2018 WPT India

₹55,000 Main Event
Day: 3
Event Info

2018 WPT India

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
95
Prize
₹6,635,000
Event Info
Buy-in
₹55,000
Prize Pool
₹36,249,576
Entries
697
Level Info
Level
34
Blinds
125,000 / 250,000
Ante
250,000

Nikunj Jhunjhunwala Wins WPT India Main Event for ₹6,635,000 ($92,180)

Level 34 : 125,000/250,000, 250,000 ante
WPT India Main Event Champion Nikunj Jhunjhunwala
WPT India Main Event Champion Nikunj Jhunjhunwala

Nikunj Jhunjhunwala topped a record field of 697 players to win the second ever WPT India Main Event. After coming into the final table as the second-shortest player in chips, he rode out a topsy-turvy day to emerge as the winner and take home ₹6,635,000 (~$92,180) in prize money.

The prize is by far Jhunjhunwala's most significant recorded cash of his career, and he was a wildly popular player with the rail here aboard the Deltin Royale in Goa, India.

The runner-up Sahil Mahboobani takes home ₹4,653,000 (~$64,644), falling just short after a real tussle of a heads-up match. Start-of-day chip leader Deepak Singh finished fourth and Adda52 Team Pro Amit Jain seventh.

Here are the final table results:

PositionPlayerCountryPrize in INRPrize in USD
1Nikunj JhunjhunwalaIndia₹6,635,000$92,180
2Sahil MahboobaniIndia₹4,653,000$64,644
3Vidur SinghalIndia₹3,000,000$41,679
4Deepak SinghIndia₹2,207,000$30,662
5Hidangmayum SomeshIndia₹1,683,000$23,382
6Akshay NasaIndia₹1,341,000$18,631
7Amit JainIndia₹1,111,000$15,435
8Kanishka UpretiIndia₹884,000$12,281
9Harsh DemblaIndia₹663,976$9,225

Despite securing the most significant victory of his career so far, Jhunjhunwala says that just three weeks ago he was on a “poker sabbatical.”

“Coming here, I had this prop bet with my friend that I was either going to final table the Main Event or the High Roller,” he said shortly after his victory, “So now that’s all happened it’s just starting to sink in.”

Jhunjhunwala’s most substantial cash so far came in 2015 when he won a Main Event and High Roller in the space of three days for over $50,000. He said he was glad that this time around his rail was here to witness his victory.

“There was a point in time where my stack was down, and he had a 3-1 chip lead over me. My rail was on him and in his ears, and honestly, it was fantastic.

“I had a sleepless night; lots of anxiety. I knew there were two people at the FT that I wasn’t going to get into hands with until I got a double up. Then, I’d have 25-30 bb stack and I’d open up and wider up my range.”

Both Jhunjhunwala and Adda52 Team Pro Amit Jain have played cash games together previously. They both said they wanted to play each other heads-up.

“I had Amit to my immediate left, and we play a lot of cash games in Bombay together. He knows my game through and through. Once he lost his stack, it made things easier for me.”

The stacks at the final table were shallow, but more importantly, balanced, something that Jhunjhunwala said worked in his favor.

“I play high stakes cash games compared to the other players. I play a lot of PLO where it kinda gets swingy. You get used to that variance, that was something I used to my advantage.

Getting to heads-up with a level stack with opponent Sahil Mahboobani, he took his time before starting to make moves.

“I just wanted to see how he was doing and get a feel for the player. I know if it’s a deeper structure in a heads-up match it’s better for me to be playing post-flop than pre-flop. He’s out and out an online player, so I just wanted everything to be postflop”

Although like he said, he was a short stack at one point, he managed two consecutive doubles to snatch victory over his opponent.

“That’s the beauty of these blind levels,” he said. “There were instances yesterday when a player had two big blinds, and six hands later he’s rallied to 515,000. I knew that it’s not impossible, so I knew not to lose morale. I had my rail there cheering me on, and that was great.”

