2018 US Poker Open

USPO #05 – $10,000 No Limit Hold'em
Day: 2
Event Info

2018 US Poker Open

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
aa
Prize
$187,600
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Entries
67
Level Info
Level
26
Blinds
40,000 / 80,000
Ante
80,000

Ben Tollerene Conquers the US Poker Open Event #5: $10k NLH for $187,600

Level 26 : 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
Ben Tollerene Wins Event #5 10K NLH
Ben Tollerene Wins Event #5 10K NLH

It has become a US Poker Open tradition to watch the eventual champions hid the skids on the final table only to rebound back into contention. High stakes legend Ben Tollerene followed the script today, coming back from fewer than five big blinds to emerge victorious in the Event #5: $10,000 No Limit Hold'em. Tollerene outlasted a 67-entry field on his way to the $187,600 first-place prize.

Tollerene, 30, has been widely acknowledged as one of the best online cash game grinders the virtual realm has ever seen. He's no stranger to live tournaments either but he only picks the tournaments with the large chunks of money at stake.

"I wouldn't come if the buy-ins weren't big," Tollerene said in his post-win interview.

US Poker Open - Event 5: $10,000 No Limit Hold'em results:

PlacePlayerCountryPrize (USD)
1stBen TollereneUnites States$187,600
2ndJake SchindlerUnites States$134,000
3rdRyan RiessUnites States$87,100
4thCary KatzUnites States$67,000
5thKristina HolstUnites States$53,600
6thRodger JohnsonUnites States$40,200
7thBen YuUnites States$33,500
8thBrent HanksUnites States$26,800
9thKeith TilstonUnites States$20,100
10thDavid PetersUnites States$20,100

Tollerene had a rough start to the tournament, using the maximum of three allowed bullets. His third attempt worked out fine and he found his way to the final table with the third biggest stack.

The six-handed finale included two players whose faces were perhaps not so familiar to the high roller fans; Rodger Johnson and Kristina Holst. Unfortunately for them, they were also the first two contenders to bow out. Johnson couldn't do much with his short stack, especially after Cary Katz, who came in fourth place, more than doubled his belongings in the two opening orbits.

Katz continued squeezing the most from his momentum and eliminated Johnson in sixth place. Johnson three-bet shoved for his last eight bigs out of the small blind only to run with ace-four into ace-queen of Katz.

Holst followed Johnson to the rail three hands later when she reshoved for 20 big blinds with pocket threes over Tollerene's button-raise. Tollerene called off with ace-king and won the race thanks to an ace on the turn.

Holst was the only female player to take to the felt, calling her run a great learning experience: "These guys are some of the best in the world. They play a lot more tournaments than I do," said Holst, who specializes in software engineering. "It's fun to come out and play against them." She collected $53,600 for her fifth-place finish, her largest poker reward so far.

The four remaining players all possessed over 50 big blinds, and while there were no eliminations for quite some time, the action carried on at a decent tempo. Jake Schindler hit a few boards to solidify his lead but he soon switched positions with Ryan Riess just before the first break of the day. They met in a preflop raising war in a button-against-small blind contest. Schindler was in position with king-nine and four-bet-folded to Riess' five-bet jam with tens.

Tollerene's stack then hit the wrong direction and a couple of losses saw him drop all the way down to fewer than five big blinds. He doubled with king-five against Katz' ace-seven and then bluffed Katz off a two pair hand with a river shove after missing a double gutshot. Tollerene worked his way back to contention and got the best of Katz shortly afterwards.

Katz busted when he rivered a runner-runner flush on a paired board, lead-shoving. Tollerene, however, also made the flush - a much higher one - and knocked the Poker Central founder out in fourth.

Riess was the shortest stack among the final three players and he slipped to a re-stealing stack of just under 20 big blinds. Then he open-shoved from the small blind with jack-seven suited, running into Tollerene's ace-nine. The flop gave Riess a gutshot for some extra outs to his live cards but the rest of the board bricked to send him packing.

That paved way for a heads-up match between Tollerene and Schindler with both players guarding well over 40 big blinds. Tollerene entered the battle with a slight chip lead but it seemed to be Schindler getting all the value. He was hitting nearly every board while Tollerene struggled, airballing with the most of his hands. Schindler quickly took over the chip lead and stretched it to more than a 2-1 chip-advantage.

Tollerene magnetized some momentum with a double up when he rivered top two pair on a board that included a smaller pair and filled a spade flush draw from the flop. Schindler bluff-shoved for about the size of the pot and Tollerene picked him off.

Schindler, however, kept connecting to the majority of the boards and Tollerene had no easy ride towards the first place. But in the crucial hand, it was Tollerene who found himself in a dream spot as both players flopped trip sevens. Tollerene held a stronger kicker and made a huge river-bet, leaving himself with only four big blinds. Schindler moved all-in and maybe hoped for a call when he saw Tollerene thinking for about 20 seconds. Tollerene eventually called, showing the winning had, much to Schindler's disappointment.

"I didn't think you'd shove if your kicker didn't play by a couple pits," Tollerene explained why he took some time for the decision which seemed to be a snap-call for Schindler.

