Dan O’Brien Denies Loren Klein Third RIU Reno Main Event Title

Dan O'Brien

The eighth edition of Run It Up Reno ended Monday night with the conclusion of the $600 buy-in Main Event, a tournament that attracted 629 runners. Nine players returned to the Peppermill Casino to battle it out on the live-streamed final table, and it was poker pro Dan O’Brien denying Loren Klein a third RIU Main Event title to capture a $46,681 first-place prize.

The win brought O’Brien’s lifetime earnings up over $3.3 million and, in a sense, symbolizes his return to tournament poker after laying relatively low in 2018. Surprisingly, it marked just his third documented win and is arguably the most prestigious.

"It’s really nice to put in all that work and see immediate results."

“It feels really good to win, it really does. It was a lot of fun,” O’Brien said. “I ran really well the entire tournament obviously. I tried to focus on playing well and really not worrying about anything else.”

He continued: “I really didn’t play much in 2018, I was working on some other things. In the fall I decided to actually put some work in. It’s really nice to put in all that work and see immediate results even though it’s still a lot of luck to get here.”

As for Klein, he has more than $2.7 million in lifetime earnings. In addition to being a two-time RIU Reno Main Event champ – he won both the RIU Reno III and V – he is also a three-time World Series of Poker bracelet winner after taking down last summer’s $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship for $1,018,336, the 2017 WSOP Event #41: $1,500 PLO for $231,483, and the 2016 WSOP Event #45: $1,500 Mixed NLH/PLO for $241,427. He’s also finished runner up in two other WSOP tournaments for $552,713 and $195,147 respectively.

“He’s incredible. He has a really high success rate in tournaments, and generally, he doesn’t play that many,” O’Brien said of his heads-up foe. “He’s definitely a tough opponent. I like him as a person but I was certainly rooting against him.”

Final Table Results

PlacePlayerPrize
1Dan O’Brien$46,681
2Loren Klein$30,950
3Austin Roberts$22,180
4Tim Tucker$17,120
5Vito Distefano$13,920
6Julio Uribe$11,640
7Kevin Gerhart$9,825
8Chris Gallagher$8,245
9Robert Valdez$6,750

The short-stacked Robert Valdez bowed out right at the start of the final table – the result of losing a flip with pocket nines to Vito Distefano’s ace-jack – but then it took several hours for the next player to fall. It happened when Chris Gallagher three-bet jammed king-seven suited and received a call from Klein, who had ace-ten. Gallagher paired his seven on the flop but a river ten sent him packing in eighth place.

Kevin Gerhart was next to go losing a flip with king-six to Klein’s pocket fours, and then Julio Uribe followed him out the door in sixth place running ace-deuce suited into O’Brien’s aces. Distefano, who began the final table as chip leader, dwindled before getting all in with queen-jack and failing to get there against Klein’s ace-eight to exit in fifth place.

Loren Klein
Loren Klein

Not long after, RIU Reno IV champ Tim Tucker hit the rail when his pocket jacks were cracked by Klein’s queen-jack after a queen spiked on the flop. The elimination of Austin Roberts in third place – his queen-ten suited couldn’t overcome O’Brien’s ace-queen – saw the eventual champ take a small chip lead into heads-up play against Klein.

The two battled back and forth for quite some time and swapped the chip lead on several occasions. Eventually, a big hand played out that saw Klein flop two pair and O'Brien turn a bigger two pair. The latter doubled and a couple of hands later it was all over.

Andy Pokrivnak Captures First RIU Reno Title

Andy Pokrivnak
Andy Pokrivnak

Andy Pokrivnak is a regular at Run It Up Reno, but one thing that escaped him during early visits was a RIU title. That changed on Sunday night when he topped an 83-entry field to win the $340 buy-in, $20K GTD Short Deck Championship.

The $24,153 prize pool was paid out to the top 13 players including Donnie McCormick (13th - $600), Frank Lagodich (10th - $960), Nathan Manuel (6th - $1,665), and Jason Pease (3rd - $2,840).