WPT India Main Event Final Table
WPT India Main Event Final Table

Harsh Dembla came into the day with a four big blind stack, and on the third hand of the day managed the rare feat of chopping a pot and doubling in the same hand! However, despite doubling once more - the proper way this time - he was eliminated by start of day chip leader Deepak Singh.

He was quickly followed by Kanishka Upreti who ran ace-jack into the ace-king of Sahil Mahboobani before Hidangmayum Somesh doubled through Amit Jain.

Adda52 Team Pro Jain suffered a terrible start to the day and barely won a pot before shoving ace-ten into the ace-king of Nikunj Jhunjhunwala to bust in seventh.

Like the first elimination, Jain's was quickly followed by that of Akshay Nasa whose king-jack was no match for the pocket queens of Jhunjhunwala, with the latter making backdoor quads to move over five million in chips.

It was Singh and Jhunjhunwala at the top of the counts, and although Vidur Singhal doubled through Singh twice, the elimination of Hidangmayum Somesh by Singh with kings against ace-queen would ensure both he and Jhunjhunwala remained level-pegging.

However, soon after play resumed four-handed Mahboobani doubled through Singh with sevens against king-ten, and Singh eventually three-bet shoved jacks into the ace-five suited of Jhunjhunwala to bust in fourth.

The average stack by now had crept up to over 45 big blinds, but when Singhal shoved small to big, Mahboobani woke up with ace-ten and held against his opponent's king-nine to bring the tournament to heads-up.

The stacks were dead level, and so it would remain with neither playing giving the other any room to gain an advantage. That was the case until Mahboobani bet all three streets and opened up a sizeable gap.

After that, Mahboobani looked to press home his advantage, but with the blinds so high all it took was two quick doubles for Jhunjhunwala to wrestle back the chip lead, and on the very next hand the tournament was over.

This concludes PokerNews coverage of the WPT India Main Event from the Deltin Royale in Goa, India, PokerNews's first-ever event covered in India.

Tags: Akshay NasaAmit JainDeepak SinghHarsh DemblaHidangmayum SomeshKanishka UpretiNikunj JhunjhunwalaSahil MahboobaniVidur Singhal

Sahil Mahboobani Eliminated in 2nd Place (₹4,653,000)

Level 34 : 125,000/250,000, 250,000 ante
Sahil Mahboobani
Sahil Mahboobani

Sahil Mahboobani was left with just 1,600,000 in chips, 600,000 of which was going in as his blind and ante on the very next hand.

And when Nikunj Jhunjhunwala open-shoved from the small blind, Mahboobani called.

Nikunj Jhunjhunwala: {9-Spades}{5-Spades}
Sahil Mahboobani: {k-Clubs}{8-Spades}

Mahboobani was ahead but there was a five on the {q-Diamonds}{5-Hearts}{10-Diamonds} flop to give Jhunjhunwala the lead. The turn {9-Diamonds} gave him two pair meaning Mahboobani would need a jack to make a straight to stay alive.

The river was the {8-Clubs} and Mahboobani was eliminated in 2nd place for ₹4,653,000.

Player Chips Progress
Nikunj Jhunjhunwala in
Nikunj Jhunjhunwala
20,900,000
1,600,000
1,600,000
Sahil Mahboobani in
Sahil Mahboobani
Busted

Tags: Nikunj JhunjhunwalaSahil Mahboobani

Vidur Singhal Eliminated in 3rd Place (₹3,000,000)

Level 32 : 75,000/150,000, 150,000 ante
Singhal Vidur
Singhal Vidur

Vidur Singhal jammed from small to big for 5,175,000 and Sahil Mahboobani called in the big blind.

Vidur Singhal: {k-Clubs}{9-Spades}
Sahil Mahboobani: {a-Hearts}{10-Clubs}

The board ran out {a-Clubs}{4-Spades}{6-Hearts}{7-Diamonds}{a-Spades} and after a brief check Singhal was found to cover his opponent by just 20,000 chips and SInghal was eliminated in 3rd place for ₹3,000,000.

