Mike Stashin Takes Down Borgata Fall Poker Open Six-Max for $39,575
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The 2019 Borgata Fall Poker Open has just completed another tournament on the schedule as Event #14: $1,090 Six-Max NLH is now in the books. Emerging victorious was Mike Stashing for $39,575, along with a prestigious Borgata trophy after topping a 136-entry field.
Stashin entered the final day atop the leaderboard, having no real hurdles en route to his victory. He took control of the final table and applied an insane amount of pressure on his competitors in the final stages.
The Massapequa, New York native now eclipses the $400,000 mark in live career earnings, adding his first Borgata trophy to an already solid resume.
Six-Max Final Table Results
Place | Player | Country | Payout |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Mike Stashin | United States | $39,575 |
2 | Qi Hu | Canada | $24,405 |
3 | Gintautas Putinas | United States | $18,139 |
4 | Joe McKeehen | United States | $14,552 |
5 | Michael Wang | United States | $10,224 |
6 | Kenny Huynh | United States | $7,256 |
Final Day Action
Day 2 of the event began with just nine players, and it was not long before one took an exit. Unfortunately for Carlos Guerrero, he claimed the first payout of the day. Guerrero fell short during the first round of play, shipping most of his stack to 2015 World Series of Poker Main Event champ Joe McKeehen, who in return finished him off. Guerro moved all in for his remaining stack with jack-six and was called by McKeehen's queen-seven. A queen high board rolled out and Guerrero was the first to leave.
The next person to drop was Nicholas Verderamo, who is fresh off of a WSOP high-roller victory in Baltimore. Once he fell out of contention the unofficial final table was formed and bracelet winner Michael Wang was leading the way. Chris Caruso sat as the table short stack and grinded as long as possible before eventually putting it in with ace-eight versus the queens of Wang. The board ran out dry and Caruso dipped out in seventh.
Kenny Hunyh started the day second in chips but fell below average rather quickly and when it looked like the tide was finally turning on his Day 2, he was caught in a cooler of a hand with Gintautas Putinas. Putinas opened with kings, Hunyh shoved with queens, Putinas called and the rest is history as Hunyh was sent packing in sixth. Wang lost a monster pot to Stashin, running into three nines and just hands later he moved all in with ace-four. McKeehen called with ace-nine and took down the pot, sending Wang out in fifth.
McKeehen moved into second but quickly dropped a large pot to Stashin who then had a monstrous chip lead. The next hand saw McKeehen attempt a bluff on a four-heart board and Qi Hu took his time with the decision. McKeehen called clock and Hu elected to call just as time was running out, tabling a rivered pair of threes, which beat the ace-high bluff of McKeehen. A few hands later McKeehen moved it all-in with ace-king against the ace-eight of Hu. The river brought a devastating card for the two-time bracelet winner as an eight peeled off, sending him out in fourth place.
Three-handed play started with Stashin holding a large lead, but Putinas started to stack up quickly and eventually put Stashin to the test on a six-three-two board. The players four-bet jammed all of their chips into the pot for what was the biggest pot of the day, with Stashin having just a few hundred thousand more. Putinas held top pair against Stashin's middle pair with a flush draw and the board failed to bring a flush for Stashin but the three river did give him trips and the pot, eliminating Putinas.
Hu and Stashin played heads up for just a hand before a champion was crowned. Stashin opened from the button, Hu defended and the ace-jack-ten board peeled off. Hu check-called a bet on the flop and an ace fell on the turn. Hu check-called another bet on the turn and a king completed the board. Stashin jammed, Hu quickly called with his three bullets but they were not enough as Stashin tabled queen-five for a straight, eliminating Hu out in second place for respectable $24,405.
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