2019 Heartland Poker Tour The Meadows

Main Event
Day: 1b
Event Info

2019 Heartland Poker Tour The Meadows

Event Info
Buy-in
$1,100
Prize Pool
$334,650
Entries
345
Players Left
1
Average Chip Stack
10,350,000
Total Chips
10,350,000
Next Payout
Place 2
$48,215
Level Info
Level
31
Blinds
80,000 / 160,000
Ante
160,000

Stevens Bags Slight Lead Over Wagner on Day 1b of HPT The Meadows

Level 15 : 2,000/4,000, 4,000 ante
Jimmy Stevens
Jimmy Stevens

Chips are in the bags for Day 1b of HPT The Meadows $1,100 Main Event, and local player Jimmy Stevens managed to edge out Dan Wagner for the chip lead when the dust settled and 20 players headed for the exits with hopes of running it up on Sunday.

Stevens finished with 367,000 and Wagner 343,000, though neither player quite matched the 387,500 notched by Day 1a leader Jason Pickup.

Ninety-five entries were logged on the second of three starting days, a solid bump over the 53 that populated the lower floor of The Meadows on Day 1a.

Another notable bagging was WSOP bracelet winner Joe Ebanks. He finished with a decent stack of 185,000, which ranked fifth. Sporting over $3.2 million in cashes, Ebanks certainly appears well-positioned to compete for the biggest chunk of the $250,000 guaranteed prize pool.

Chris Bibb (172,500), Ricky Ali (149,000), Dean Schultz (105,000) and Henry Zou (69,000) also made it through to Sunday's Day 2.

Schultz completed a remarkable comeback to get in the bag. He shoved all in with ace-queen when he had around 20 blinds at 1,200/2,400/2,400. He ran into the kings held by Bill Reilly and grabbed his backpack after it looked like he was out the door when the board bricked out. When stacks were counted down though, he had 800 left.

Despite being under a single small blind, Schultz managed to pull the "chip and a chair" act. A few hands later, he had almost 10,000 again and picked up pocket jacks. He got his stack in three ways and survived, finding himself with 15 big blinds and a fighting chance on which he made good.

A few more notables showed up on Day 1b but most found themselves dry on chips. Nick Pupillo, Adam Friedman, Andy Rubinberg, Iverson Cotton Snuffer, Andy Spears and DJ MacKinnon were among the busted and all will still have one last shot on Saturday's Day 1c.

Day 1c commences at noon local time with another 15 levels on tap. Come back to PokerNews for more live updates at that time.

Another Tough Day for Campbell

Level 13 : 1,200/2,400, 2,400 ante
Andrew Campbell
Andrew Campbell

Andrew Campbell's chips were being pushed to another player and we inquired as to how it happened. He said he got it in with queens but lost against ace-king to end his Day 1b hopes. One day after he busted late with the nut flush draw against an inferior flush draw, it hasn't been the best of times for Campbell at The Meadows after driving in from Chicago.

Still, he said he plans to fire Day 1c on Saturday.

Player Chips Progress
Andrew Campbell us
Andrew Campbell
Busted

Tags: Andrew Campbell

Bibb Clicks Call, Doubles

Level 10 : 600/1,200, 1,200 ante
HPT Meadows Chips
HPT Meadows Chips

Rich Finberg raised in late position and got action from both blinds. On the {q-Hearts}{8-Hearts}{4-Hearts} flop, action checked to Finberg and he put in a sizable bet of 8,500. Small blind Chris Bibb continued and it was heads up to the {7-Clubs} turn. Bibb checked and Finberg piled in 40,400.

Bibb looked perplexed and counter his stack with a sigh. Finally, after about a minute he shrugged and announced he was all in for "about 80,000." Finberg called in short order and tabled {k-Hearts}{k-Clubs} for an overpair and flush draw. He would need to improve as Bibb held {q-Diamonds}{q-Clubs} for top set.

The river was a {4-Diamonds} and Bibb pumped his fist. He collected 79,200.

Player Chips Progress
Chris Bibb us
Chris Bibb
185,000 148,000
Rich Finberg us
Rich Finberg
60,000 -50,000

Tags: Chris BibbRich Finberg

Day 1b Registration Closes

Level 10 : 600/1,200, 1,200 ante
HPT The Meadows
HPT The Meadows

The cards are back in the air and action is back under way at HPT The Meadows Day 1b.