"It's probably a good play then," smiled Schindler, taking the accidental slowroll with class. "Well, I didn't fold, but yeah," replied Tollerene, adding: "Sorry that I didn't stick it in right away."

That trips-over-trips double allowed Tollerene to seize a huge lead and he finished Schindler only two hands later, peeling pocket aces. Schindler flopped the top pair on a queen-high board and couldn't escape the lethal strike.

Tags: Ben TollereneBen YuBrent HanksCary KatzDavid PetersJacob SchindlerKristina HolstRodger JohnsonRyan Riess

Jake Schindler Eliminated in 2nd Place ($134,000)

Level 26 : 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
Jake Schindler
Jake Schindler

Hand #116: Jake Schindler limped in with {q-Clubs}{9-Clubs} and Ben Tollerene picked up the {a-Spades}{a-Clubs} in the big blind. He just checked his option and the flop came {q-Hearts}{7-Spades}{3-Hearts}. Schindler led out for 100,000 after flopping top pair and Tollerene raised to 300,000. Schindler just called and the {6-Diamonds} landed on the turn.

Schindler checked and Tollerene wasted little time before shoving all in, which was met by a quick call for the last 720,000 from Schindler. Tollerene would need to avoid a queen or nine to take the title and eliminated Schindler.

The dealer burned and turned the {2-Spades} on the river and Schindler was unable to come from behind. The two players shook hands after a well-played heads-up match and will surely be heading over to the poker room to join in Event #6: $25,000 No Limit Hold'em.

Player Chips Progress
Ben Tollerene us
Ben Tollerene
6,700,000 1,200,000
Jake Schindler us
Jake Schindler
WSOP 1X Winner
Busted

Tags: Ben TollereneJacob Schindler

Ryan Riess Eliminated in 3rd Place ($87,100)

Level 25 : 35,000/70,000, 70,000 ante
Ryan Riess
Ryan Riess

Hand #96: Ryan Riess shipped all in for 1,100,000 with {j-Spades}{7-Spades} in the small blind and was called by Ben Tollerene in the big blind with {a-Clubs}{9-Hearts}.

The flop came {5-Clubs}{4-Diamonds}{3-Hearts} and Riess picked up a gut-shot straight draw with his two live cards. The {k-Clubs} on the turn was of no help and the {5-Spades} paired the board on the river. Riess was eliminated in third place and will take home $87,100 in the process.

Player Chips Progress
Ben Tollerene us
Ben Tollerene
3,565,000 1,100,000
Ryan Riess us
Ryan Riess
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 1X Winner
WPT 1X Winner
Busted

Tags: Ben TollereneRyan Riess

Cary Katz Eliminated in 4th Place ($67,000)

Level 24 : 30,000/60,000, 60,000 ante
Cary Katz
Cary Katz

Hand #80: Ben Tollerene opened to 125,000 in the cutoff with {k-Diamonds}{5-Diamonds} and Cary Katz defended with the suited {4-Diamonds}{3-Diamonds}. The flop came {10-Spades}{8-Diamonds}{7-Spades} and both players checked to the {2-Diamonds} on the turn.

Katz led out for 200,000 after picking up a flush draw, but Tollerene wasn't going anywhere with the larger flush draw. The river brought the {7-Diamonds}, completing the flush for both players. Katz shipped all in and was snap-called by Tollerene. Katz thought he hit the gin card on the river but unfortunately, he was the one to hit the rail in fourth place.

Player Chips Progress
Ben Tollerene us
Ben Tollerene
2,705,000 1,305,000
Cary Katz us
Cary Katz
Busted

Tags: Ben TollereneCary Katz

Kristina Holst Eliminated in 5th Place ($53,600)

Level 19 : 10,000/25,000, 25,000 ante
Kristina Holst
Kristina Holst

Hand #16: Cary Katz limped in from the small blind with {5-Spades}{4-Spades} and Ben Tollerene checked his {Q-Diamonds}{8-Spades}. They checked the {K-Spades}{9-Clubs}{Q-Clubs} flop as well as the {7-Clubs} turn before Katz led out 25,000 on the {2-Spades} river, firing a last-minute bluff. Tollerene, however, raised to 80,000 to force a fold from Katz.

Hand #17: Katz found spades again, raising the button to 50,000 with {Q-Spades}{4-Spades}. He wouldn't have any success as Tollerene three-bet out of the small blind, making it 225,000 with {K-Clubs}{Q-Diamonds}.

Hand #18: Tollerene raised to 60,000 from the button and Kristina Holst looked down at a small pair in the small blind. She shoved for 495,000 and Tollerene double-checked his hand before calling with a monster.

Holst: {3-Spades}{3-Diamonds}
Tollerene: {A-Spades}{K-Diamonds}

Unfortunately for Holst, the {J-Hearts}{9-Diamonds}{5-Hearts}{A-Diamonds}{9-Hearts} board hit Tollerene's Big Slick on the turn and that was the end for the lone female player in the tournament. Holst collected $53,600 for the fifth place, the biggest prize of her career.

