Mike Allis Potentially Going Out on a High After Winning the One Drop ($535,610)

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The 2022 World Series of Poker (WSOP) Event #71: $1,111 One More for One Drop was an incredible event that not only supported a great cause but also provided plenty of drama with a handful of big names making deep runs.

At the end of five days, there could only be one winner from the 5,702-entry field to collect the famous gold bracelet and $535,610 in prize money: Mike Allis.

The Idaho native came out on top after an absolute battle with 2013 WSOP Main Event Champion Ryan Riess that went back-and-forth for nearly three hours before a champion was finally crowned in bizarre fashion.

Ryan Riess
Ryan Riess

According to The Hendon Mob, Allis�� previous best live cash was for $32,882 when he finished in 35th place at the 2013 WSOP $1,500 Millionaire Maker, with his total cash earnings totaling $299,210.

Allis is no stranger to deep runs in Las Vegas as this tournament marked his second-career WSOP final table experience. Allis previously finished 6th in the 2012 $1,500 Pot Limit Hold'em event. He also placed 11th at the $1,000 WSOP Seniors World Championship back in 2008.

This was also Allis�� 37th WSOP cash and this event marked his fourth cash of 2022.

Event #47: $1,000 Seniors Championship Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Mike AllisUnited States$535,610
2Ryan RiessUnited States$331,056
3Basel ChauraUnited States$250,157
4Mohammed JaafarUnited States$190,363
5Leonardo De SouzaBrazil$145,892
6Salah NimerUnited States$112,612
7Andrew RobinsonUnited States$87,551
8Rio FujitaUnited States$68,562
9Niklas WarlichGermany$54,085
10Boris AkopovUnited States$42,980

Winner's Reaction

His first bracelet is the cherry on top of a lifetime of poker, with this potentially being his final tournament in his World Series of Poker career. He plans on giving the majority of his prize money to his grandchildren.

��I was very tired and mentally fatigued. The dealers were really awesome helping me with my chip counts. I was very nervous (at the final table).

��I didn��t know if I was going to win or not, I said going into today that a lot of it would have to come down to my cards but I did feel comfortable playing such a good opponent because that guy (Riess) is terrific. If I had to play heads-up with him again, he��d probably kill me. I think I got very fortunate.

��If my health holds up, I��d like to (come back and defend my title) but one of the reasons that I��ve been here for six weeks is because of my bad health. I said that I��m going to play the whole series and I had a few min-cashes. I kept saying to myself ��My luck��s gotta change�� because I was losing all my flips and then in this tournament, I won a few flips. I feel really grateful.��

Final Table Action

The first player out was Boris Akopov ($42,980), who came into the 10-man final table as the short stack. Even though he had pocket aces, they would be cracked by Riess�� pocket nines, which flopped a set.

A little over a half hour went by before Niklas Warlich ($54,085) was eliminated in ninth place. He ran his ace-king into the pocket aces of Allis.

Out in eighth was Rio Fujita ($68,562). After being down to two big blinds, his pocket threes could not hold up against the ace-queen of Mohammed Jaafar.

In seventh place was Andrew Robinson ($87,551), who was on fumes when he was all in three ways with king-jack suited. Riess�� ace-queen won the hand.

Salah Nimer ($112,612) was the next one out, being the first one to collect six figures for his efforts. He was down to under four big blinds when he shoved ten-nine suited from the small blind. Unfortunately for Nimer, Basel Chaura woke up with jack-ten in the big blind.

Mike Allis

Out in fifth was Brazil��s Leonardo De Souza ($145,892). He was down to six bigs when he shoved pocket fives from the small blind. Chaura called with eight-seven off and hit a runner-runner straight.

The final elimination on Day 4 was Jaafar ($190,363). He jammed for roughly 20 big blinds from the button with ace-five off and was called by Aliss in the small blind, who had ace-queen. Allis cemented the victory with a queen on the flop.

Three players came back for Day 5 and Chaura would be the one who would exit first ($250,157). After Riess opened from the button, Chaura shoved with queen-jack off for nine bigs from the small blind. Riess called with pocket fours and although Chaura would turn a queen, Riess made a flush on the river.

Heads-up play would go on for nearly three hours but it was Riess ($331,056) who would finish as runner-up, missing out on his second-career bracelet. In a truly strange hand, Riess would get it all in with pocket nines against the six-three offsuit of Allis. Allis rivered a straight to claim the title.

That does it for PokerNews' coverage of Event #71: $1,111 One More for One Drop, but stay tuned as we continue covering the final tournaments of the 2022 WSOP including the last days of the Main Event.

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Blaise Bourgeois is a full-time digital nomad living and playing poker in Latin America. He's part of the PokerNews live reporting team for the 2022 World Series of Poker.

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