Player Chips Progress
Sahil Mahboobani in
Sahil Mahboobani
10,400,000
5,300,000
5,300,000
Vidur Singhal in
Vidur Singhal
Busted

Tags: Sahil MahboobaniVidur Singhal

Deepak Singh Eliminated in 4th Place (₹2,207,000)

Level 31 : 75,000/125,000, 125,000 ante
Deepak Singh
Deepak Singh

Nikunj Jhunjhunwala raised to 250,000 from under the gun. Deepak Singh three-bet all in for 2,030,000 from the big blind and Jhunjhunwala tank-called it off.

Nikunj Jhunjhunwala: {a-Clubs}{5-Clubs}
Deepak Singh: {j-Diamonds}{j-Spades}

The flop came {q-Spades}{9-Clubs}{2-Clubs} giving Jhunjhunwala a flush draw. The turn was the {2-Hearts} but the river {k-Clubs} completed his flush and sent the start-of-day chip leader Singh to the rail in 4th place.

Player Chips Progress
Nikunj Jhunjhunwala in
Nikunj Jhunjhunwala
9,600,000
2,000,000
2,000,000
Deepak Singh in
Deepak Singh
Busted
Day 2 Chip Leader

Tags: Deepak SinghNikunj Jhunjhunwala

Hidangmayum Somesh Eliminated in 5th Place (₹1,683,000)

Level 31 : 75,000/125,000, 125,000 ante
Hidangmayum Somesh
Hidangmayum Somesh

Hidangmayum Somesh opened to 300,000 on the button and Deepak Singh three-bet to 675,000 in the small blind. The big blind folded and Somesh four-bet to 1,075,000. Singh called.

The flop came {3-Diamonds}{7-Clubs}{3-Clubs} and Singh checked. Somesh moved all in and Singh called.

Hidangmayum Somesh: {a-Hearts}{q-Clubs}
Deepak Singh: {k-Hearts}{k-Clubs}

The turn {8-Spades} and river {3-Hearts} changed nothing and Somesh was eliminated in 5th place.

Player Chips Progress
Deepak Singh in
Deepak Singh
6,200,000
2,350,000
2,350,000
Day 2 Chip Leader
Hidangmayum Somesh in
Hidangmayum Somesh
Busted

Tags: Deepak SinghHidangmayum Somesh

Akshay Nasa Eliminated in 6th Place (₹1,341,000)

Level 30 : 50,000/100,000, 100,000 ante
Akshay Nasa
Akshay Nasa

Akshay Nasa moved all in for 1,660,000 from the hijack and Nikunj Jhunjhunwala called in the cutoff. The remaining players folded and the cards turned over.

Akshay Nasa: {k-Hearts}{j-Clubs}
Nikunj Jhunjhunwala: {q-Diamonds}{q-Hearts}

The flop came {a-Spades}{7-Spades}{2-Hearts} and the turn was the {q-Spades} giving Jhunjhunwala a set. The river was the {q-Clubs} completing backdoor quads for Jhunjhunwala and Nasa was eliminated.

Player Chips Progress
Nikunj Jhunjhunwala in
Nikunj Jhunjhunwala
5,100,000
2,000,000
2,000,000
Akshay Nasa in
Akshay Nasa
Busted
Day 1B Chip Leader

Tags: Akshay NasaNikunj Jhunjhunwala

Amit Jain Eliminated in 7th Place (₹1,111,000)

Level 30 : 50,000/100,000, 100,000 ante
Amit Jain
Amit Jain

Amit Jain moved all in from early position for around 1,500,000 and it folded to Nikunj Jhunjhunwala in the big blind who called.

Amit Jain: {a-Clubs}{10-Clubs}
Nikunj Jhunjhunwala: {a-Spades}{k-Hearts}

There was no help for Jain on a {q-Diamonds}{j-Spades}{8-Hearts}{6-Spades}{2-Hearts} board and from second in chips at the start of the day, Adda52 Team Pro Jain would have to settle for seventh place and a seven-figure cash in the WPT India Main Event.

