2020 World Series of Poker Circuit Potawatomi

$1,700 Main Event
Day: 3
Event Info

2020 World Series of Poker Circuit Potawatomi

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
aj
Prize
$151,284
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,700
Prize Pool
$793,860
Entries
524
Level Info
Level
30
Blinds
50,000 / 100,000
Ante
100,000
Players Info - Day 3
Entries
8
Players Left
1

Philip Shing Wins WSOP Circuit Potawatomi Main Event ($151,284)

Level 30 : 50,000/100,000, 100,000 ante
Philip Shing
Philip Shing

The 2020 World Series of Poker Potawatomi $1,700 Main Event began with 524 entrants, and on Monday it was 35-year-old Philip Shing, who was visiting Milwaukee for the first time, coming out on top to capture the $151,284 first-place prize, a gold ring, and a seat into the 2020 Global Casino Championship.

It actually marked the second ring for Shing, who revealed that he only plays poker a couple of times a year. Back in 2015, he won the WSOP Circuit Foxwoods Event #3: $580 Six-Max NLH for $14,543 and his first gold ring.

“Honestly it hasn’t really kicked yet but I think it feels really good,” Shing stated after his win. “I only play three events a year due to work but I actually had a week off of work so I came here.”

He added: “The casino was great, the people were amazing and I just had a blast here at the final table so I will definitely be making this trip again ... As you can expect I’m exhausted at this point and I’m ready to go home and see my kids.”

Final Table Results

PositionNameHometownPrize Money
1Philip ShingBrooklyn, New York$151,284
2Ken DonarskiWillow Brook, Illinois$93,498
3John GallaherLebanon, Tennessee$68,947
4James PupilloGilbert, Arizona$51,484
5Cero ZuccarelloMadison, Wisconsin$38,937
6Chris RothWaukesha, Wisconsin$29,829
7Michael HartzheimLittle Chute, Wisconsin$23,152
8Marcus YofonLas Vegas, Nevada$18,209
9Fadi HamadDanvers, Illinois$14,514

Final Table Action

The first final table casualty was the result of a classic flip when Marcus Yofon failed to get there with ace-king suited against Shing’s pocket eights.

Not long after, Mike Hartzheim bowed out in seventh after flopping top pair with a flush draw. He got it in on the turn against Cero Zuccarello, who was ahead with aces up. The ace of diamonds on the river gave Hartzheim his flush, but it was no good as it also filled up Zuccarello.

Chris Roth took his leave after jamming with nine-seven only to run into Zuccarello’s kings, and then the latter followed him out the door after running into kings himself after John Gallaher had limped with them from the small blind.

James Pupillo, who back in September finished fourth in the same tournament, got unlucky losing with ace-jack to the ace-eight of Shing all in preflop after an eight spike on the turn. That resulted in back-to-back fourth-place finishes for Pupillo, this one good for $51,484.

After Gallaher was dispatched in third place – the result of losing with queen-jack to Shing’s ace-jack – it took just one hand of heads-up play to crown a winner. Ken Donarski was at a 6:1 chip disadvantage and three-bet jammed with jack-eight. Shing called with ace-jack and held to nab by far the biggest score of his career.

Donarski Wins Casino Championship

Ken Donarski
Ken Donarski

The WSOP Circuit Potawatomi Casino Championship race was a tight one. Donarski had the early lead only to see Brett Reichard pass him up. Then, Vishal Patel took down the last two events on the schedule to win back-to-back rings and take the lead. Reichard’s elimination from the Main Event meant he was out of the running, but Donarski remained.

He needed to finish third or better to claim the title, so by finishing in second place he locked up the stop’s second seat into the 2020 Global Casino Championship. It was the cherry on top of an excellent series for Donarski, who finished fifth in Event #1: $400 NLH for $5,409 and then won Event #5: $400 NLH for $13,127 and his second gold ring.