Player Chips Progress
Ben Tollerene us
Ben Tollerene
2,120,000 695,000
Kristina Holst us
Kristina Holst
Busted

Tags: Ben TollereneCary KatzKristina Holst

Rodger Johnson Eliminated in 6th Place ($40,200)

Level 19 : 10,000/25,000, 25,000 ante
Rodger Johnson
Rodger Johnson

Hand #15: Jake Schindler opened to 60,000 from the cutoff with {10-Clubs}{9-Diamonds} and Rodger Johnson found a spot to get involved holding {a-Clubs}{4-Clubs}. Johnson shipped all in for 200,000 but Cary Katz woke up in the big blind with {a-Spades}{q-Diamonds}. Katz asked for a count and then made the call while Schindler quickly folded.

The flop came {j-Diamonds}{7-Spades}{2-Clubs} and Johnson would need some help in order to stay alive. The turn brought the {6-Hearts} and Johnson was left drawing to a four. The {k-Clubs} landed on the river and Johnson became the first player eliminated at the final table.

Player Chips Progress
Cary Katz us
Cary Katz
1,330,000 260,000
Rodger Johnson us
Rodger Johnson
Busted

Tags: Cary KatzJacob SchindlerRodger Johnson

Stacked Final Table of Event #5: $10,000 No Limit Hold'em Begins at 12:00 PM

2018 US Poker Open
2018 US Poker Open

Welcome back to the final day of Event #5: $10,000 No Limit Hold'em of the inaugural US Poker Open. After an 11 hour grind on Day 1, the final six players were finalized and what a lineup we have for you today.

Jake Schindler, a regular on the high-stakes tournament scene, comes into the day as the overwhelming chip leader. Schindler bagged an impressive 2,380,000 chips as he enters his second final table of the series. After finishing in fourth place in Event #3, the American poker pro will look to make better on his second attempt.

Following him is none other than 2013 WSOP Main Event champion, Ryan Riess with 1,375,000. Riess had a slow start to the series, failing to cash in the first two hold'em events, but looks to be in fine form heading into today. Ben Tollerene rounds out the top three with 1,265,000 chips and, like Schindler, is mostly known for competing in the nosebleed tournaments. Tollerene had a rough start to the tournament, finding himself in for the maximum amount of entries, but turned things around in the last few levels of the day.

Not only is the final table packed with highly-skilled players, but there are some unknowns as well. Everyone knows Cary Katz, founder of Poker Central, who comes into the day with 490,000 chips, but how will he match up against some of the world-class players. Well, Katz is coming off a win in the $100,000 Super High Roller at the 2018 PCA for just under $1.5 million so there should be no issue there.

Rodger Johnson, the short stack at the table with just 350,000, is a Vegas locale who can be mostly found playing tournaments in the $1,000 buy-in range. However, Johnson took a shot to play with some of the high rollers this week and it appears to be paying off as he has demonstrated all of the skills needed to crack the top six.

The final question mark would be the lone female to enter the tournament, Kristina Holst. When the action got underway on Day 1, Holst was ready to duke it out with her male counterparts and she showed no fear whatsoever. Holst has proven she is not shy to three-bet, four-bet, and put her opponents to the test with the best of them. Over the course of her career, the native of California has taken some shots at the $5,000 and $10,000 tournament range but has yet to find much success with her largest cash being around $44,000. Maybe this is the moment Holst has been waiting for.

Final Table Seating

SeatPlayerChips
1Ben Tollerene1,265,000
2Kristina Holst840,000
3Jake Schindler2,380,000
4Ryan Riess1,375,000
5Rodger Johnson350,000
6Cary Katz490,000

The action is set to get begin at 12:00 P.M. PST inside the Aria Resort and Casino. There will be 17 minutes remaining in level 18 with the blinds at 10,000/20,000 and a 20,000 big blind ante. The players will receive a fresh set of three 60-second time extensions at the start of play. The final six players are all guaranteed to at least pocket $40,200 but will be in search of the top prize of $187,600. Here is a look at the payouts thus far:

Prize Payouts

PlacePlayerPrize (USD)
1st $187,600
2nd $134,000
3rd $87,100
4th $67,000
5th $53,600
6th $40,200
7thBen Yu$33,500
8thBrent Hanks$26,800
9thKeith Tilston$20,100
10thDavid Peters$20,100

Although the winner won't have much impact on the overall standings, they will be able to set themselves up for a big push down the final stretch. With just three tournaments remaining to be played, there is still a lot of money up for grabs. Everyone is currently chasing money leader, Stephen Chidwick, who has racked up over $810,000 in the first half of the series. Chidwick has made three final tables and won two of the opening $25,000 events. Here is a look at the leaderboard.

If you are looking to keep an eye on the final table, you can catch all of the action on a 30-minute delay on PokerGO. The live-stream will be taking place throughout the entire final table with the hole cards being shown. The action will begin at 1:00 P.M. PST and continue until a winner is crowned.

You can also follow along with the PokerNews live reporting team as we will be bringing you hand-for-hand coverage from start to finish.

Tags: Ben TollereneCary KatzJacob SchindlerKristina HolstRodger JohnsonRyan RiessStephen Chidwick