2017 Seneca Fall Poker Classic

Main Event
Day: 1a
Event Info

2017 Seneca Fall Poker Classic

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
a8
Prize
$58,608
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,000
Prize Pool
$239,212
Entries
271
Level Info
Level
28
Blinds
30,000 / 60,000
Ante
5,000

The Seneca Fall Poker Classic Main Event Starts Now!

Get In Here
Get In Here

It's Fall in Western New York and with the leaves changing colors and temperatures dropping outside, the action always heats up inside the Niagara Falls Poker Room at the Seneca Niagara Casino & Resort.

Today marks the start of the $1,000 buy-in 2017 Seneca Fall Poker Classic Main Event and if it's action you're looking for, this is the place to be.

Play will begin at 11 a.m. on Friday with the first of two starting flights for the $200,000 guaranteed event. However, this one is played for more than just cash and a sweet trophy. For the second year in a row, CardPlayer magazine has come on as a title sponsor of the Seneca Fall Poker Classic, so the Main Event winner will grace the cover of CardPlayer, one of the most popular magazines in poker.

The event will kick off and play out entirely inside the poker room this year. Players will start with 30,000 in chips with plans to play through 15 40-minute levels on Day 1. The levels increase in length as the tournament moves forward.

Registration and unlimited reentry is available through the first ten levels and the 45-minute dinner break that will take place after ten levels are through. Plus, there's another starting flight Saturday.

This event always attracts some of the area's top poker players and several from beyond it. In fact, last year saw a whopping 300 entries create a guarantee-smashing $264,810 prize pool. West Seneca, New York's Dan Wagner went from perennial bridesmaid to bride, taking down the 2016 Seneca Fall Poker Classic Main Event.

The top earning pro booked his first big win after final table appearances in the 2016 Western New York Poker Challenge and 2015 Summer Slam Main Events.

With multiple satellite winners already in, and more running up until the last minute, there should be a big field for this one as well.

Of course, PokerNews will be on hand from beginning to end, so sit back and enjoy our coverage of the 2017 Seneca Fall Poker Classic Main Event. It starts now.