TournamentEntriesPrize PoolWinnerPrize
Event #1: $400 NLH313$103,290Darin Utley$22,642
Event #2: $400 Pot-Limit Omaha164$54,120Kyle Klett$13,723
Event #3: $400 NLH Multi-Flight983$324,390James Gregg$54,155
Event #4: $400 NLH Tubro257$84,810Jorden Helstern$19,019
Event #5: $400 NLH One-Day155$51,150Ken Donarski$13,127
Event #6: $400 NLH 6-Handed224$73,920Todd Sladek$17,630
Event #7: $600 NLH 8-Hnaded162$83,430Brett Reichard$21,611
Event #8: $400 Monster Stack610$201,300Jason Farkas$38,039
Event #9: $1,125 NLH151$151,000Sam Cosby$39,250
$250 Ladies Event NLH69$13,800Kyna England$4,436
Event #10: $1,700 Main Event524$793,860Philip Shing$151,284
Event #11: $250 NLH One-Day366$73,200Josh Clanton$15,374
Event #12: $400 NLH One-Day190$62,700Vishal Patel$15,272
$250 Seniors Event #1311$62,200Scott Weinstein$13,642
$250 Seniors Event #2266$53,200Scott Reilly$11,835
Event #13: $400 NLH Double Stack255$84,150Vishal Patel$18,873

The World Series of Poker Circuit continues this week at Hard Rock Tampa. The PokerNews Live Reporting Team will be on-site later this week to offer live updates from both high rollers as well as that stop’s $1,700 Main Event.

Tags: Philip Shing

Ken Donarski Eliminated in 2nd Place ($93,498)

Level 30 : 50,000/100,000, 100,000 ante
Ken Donarski
Ken Donarski

In the first hand of heads-up play, Tsz Shing raised the button to 450,000 and called when Ken Donarski jammed for right around 2 million.

Tsz Shing: {a-Hearts}{j-Diamonds}
Ken Donarski: {j-Clubs}{8-Hearts}

Shing was way out in front and stayed there as the board ran out {k-Diamonds}{4-Spades}{6-Spades}{7-Spades}{2-Spades}. Donarski had to settle for second place and $93,498 in prize money, though both men will walk away with seats into the 2020 Global Casino Championship.

Player Chips Progress
Tsz Shing us
Tsz Shing
15,720,000 2,020,000
Ken Donarski us
Ken Donarski
Busted

Tags: Tsz ShingKen Donarski

John Gallaher Eliminated in 3rd Place ($68,947)

Level 30 : 50,000/100,000, 100,000 ante
John Gallaher
John Gallaher

Tsz Shing raised to 225,000 from the button and then called when John Gallaher three-bet all in for around 2.1 million.

Tsz Shing: {a-Hearts}{j-Diamonds}
John Gallaher: {q-Clubs}{j-Spades}

The {k-Diamonds}{6-Hearts}{9-Spades} flop gave Gallaher a gutshot straight draw but neither the {j-Clubs} turn nor {9-Clubs} river helped him. With that, Gallaher was ousted in third place for $68,947.

Player Chips Progress
Tsz Shing us
Tsz Shing
13,700,000 4,300,000
Ken Donarski us
Ken Donarski
2,000,000 -1,200,000
John Gallaher us
John Gallaher
Busted

Tags: John GallaherTsz Shing

James Pupillo Eliminated in 4th Place ($51,484)

Level 30 : 50,000/100,000, 100,000 ante
James Pupillo
James Pupillo

Last September, James Pupillo finished fourth in the WSOPC Potawatomi Main Event for $46,017. Fate had the same finish in store for him again, though this time it was for $51,484.

In his final hand, Tsz Shing raised to 200,000 under the gun and called when Pupillo jammed for 1.255 million from the small blind.

Tsz Shing: {a-Spades}{8-Clubs}
James Pupillo: {a-Hearts}{j-Clubs}

Pupillo was in a dominating position and he picked up a straight draw on the {4-Hearts}{q-Clubs}{k-Hearts} flop. Unfortunately for him, and his brother Nick on the rail, the dealer burned and turned the {8-Hearts} to pair Shing.

The {9-Diamonds} river was a brick for Pupillo and he was sent out the door in fourth place yet again.

Player Chips Progress
Tsz Shing us
Tsz Shing
9,400,000 1,400,000
James Pupillo us
James Pupillo
Busted

Tags: James PupilloTsz Shing

Cero Zuccarello Eliminated in 5th Place ($38,937)

Level 29 : 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
Cero Zuccarello
Cero Zuccarello

Action folded to John Gallaher in the small blind and he just limped. Cero Zuccarello then moved all in for around 750,000 from the big and Gallaher snap-called.

