang, OK$344,934*
4Andy AndrejevicMiami, FL$134,238
5Barry HutterHollywood, FL$108,161
6Lonny HardcastleRockwall, TX$93,022
7Jose MontesBronx, NY$79,049
8Douglas ClaybrookVidor, TX$58,576
9Numit AgrawalWest Lafayette, IN$44,186

*Denotes a three-way deal.

The fireworks didn't wait long before they exploded, with Patana Pradith falling in 10th place within the first few hands of action to set the official final table of nine. His elimination allowed severe short stack Numit Agrawal to ladder up one pay spot and earn an additional $15,000 in prize money before he went on on Hand #8 of the official final table.

From there, Douglas Claybrook went out eighth, and Jose Montes hit the rail in seventh. For Montes, the $79,049 in prize money he earned pushed him to the just about the $700,000 mark for yearly earnings and provided another big result in 2015 for the man from Bronx, New York.

Then, with six players remaining, it was time for Coleman to really take over. On Hand #48, he won a big hand against Lonny Hardcastle and moved to nearly a 2-1 chip lead over anyone else at the table. Hardcastle then busted in sixth place, and that allowed for the five remaining players to earn a six-figure payday. After that, Barry Hutter fell in fifth place, and then Andy Andrejevic got unlucky to hit the rail in fourth.

It was Andrejevic's elimination that truly allowed Coleman to grab the tournament by the horns, as the pot vaulted him up over 20 million in chips with 29.1 million in play. It happened on Hand #62 when Andrejevic raised to 235,000 on the button with the blinds at 50,000/100,000/15,000. Coleman reraised to 550,000 from the small blind, and then Andrejevic made it 1.3 million to go. Coleman jammed, for approximately 4.2 million, effectively, and Andrejevic called with the AQ. Coleman had a dominated A10, but came from behind to win on the J10287 board.

With three players remaining, and Coleman having a huge lead over Skinner and Haller, the three opted to strike a deal that gave the lion's share of the prize pool to Coleman. Skinner and Haller chopped up the remaining money for nearly $350,000 each, and that was well over what second place was originally planned to receive. Then, the three players accelerated the blinds to 250,000/500,000 with a 50,000 ante and played to a winner.

Just five hands after the deal, Haller was eliminated by Coleman in third when his 85 couldn't win against AxQx. Three hands after that, Skinner lost with the Q7 to Coleman's J4 on the final hand. With that, the victory was Coleman's and he wrapped the shiny gold bracelet around his wrist and smiled for the cameras.

A regular cash-game player, Coleman adds this victory to a short, but impressive résumé of tournament results and now boasts over $1.2 million in earnings. Prior to this score, his biggest cash was in 2013 when Coleman took 21st in the World Series of Poker Main Event for $285,408. This past summer, Coleman finished in the money in five WSOP events, with his best finish there being a 10th-place result in the $5,000 Six-Max No-Limit Hold'em event for $42,032.

Other notables to cash in this event were Clint Tolbert (110th - $4,000), Maria Ho (97th - $4,500), Joe Kuether (77th - $5,000), James Mordue (56th - $6,000), Ray Henson (41st - $7,000), Bronson Tucker (33rd - $8,000), Cord Garcia (22nd - $12,000), Olivier Busquet (13th - $20,000), and Matt Lapossie (11th - $30,000).

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