With the beginning of Level 10, the field is now locked in with the screen reading 95 entries. Added to Day 1a, that means the total thus far is 148, leaving the tournament a little more than 100 short of meeting the $250,000 guarantee.

Of those 95 entries, roughly 60 remain, and they'll play out six more levels before bagging for the night.

Use the PokerNews MyStack App To Keep Friends and Family Up-To-Date

Level 7 : 300/600, 600 ante
MyStack
MyStack

PokerNews has activated the MyStack App for this event, allowing you to directly adjust your chip counts in our live reporting blog using your iPhone or Android phone.

You can download the app for iPhone or Android now to get started.

Then, create a new PokerNews account or update your current one to start updating your status immediately. Your followers can see all the live action that you're involved in.

Click here to download the My Stack app for iPhone, or click here to download the My Stack app for Android.

Rubinberg Wins Blind-Versus-Blind Battle Before Break

Level 3 : 100/300, 0 ante
Andy Rubinberg
Andy Rubinberg

In the last hand of the third level with 5,500 in the pot, Andy Rubinberg was heads up in the small blind against the player in the big blind. The flop came {q-Clubs}{8-Clubs}{2-Clubs} and Rubinberg bet 2,500. His opponent called, bringing the {2-Diamonds} turn. Rubinberg checked, and his opponent bet 4,200. Rubinberg called, and the river came a {2-Spades}, bringing three of a kind to the board. Rubinberg shoved for around a pot sized bet, and his opponent instantly mucked his {a-Clubs}{k-Clubs} face up, exclaiming that it was the worst possible river he could have seen.

The two talked about the hand for another few seconds, and Rubinberg revealed that the river actually helped his opponent. He told him he had {q-}{q-} and had turned the full house.

Player Chips Progress
Andy Rubinberg us
Andy Rubinberg
34,000 4,000

Tags: Andy Rubinberg

Rubinberg Firing Day 1b

Level 1 : 100/100, 0 ante
Andy Rubinberg, pictured at a different event.
Andy Rubinberg, pictured at a different event.

It's still early in Day 1b of HPT The Meadows, but the field already appears certain to surpass Thursday's lukewarm turnout, as there are already over 40 players sitting in.

One of those is Andy Rubinberg, a player from the Chicago area who has been one of the more successful players in mid-major events around the Midwest.

Rubinberg has been particularly successful in the MSPT, where he's booked two wins and a runner-up finish for about $360,000 in prize money. He also won the WSOP Warm-Up Main Event at Horseshoe Hammond in 2016 for over $50,000. On the HPT, he finished third in the season-ending HPT Championship back in 2008 for $31,849.

In total, Rubinberg has over $650,000 in cashes and will certainly be a player to watch here at HPT The Meadows.

Player Chips Progress
Andy Rubinberg us
Andy Rubinberg
30,000

Tags: Andy Rubinberg

Welcome to Day 1b of the HPT The Meadows Main Event

HPT The Meadows
HPT The Meadows

Season XV of the Heartland Poker Tour (HPT) resumes today with the second of three initial flights to the $1,100 buy-in Main Event Day 1b flight at The Meadows Casino just south of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Yesterday’s Day 1a flight drew only 53 players for this $250,000 guarantee tournament, with eight advancing to Day 2 after a 12-hour day. Upon completion of play, Jason Pickup found himself with a massive chip lead. He eliminated two players at the end of the night and found himself with 387,500 chips to take with him into Sunday’s Day 2, well clear of the next two closest stacks from Chuck Scaglione (252,000) and Doug Krency (234,500).

Players will receive 30,000 in chips and play 15 levels of 40 minutes each. Unlimited reentries are available until the end of the dinner break after Level 9.

Today’s flight is the second of three. Players who do not survive today’s heat will have the option to return tomorrow for the last flight of the tournament. All players who advance will return for Day 2 action at 11 a.m. on Sunday. Players will play down to the final table, which will then be live streamed on Monday.

Cards are in the air at noon local time. The PokerNews live reporting team will be on the floor bringing you updates on the action through the duration of the tournament.