John Gallaher: {k-Clubs}{k-Diamonds}
Cero Zuccarello: {q-Clubs}{5-Spades}

Zuccarello was in a bad spot and he didn't get so much as a sweat as the board ran out a dry {2-Diamonds}{6-Clubs}{8-Hearts}{10-Diamonds}{4-Hearts}.

Player Chips Progress
John Gallaher us
John Gallaher
1,700,000 700,000
Cero Zuccarello us
Cero Zuccarello
Busted

Tags: Cero ZuccarelloJohn Gallaher

Chris Roth Eliminated in 6th Place ($29,829)

Level 29 : 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
Chris Roth
Chris Roth

Upon coming back from the break, there were about a half dozen all-in shoves from various players, none of which got called.

That all changed when action folded to Chris Roth on the button and he moved all in for his last 950,000. Cero Zuccarello was in the small blind and moved all in over the top, which prompted James Pupillo to get out of the way in the big.

Cero Zuccarello: {k-Clubs}{k-Diamonds}
Chris Roth: {9-Clubs}{7-Clubs}

The board ran out {k-Spades}{6-Spades}{7-Hearts}{a-Hearts}{j-Spades} and that was all she wrote for Roth.

Player Chips Progress
Cero Zuccarello us
Cero Zuccarello
2,100,000 1,275,000
Chris Roth us
Chris Roth
Busted

Tags: Cero ZuccarelloChris Roth

Vishal Patel Wins Two Rings in Two Days to Take WSOPC Potawatomi Casino Championship Lead; Donarski Still in the Hunt

Level 28 : 30,000/60,000, 60,000 ante
Vishal Patel
Vishal Patel

For most of the WSOP Circuit Potawatomi Casino stop, Ken Donarski and Brett Reichard sat atop the points leaderboard in the race for "Casino Champ," which will award the top points finisher with a seat into the 2020 Global Casino Championship.

That all changed this weekend when 33-year-old Vishal Patel won back-to-back tournaments.

First, he topped a 190-entry field to win Event #12: $400 NLH One-Day for $15,272 and his first gold ring. The bodies at the final table fell one after another until it was Jim Kilarjian and Patel heads-up with Kilarjian holding a 2:1 chip advantage. Even though Patel was behind, a few cooler turned the tides and it was Kilarjian was in rough shape after calling Patel’s all-in bet with ace-rag while Patel held pocket kings. Kilarjian didn’t find an ace with the runout ending his night just short of victory once again while Patel captured his first ring.

“It feels really good to get this win,” Payel said after his victory. “I had two close finishes last week, so I wanted to come back and give it another try.”

Those two close finishes are the only WSOP events Patel has played in and was a 12th-place finish in Event #3 and a 14th-place finish in Event #4.

“I just want to thank my wife for her support and letting me play.”

Vishal Patel
Vishal Patel gets his second ring in as many days.

As if that wasn't impressive enough, Patel returned the following day and came out on top of a 255-entry field in Event #13: $400 NLH Double Stack, good for $18,873.

In that tournament, Patel got was heads up against ring winner DJ MacKinnon. Patel had a clear chip advantage over MacKinnon and started to steamroll him over as McKinnon didn’t win one hand in the first 20-minutes of the heads-up battle.

It wasn’t until MacKinnon was down to his last 500,000 chips where he found a little momentum after he cracked Patel’s pocket tens on the river holding ace-seven. MacKinnon then continued to win hand after hand until his ace-jack came up short to Patel’s pocket three’s.

“I can’t even describe how I’m feeling right now,” Patel stated. “My goal was to win one ring and hopefully win another a few years down the road but getting two rings back-to-back is unbelievable.”

The second victory catapulted Patel into the top spot for Casino Champion as he now has 120 points but still has a little sweat as Donarski is still in the hunt for Casino Champion and can take the number one spot if he finishes in second or third place in the Main Event.

