2019 US Poker Open

USPO #9 - $50,000 NLH
Day: 2
Event Info

2019 US Poker Open

Final Results
Winner
Koray Aldemir
Winning Hand
kq
Prize
$738,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$25,000
Entries
41
Level Info
Level
24
Blinds
60,000 / 120,000
Ante
120,000

Koray Aldemir Wins 2019 USPO Event #9: $50K NLH for $738K; Sean Winter Takes Overall Points Lead

Level 24 : 60,000/120,000, 120,000 ante
Koray Aldemir - Champion
Koray Aldemir - Champion

One week ago, Koray Aldemir nearly won a 2019 U.S. Poker Open tournament but came up one spot short when he finished runner-up to Lauren Roberts in Event #3: $10,000 NLH for $159,250. He found some redemption in the penultimate event of the series by topping a 41-entry field to win Event #9: $50,000 NLH for $738,000.

It was also a bit of redemption from last September’s Poker Masters when he finished runner-up to Ali Imsirovic in Event #6: $50,000 NLH. Aldemir earned $517,000 in that event.

“This feels great, honestly. I had a lot of second and third finishes in the last year and winning one feels great," Aldemir said after his win. “Playing these high rollers is the best thing in poker for me. I have a lot of fun playing these things. Sometimes I take a break from poker, but when I do play I just love competing with the best.”

In other news, Sean Winter had 440 points on the 2019 USPO leaderboard entering the Event #9: $50,000 NLH final table. Thanks to a third-place finish, he earned 100 points to tie Stephen Chidwick on top with 540 points. However, Winter has cashed for more in the first nine events, which gives him the tiebreaker. Still, there’s one more event to go, so all signs point to it coming down to the wire.

Event #9: $50,000 NLH Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Koray AldemirGermany$738,000
2Ryan RiessUnited States$492,000
3Sean WinterUnited States$328,000
4Alex FoxenUnited States$205,000
5David PetersUnited States$164,000
6Seth DaviesUnited States$123,000

Final Table Action

Things got off to a quick start when Seth Davies jammed the hijack holding ace-queen of diamonds and Foxen woke up with the same hand in the big, albeit in clubs. The latter flopped a Royal Flush draw, and while he didn’t hit poker’s top hand, he did find another club on the river to send Davies out the door in sixth place for $123,000.

Soon after, Foxen dispatched David Peters in fifth place when his Big Slick won a flip against pocket eights, and then a marathon four-handed match ensued where a dozen straight all-in-and-a-call hands resulted in 11 short stack doubles and one chop.

Eventually, the blinds and antes got big and Foxen got his stack all in preflop with ace-eight suited only to run it smack dab into 2013 World Series of Poker Main Event champ Ryan Riess’ ace-nine suited. The better ace won and Foxen finished in fourth place for $205,000.

Winter, who was at his fifth final table of the 2019 USPO, missed out on his second win – he previously took down Event #4: $10,000 Short Deck for $151,200 – when his jack-nine failed to get there against Riess’ Big Slick.

While he didn’t notch any of the eliminations up to that point, Aldemir got the one that mattered. He began heads-up play with a lead over Riess and set about whittling him down. In what would be the final hand of the tournament, Riess jammed with king-seven and Aldemir woke up with king-queen. It held and Riess had to settle for second place and a $492,000 consolation prize.

Because of this win, Aldemir is in real contention for the U.S. Poker Open Championship as the $100,000 Main Event is now underway.

Here's how things look on the overall leaderboard after the conclusion of Event #9:

PlacePlayerCashesPointsWinnings
1Sean Winter5540$747,900*
2Stephen Chidwick4540$705,950
3Nick Schulman2410$390,000
4Brandon Adams3365$314,750
5Koray Aldemir2340$897,200
6Cary Katz3340$580,200
7Bryn Kenney2240$477,000
8Lauren Roberts2240$263,400
9Jordan Cristos2240$206,200
10Ali Imsirovic1200$442,500
11David Peters2200$264,800
12Ben Yu3200$262,800

*Winter holds the tiebreaker by virtue of having won more money over the course of the series.

“The leader board is very exciting, I wish more tournament series and casinos would do that," said Aldemir. "I think that it brings out more players to participate and I think that it’s also just a lot of fun to play in it.”

PokerNews coverage of the 2019 USPO continues now with updates from Event #10: $100,000 Main, which you can follow by clicking here.

Remember, you can watch all USPO final tables exclusively on PokerGO. Subscribe to PokerGO for just $10 a month or $99 a year to watch nine straight days of U.S. Poker Open final table action plus PokerGO’s full catalog of programming.

Tags: Koray Aldemir

Sean Winter Eliminated in 3rd Place ($328,000)

Level 23 : 50,000/100,000, 100,000 ante
Sean Winter - 3rd Place
Sean Winter - 3rd Place

Sean Winter raised the button to 430,000 and then called off for 860,000 total when Ryan Riess jammed from the button.

Winter: {j-Spades}{9-Spades}
Riess: {a-Diamonds}{k-Clubs}

The {3-Diamonds}{q-Diamonds}{10-Hearts} flop gave both players a straight draw, but neither would hit as the turn came the {4-Clubs} followed by the {4-Spades} on the river. Riess' ace-high was good and Winter was sent to the rail, albeit with the overall points lead in the 2019 USPO Player of the Series race with just one event to go.