Player Chips Progress
Nikunj Jhunjhunwala in
Nikunj Jhunjhunwala
3,100,000
1,500,000
1,500,000
Amit Jain in
Amit Jain
Busted

Tags: Amit JainNikunj Jhunjhunwala

Kanishka Upreti Eliminated in 8th Place (₹884,000)

Level 29 : 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
Kanishka Upreti
Kanishka Upreti

Kanishka Upreti was on the button and moved all in for 1,200,000. Sahil Mahboobani was in the small blind and called and the big blind folded.

Sahil Mahboobani: {A-Hearts}{K-Spades}
Kanishka Upreti: {A-Spades}{J-Hearts}

There was no help for Upreti on the {7-Clubs}{5-Clubs}{2-Diamonds} flop and the turn {k-Clubs} sealed his fat. The river was the {10-Diamonds} and he was eliminated in 8th place.

Player Chips Progress
Sahil Mahboobani in
Sahil Mahboobani
4,000,000
1,600,000
1,600,000
Kanishka Upreti in
Kanishka Upreti
Busted

Tags: Kanishka UpretiSahil Mahboobani

Harsh Dembla Eliminated in 9th Place (₹663,976)

Level 29 : 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
Harsh Dembla
Harsh Dembla

Deepak Singh opened to 170,000 and Harsh Dembla defended his big blind.

The flop came {4-Clubs}{7-Spades}{10-Clubs} and Dembla checked. Singh continued for 145,000 and Dembla check-raised to 475,000. Singh then moved all in and Dembla called.

Deepak Singh: {a-Spades}{k-Diamonds}
Harsh Dembla: {8-Spades}{6-Spades}

Singh was ahead, for now, but Dembla held a double gutshot to double for a third time at this final table.

The turn was the {2-Diamonds} and the river the {7-Diamonds} and he was eliminated in 9th place.

Player Chips Progress
Deepak Singh in
Deepak Singh
5,000,000
1,200,000
1,200,000
Day 2 Chip Leader
Harsh Dembla in
Harsh Dembla
Busted

Tags: Deepak SinghHarsh Dembla

Who Will Win the Biggest WPT India Main Event Ever?

WPT India Main Event Final Table
WPT India Main Event Final Table

It's the final day of the WPT India Main Event and from a record field of 697 players we have reached final table of nine.

Leading the way is Deepak Singh who knocked out two players in the final hand last night to reach the final table and deny Adda52 Team Pro Amit Jain the chip lead.

The pair sit with close to 60 big blinds at the start of a short-stacked final table where the average is just 29 big blinds.

SeatNameCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Deepak SinghIndia4,645,00058
2Akshay NasaIndia1,660,00021
3Nikunj JhunjhunwalaIndia1,460,00018
4Vidur SinghalIndia2,410,00030
5Amit JainIndia4,500,00056
6Kanishka UpretiIndia1,665,00021
7Harsh DemblaIndia305,0004
8Sahil MahboobaniIndia2,755,00034
9Hidangmayum SomeshIndia1,620,00020

Sahil Mahboobani and Singhal Vidur occupy the dangerous middle and will look to tread carefully lest they become one of the first eliminations.

Behind them is a trio sat at 21 big blinds of Akshay Nasa, Kanishka Upreti and Hidangmayum Somesh. Bringing up the rear is short stacks Nikunj Jhunjhunwala with 18 big blinds and Harsh Dembla with just four big blinds to start the day.

Play will resume with around five minutes left of 30,000/60,000 before the blinds increase to 40,000/80,000. Levels are 60-minutes at the final table, and 30-minutes heads-up.

Stay tuned to PokerNews as we play down to a winner!

Tags: Akshay NasaAmit JainDeepak SinghHarsh DemblaHidangmayum SomeshKanishka UpretiNikunj JhunjhunwalaSahil MahboobaniSinghal Vidur