In the end, the title came down to Pokrivnak and Mark Mazza, with the former ultimately getting the monkey off his back to capture the title and $5,083 first-place prize.

Final Table Results

PlacePlayerHometownPrize
1Andy PokrivnakOrlando, FL$5,083
2Mark MazzaLos Angeles, CA$3,675
3Jason PeaseLa Porte, IN$2,840
4Paul HolderCrested Butte, CO$2,320
5Frank CarterDenham Springs, LA$1,950
6Nathan ManuelBrooklyn, NY$1,665
7Christopher BrandtSparks, NV$1,415
8Marty GorencReno, NV$1,185

Joe Brindle Captures Second Title of RIU Reno VIII

Joe Brindle
Joe Brindle captured his second title of the series.

Earlier in the series, the UK’s Joe Brindle won the $125 6-Max Triple Stud for $1,627. On Sunday night, he also navigated an 83-entry field to win the $125 Taiwanese Poker Double Board tournament for $2,460 and his second victory of the series.

Not only did he become the only two-time winner at the RIU Reno VIII, but he also became an overall three-time champ to tie him in second place with Jason Daniele and Andrew Cha for most titles in RIU Reno history (Jimmy Cappucci holds the record with six wins).

Among those to cash the Taiwanese tournament were Jesse Capps (17th - $200), Stanley Wang (10th - $250), Steven Filipovic (7th - $410), DJ Fenton (4th - $845), Bill Butcher (3rd - $1,100), and Valerie Perea (2nd - $1,580).

Final Table Results

PlacePlayerHometownPrize
1Joe BrindleLondon, England$2,460
2Valerie PereaReno, NV$1,580
3William ButcherAtlanta, GA$1,100
4Dale FentonYuba City, CA$845
5Gail SarettHuntersville, NC$675
6Colton BlombergTempe, AZ$540
7Steven FilipovicCambridge, ON$410
8Vincent NewlandLas Vegas, NV$320

The RIU Reno VIII is in the books, but it’s never too soon to look ahead to the next edition. The exact schedule will be released in the future, but PokerNews can confirm that the RIU IX will take place at the Peppermill Casino from October 11-21, 2019.

Here’s a look at those who won titles at the RIU Reno VIII:

TournamentEntriesPrize PoolWinnerPrize
$440 Mini Main Event285$110,580John Boriolo$26,073
$125 Short Deck Hold’em113$10,961Sherman Mah$3,153
$125 6-Max NLO891$8,827Sarah Sherman$2,000
$235 6-Max H.O.R.S.E.94$20,000Adam Owen$5,955
$125 Superstack Supersonic140$13,580Patrick Tardif$3,030
$235 Pro Bounty174$30,500 + $4,500 BountiesJim Petzing$7,930
$125 NL Bomb Pot124$12,028John Lewis$2,440
$235 Black Chip Bounty236$22,184 + $23,600Donnie McCormick$5,060
$125 All In or Fold149$15,000Kyle Anderson$3,185
$235 8 Game Championship109$21,146Nicholas Kiley$5,220
$125 Win the Button175$16,975Steven Filipovic$4,125
$125 N.O.R.S.E.82$7,954Jimmy Cappucci$2,219
$1,100 Thursday Thrilla176$82,720 + $88,000Adin Cota$20,400
$125 6-Max Triple Stud66$6,402Joe Brindle$1,627
$125 2, 3, 4, 5 Mix95$9,215Patrick Truong$2,215
$340 Short Deck Championship83$24,153Andy Pokrivnak$5,082
$125 Taiwanese Poker Double Board83$10,000Joe Brindle$2,460
$600 Main Event629$329,471Dan O’Brien$46,681
$235 NLH Progressive Bounty131$12,314+$13,100 bountiesTimothy “VaderNader” Guilford$2,314
$125 NLH Turbo Deepstack99$9,603Hank Lin$2,653
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