2016 RunGood Poker Series Horseshoe Council Bluffs

Main Event
Day: 2
Event Info

2016 RunGood Poker Series Horseshoe Council Bluffs

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
66
Prize
$40,320
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,000
Prize Pool
$144,000
Entries
144
Level Info
Level
25
Blinds
15,000 / 30,000
Ante
5,000

Mike Sortino Wins RunGood Poker Series Horseshoe Council Bluffs ($40,320)

Level 25 : 15,000/30,000, 5,000 ante
Mike Sortino
Mike Sortino

Mike Sortino is the first $1,100 Main Event champion on the RunGood Poker Series.

He earned his largest ever live cash — $40,320 — and will get his name etched on the RunGood Champions Cup after topping a 144-player field at RunGood Horseshoe Council Bluffs.

After two Day 1 flights that both hit hard stops with 13 players left, a total of 26 runners returned to the Horseshoe for Day 2 on Sunday morning. Fifteen of those players would be paid, and Matt Anderson, Clint Lilienthal, Terry Karn, and RunGood Pro and two-time RPS champ Ryan Tepen were among those falling before the money bubble burst.

Tepen's fellow RunGood Pro, Michael Sanders, dominated proceedings early on before fizzling in a big way with two tables left. Much of his stack went to Russell Licking, who finished Sanders on a {9-}{8-}{5-} flop with {q-}{9-} against {9-Diamonds}{7-Diamonds} when Sanders failed to improve. Licking busted Kipp Smith with {10-}{10-} against {a-}{k-} and took a dominating lead into the final table with almost 40 percent of the total chips.

Shortly after the final table began, Licking got the final RunGood Pro standing, Justin Gardenhire, shoving over his river bet on a completed board of {3-Diamonds}{4-Spades}{k-Hearts}{2-Clubs}{k-Spades}. Gardenhire couldn't get away from his hand and mucked when Licking showed {a-Spades}{5-Clubs} for a wheel.

While Licking continued to crush, former RunGood Council Bluffs champ Brandon Fish found his groove. After nursing a short stack for much of Day 2, he won a number of pots at the final table to move up the counts and threaten another victory. However, it wasn't to be, as he found himself short again after the elimination of Phil Mader in fourth.

Fish jammed 204,000 at 12,000/24,000/4,000 with {5-Spades}{4-Spades} and had Sortino wake up with aces behind him. Fish flopped one pair but found no further improvement on the {5-Hearts}{7-Spades}{j-Diamonds}{j-Hearts}{2-Clubs} board.

Moments later, Thomas Houston got his stack in with {q-}{8-} on a flop of {10-Diamonds}{q-Clubs}{9-Spades} and found himself trailing Sortino's {q-Hearts}{j-Hearts}. An {8-Diamonds} turn and {9-Diamonds} river meant Sortino had a straight, and for the first time in hours, someone had wrested the chip lead from Licking.

Licking and Sortino played a high-variance heads-up affair, with Sortino at one point at risk after overbet jamming with {k-Clubs}{j-Hearts} on a {9-Clubs}{q-Hearts}{8-Diamonds} and getting called by Licking, who had {q-Clubs}{j-Diamonds}. The river brought a {k-Hearts} to save Sortino's tournament life and he wouldn't relinquish the lead from there.

On the final hand, he raised to 105,000 when Licking limped in at 15,000/30,000/5,000. Licking called and the two saw a {10-Clubs}{6-Diamonds}{9-Diamonds} flop. Sortino checked and saw Licking move all in for around 700,000. That was exactly what Sortino wanted as he had {6-Spades}{6-Hearts} for a set. Licking's {a-Clubs}{5-Clubs} was in awful shape and a brick turn sent Sortino the pot and the tournament.

Tags: Mike Sortino