2019 World Series of Poker

Event #78: $1,500 Pot-Limit Omaha Bounty
Day: 4
Event Info

2019 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
aj104
Prize
$177,823
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,500
Prize Pool
$960,500
Entries
1,130
Level Info
Level
33
Blinds
120,000 / 240,000
Ante
0

PLO Specialist Bryce Yockey Looks to Claim Second Bracelet as the Remaining Seven Players Return for Day 4 of Event #78: $1,500 Pot-Limit Omaha Bounty

Bryce Yockey
Bryce Yockey

An extra day of PLO action is required to find a winner in Event #78: $1,500 Pot-Limit Omaha Bounty at the 2019 World Series of Poker as seven players remain to battle for the bracelet.

The tournament attracted a total of 1,130 entries which generated a prize pool of $960,500 and the first-place prize of $177,823. All seven players still in the tournament are guaranteed to take home at least $22,391, but they'll all be desperate to add a WSOP bracelet in this event to their collection.

Final Table Payouts

PlaceNameCountryPayouts
1  $177,823
2  $109,844
3  $77,893
4  $55,939
5  $40,691
6  $29,987
7  $22,391
8Heng ZhangUnited States$16,944
9Joseph LibertaUnited States$12,996

Maximilian Klostermeier leads the remaining seven players as he ended Day 3 of the tournament impressive 10,240,000 which is over double the current average chip stack of 4,035,714. This marks Klostermeier's biggest recorded live tournament cash as only has $3,084 in lifetime tournament earnings and he has already managed to beat that number just in bounties.

Bryce Yockey is the only bracelet winner left in the tournament and is no rookie when it comes to PLO. Yockey has a total of 43 WSOP cashes for a whopping $2,158,422 and 20 of them come from PLO games for $1,124,398. 2017 was Yockey's best PLO performance when he won Event #51: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better Championship to claim his first WSOP gold bracelet and he could very well add a second piece of WSOP jewelry to that today by beating the other 6 players. Yockey bagged a stack of 4,315,000 and sits third on the leaderboard.

Final Table Seat Draw

RoomTableSeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
Amazon11Maximilian KlostermeierDenmark10,240,00064
Amazon12Scott SharpeUnited States1,010,0006
Amazon13Jason StockfishUnited States3,150,00020
Amazon14Tim SeidenstickerUnited States1,810,00011
Amazon15Bryce YockeyUnited States4,315,00027
Amazon16Ryan LenaghanUnited States2,460,00015
Amazon17David CallaghanIreland5,250,00033

PLO bounty action kicks-off at 1 p.m. local time today where play will continue from level 31 with blinds standing at 80,000 and 160,000. The average chip stack is just under 13 big blinds and levels will last 60-minutes. Players will have a small break after every two levels and there might be a dinner break but that depends on how many players will be left.

PokerNews will be right here to provide you with live coverage until a WSOP bracelet is awarded today.

Tags: Bryce YockeyDavid CallaghanJason StockfishMaximilian KlostermeierRyan LenaghanScott SharpeTim Seidensticker