Tags: Vishal Patel

Mike Hartzheim Eliminated in 7th Place ($23,152)

Level 27 : 25,000/50,000, 50,000 ante
Mike Hartzheim
Mike Hartzheim

Mike Hartzheim raised to 125,000 from the cutoff and Cero Zuccarello called from the button. Both blinds folded and it was heads-up action to the flop, which came down {j-Spades}{6-Diamonds}{3-Diamonds}.

Hartzheim continued for 175,000, Zuccarello called, and the dealer burned and turned the {6-Spades} to pair the board.

Hartzheim moved all in for approximately 900,000 and Zuccarello snap-called.

Mike Hartzheim: {k-Diamonds}{j-Diamonds}
Cero Zuccarello: {a-Clubs}{a-Hearts}

Hartzheim had flopped top pair and a flush draw, and he made the latter when the {a-Diamonds} peeled off on the river. Unfortunately for him, that same card gave Zuccarello aces full of sixes for the knockout.

Player Chips Progress
Cero Zuccarello us
Cero Zuccarello
3,800,000 1,400,000
Mike Hartzheim us
Mike Hartzheim
Busted

Tags: Cero ZuccarelloMike Hartzheim

Marcus Yofon Eliminated in 8th Place ($18,209)

Level 27 : 25,000/50,000, 50,000 ante
Marcus Yofon
Marcus Yofon

Marcus Yofon got his stack of around 1.4 million all in preflop and was flipping for his tournament life against Tsz Shing.

Marcus Yofon: {a-Diamonds}{k-Diamonds}
Tsz Shing: {8-Clubs}{8-Diamonds}

Yofon needed to improve to stay alive, but instead, the flop came down {q-Hearts}{7-Hearts}{8-Hearts} to leave him drawing incredibly thin. The {4-Hearts} turn put out some chop options to a heart flush, but the {3-Clubs} river was of no consequence.

Shing took the pot with a set of eights and Yofon headed to the payout desk in eighth place to collect $18,209.

Player Chips Progress
Tsz Shing us
Tsz Shing
4,800,000 1,870,000
Marcus Yofon us
Marcus Yofon
Busted

Tags: Marcus YofonTsz Shing

Who Will Walk Away with the $151,284 First-Place Prize?

Cero Zuccarello sits second in chips.
Cero Zuccarello sits second in chips.

The 2020 World Series of Poker Potawatomi $1,700 Main Event began with 524 entrants, but today just eight will return to play down to a winner who will walk away with a $151,284 first-place prize, a gold ring, and a seat into the 2020 Global Casino Championship.

James Pupillo leads the final table with a 3,365,000 chip stack. Pupillo, who finished fourth in September's WSOPC Potawatomi Main Event for $46,017, will be looking to improve on that finish and was able to pad his stack nicely in the final levels on Sunday night, including notching the final knockout of the evening, when his ace-king was able to hang on against the ace-queen of Fadi Hamad (9th - $14,514).

Cero Zuccarello (3,115,000) and Tsz Shing (2,930,000) join Pupillo as the only players above two-million. Marcus Yofon (1,775,000), who busted Javier Zarco (10th - $11,727) on the first hand of the unofficial final table, sits in the middle of the pack, while Ken Donarski (1,285,000), Mike Hartzheim (1,280,000), Day 1a chip leader Chris Roth (1,125,000), and John Gallaher (880,000) round out the remaining field.

Day 3 Seat Draw

TableSeatNameChip Count
Final1Chris Roth1,125,000
Final2Mike Hartzheim1,280,000
Final3Cero Zuccarello3,115,000
Final4James Pupillo3,365,000
Final5Ken Donarski1,285,000
Final6Marcus Yofon1,775,000
Final7Tsz Shing2,930,000
Final8John Gallaher880,000

Final Table Payouts

PositionNameHometownPrize Money
1TBD $151,284
2TBD $93,498
3TBD $68,947
4TBD $51,484
5TBD $38,937
6TBD $29,829
7TBD $23,152
8TBD $18,209
9Fadi HamadDanvers, Illinois$14,514

The final table will kick off at noon local time on Monday at the start of Level 27 (25,000/50,000/50,000). Play will continue until a winner is crowned. Be sure to stay tuned right here to PokerNews as we determine which of the eight remaining players will walk out of Potawatomi Hotel and Casino with the title.