Player Chips Progress
Koray Aldemir de
Koray Aldemir
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 1X Winner
3,600,000 10,000
Ryan Riess us
Ryan Riess
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 1X Winner
WPT 1X Winner
2,600,000 950,000
Sean Winter us
Sean Winter
Busted

Tags: Sean WinterRyan Riess

Alex Foxen Eliminated in 4th Place ($205,000)

Level 22 : 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
Alex Foxen - 4th Place
Alex Foxen - 4th Place

Alex Foxen moved all in for 880,000 from the button and Ryan Riess looked him up from the big blind.

Riess: {a-Hearts}{9-Hearts}
Foxen: {a-Clubs}{8-Clubs}

The {a-Spades}{6-Spades}{3-Diamonds} flop paired both players but Riess' kicker had him out in front. The {2-Hearts} turn meant there would be no chop, and the {j-Clubs} river sealed Foxen's finish in fourth place.

Player Chips Progress
Alex Foxen us
Alex Foxen
WSOP 1X Winner
WPT 1X Winner
Busted

Tags: Alex FoxenRyan Riess

David Peters Eliminated in 5th Place ($164,000)

Level 18 : 15,000/30,000, 30,000 ante
David Peters - 5th Place
David Peters - 5th Place

David Peters raised to 60,000 from the cutoff and Alex Foxen responded by three-betting to 255,000 from the big blind. Peters four-bet jammed for 815,000 and Foxen wasted little time in making the call.

Peters: {8-Diamonds}{8-Clubs}
Foxen: {a-Clubs}{k-Diamonds}

It was a flip but not after the flop fell {a-Hearts}{7-Spades}{3-Clubs} to pair Foxen. Neither the {q-Clubs} turn nor {q-Diamonds} river helped Peters and he was sent to the rail in fifth place.

Player Chips Progress
Alex Foxen us
Alex Foxen
WSOP 1X Winner
WPT 1X Winner
1,970,000 1,115,000
David Peters us
David Peters
WSOP 2X Winner
Busted

Tags: David PetersAlex Foxen

Seth Davies Eliminated in 6th Place ($123,000)

Level 17 : 15,000/25,000, 25,000 ante
Seth Davies - 6th Place
Seth Davies - 6th Place

Seth Davies raised all in for 270,000 from the hijack and Alex Foxen called from the big blind.

Davies: {a-Diamonds}{q-Diamonds}
Foxen: {a-Clubs}{q-Clubs}

Both players had the same hand, but each were suited. The {k-Clubs}{10-Clubs}{6-Diamonds} flop gave Foxen a Royal Flush draw and Davies a backdoor diamond draw.

The {5-Spades} turn meant Davies needed to avoid a club on the river to survive, but that proved easier said than done as the {2-Clubs} spiked to give Foxen the flush.

Player Chips Progress
Alex Foxen us
Alex Foxen
WSOP 1X Winner
WPT 1X Winner
1,290,000 285,000
Seth Davies us
Seth Davies
WPT 1X Winner
Busted

Tags: Alex FoxenSeth Davies

Who Will Take Down the USPO Event #9: $50,000 NLH Title? Live stream at at 2:00 p.m. PT / 5:00 p.m. ET.

2019 US Poker Open Event 9 final table
2019 US Poker Open Event 9 final table

Welcome back to the penultimate event of the 2019 U.S. Poker Open. What started with 41 runners is down to the final six, and surprise, surprise, Sean Winter is the chip leader.

Winter has been the hottest player of the USPO this year and remarkably will be appearing in his fifth final table of the series, having over $400,000 in cashes thus far and 440 points on the leader board, behind only Stephen Chidwick who has 540. He'll either make up some ground or reclaim the lead today.

Standing in his way are some of the best in the world, including the 2013 WSOP Main Event champion Ryan Riess, who will start today second in chips. David Peters will start in third and is the only other person to have over a million. Peters is fifth on the all-time money list, with career earnings of over $30 million and already had a runner-up finish this week in the $10,000 Short Deck event.

Alex Foxen is ranked number one on the GPI and will be starting the day fourth in chips. Other players at the final table include Germany's Koray Aldemir and well-known pro Seth Davies, both making their second final table appearances of the 2019 USPO.

Final Table Seating and Counts

SeatPlayerChip Count
1Ryan Riess1,185,000
2Sean Winter2,020,000
3Alex Foxen1,005,000
4Koray Aldemir1,185,000
5Seth Davies270,000
6David Peters535,000

The final six finishers all getting paid at least $123,000 and the eventual first place finisher taking home $738,000 along with 200 points towards the championship race.

The players will be returning to battle it out at 1 p.m. PST. Blinds will begin at 10,000/25,000 with a 25,000 big blind ante and there will be a 10-minute break after every three levels of play. They will play down until a winner is crowned.

The live stream of the event will be available on PokerGo starting at 2 p.m. You can Subscribe to PokerGO for just $10 a month for $99 a year to watch nine straight days of U.S. Poker Open final table action plus PokerGO’s full catalog of programming.

PokerNews also offer coverage here in the live updates, so make sure to check back in so you don't miss a thing.

Tags: Sean Winter