As 2024 winds down, the Alberta poker scene is heating up with the final series of the Pure Poker Tour (PPT) season. The trophy events kick off at Pure Casino Yellowhead on November 21 with the Seniors First event, followed by 11 days of action-packed poker, and highlighted by the $1,100 Main Event starting on November 29.
Check out live updates and reporting from the 2024 Pure Poker Tour Series #6 by Lyle Bateman. Chose an event of your choice down below:
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Wasy Wins Another One
Event #4 is now over after about 10 hours of Day 2 play. Eric Wasylenko added another trophy to his growing collection from the PPT with yet another side event win.
He was third in chips when the final table started but the shorter the table got, the bigger Wasy’s stack got. He started his run by sending Mo Alamelhuda home in 5th place with the bigger pair, then found a pair of queens to send Shane Kozniuk to the rail in 3rd. That gave him a huge lead over runner-up Shane Brotherwood, and it didn’t take long to finish it out.
In the final hand, Brotherwood got his short stack in good with king-ten against six-four but Wasy spiked a four on the flop and held for the win.
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Shane Brotherwood Out in 2nd Place for $15,600
Level: 25 (25000/50000/50000) Entries: 1/160 Prizes: $91,200 Shane Brotherwood had a tough job ahead of him when he got heads up against Eric Wasylenko. Not only did Wasy have the chip lead but he’s also a heads-up specialist from his online days. In the final confrontation, Brotherwood shoved king-ten, and Wasy was pretty much priced in to call with any two.
He called it off with six-four then proceeded to hit the flop when it ran out 8♣9♣4♦7♠A♠ and it was all over.
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Shane Kozniuk Out in 3rd Place for $10,140
Level: 25 (25000/50000/50000 Entries: 2/160 Prizes: $91,200 Eric Wasylenko raised his button to 100k then snapped it off when Shan Kozniuk shoved the small blind. Wasy’s queens were well ahead of the A♦4♦ for Kozniuk. The board ran clean for the queens, and Kozniuk was out in 3rd place.
Wasy is now heads up against Shane Brotherwood with a big chip lead.
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Wasy Leads on Break
Level: 25 (25000/50000/50000) Entries: 3/160 Prizes: $91,200 Eric Wasylenko leads the way at the break between Levels 24 & 25.
Seat Player Chips 1 Shane Kozniuk 1,345,000 2 Shane Brotherwood 660,000 9 Eric Wasylenko 2,000,000 -
Mike Malm Out in 4th Place for $7,800
Level: 24 (20000/40000/40000) Entries: 3/160 Prizes: $91,200 They are down to three left after Mike Malm ended his run in 4th place. He took the final payout of less than $10k.
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Mo Alamelhuda Out in 5th Place for $6,010
Level: 24 (20000/40000/40000) Entries: 4/160 Prizes: $91,200 Mo Alamelhuda was left short after doubling up Mike Malm a few hands previously and he got the rest in blind-on-blind against Eric Wasylenko. He was in trouble with pocket threes against pocket eights and the board wasn’t able to help him get ahead.
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Malm Doubles
Level: 23 (15000/30000/30000) Entries: 5/160 Prizes: $91,200 Mike Malm called the small blind, then snapped it off when Mo Alamelhuda shoved his big with more. Malm had jacks over eights for Alamelhuda, and the board didn’t change anything. That puts Malm up to around 800k and drops Alamelhuda down to about 330k.
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Wasy Wins One, Loses One
Level: 23 (15000/30000/30000) Entries: 5/160 Prizes: $91,200 In the first hand, Eric Wasylenko raised under the gun to 60k and got a call from Shane Kozniuk in the cutoff as well as Mo Alamelhuda in the big blind. They all checked the [invalid notations] turn Wasy fired 70k and took it down.
In the very next hand, Alamelhuda limped the small blind, then jammed over Wasy’s big blind raise to 100k. “Such pretty cards,” Wasy said with a smile as he mucked his hand.
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Jayvee Lumahan Out in 6th Place for $4,760
Level: 23 (15000/30000/30000) Entries: 5/160 Prizes: $91,200 Eric Wasylenko raised under the gun to 60k, then called off a shove from big blind Jayvee Lumahan for 205k. It was a race between Wasy’s eights and ace-queen for Lumahan and the board of 4♣2♣4♠J♣7♠ didn’t improve Lumahan.
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79 Confirmed Entries for E7
Level: 11 (1000/2000/2000) Entries: 27/79 Prizes: $30,020 Entries are now closed for Event #7 with 79 entries in the field. That means 8 players will get a piece of just over $30k in prizes later tonight.
Event #7 Payouts
Place Prize 1 $10,210 2 $6,904 3 $4,503 4 $3,002 5 $1,981 6 $1,440 7 $1,110 8 $870 -
Skyler York Out in 7th Place for $3,740
Level: 22 (15000/25000/25000) Entries: 6/160 Prizes: $91,200 They are down to 6 players left now in Event #4 with Skyler York ending his day in 7th place. I missed the action while I was having my dinner.
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Brotherwood, Alamelhuda Stacking Big
Level: 22 (15000/25000/25000) Entries: 7/160 Prizes: $91,200 Shane Brotherwood is leading at the break, but Mo Alamelhuda is right on his heels.
S Player Chips 1 Shane Kozniuk 610,000 2 Shane Brotherwood 887,000 3 Skyler York 585,000 4 Mike Malm 250,000 5 Mo Alamelhuda 865,000 7 Jayvee Lumahan 300,000 9 Eric Wasylenko 500,000 -
Lumahan Shoves the Turn
Level: 21 (10000/20000/20000) Entries: 7/160 Prizes: $91,200 Shane Brotherwood opened to 45k from the hijack and Mo Alamelhuda called from the small blind, as did Jayvee Lumahan from the big. They all checked the 10♠4♠Q♠ flop but when Alamenhuda checked the 10♦ turn Lumahan shoved for about 200k, enough to push out the other two hands.
They are about 5 minutes from the next break and I’ll grab another round of chips counts then.
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Kyle Hartree Out in 8th Place for
Level: 20 (10000/15000/15000) Entries: 7/160 Prizes: $91,200 Shane Brotherwood raised early to 35k before Kyle Hartree shoved 100k from the small blind. Brotherwood called to the race between his sevens and the ace-queen for Hartree. Brotherwood flopped a seven on the 7♣5♥10♦J♣9♠ runout and Hartree was out in 8th place tonight.
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Colten Yamagishi Out in 9th Place for $2,420
Level: 19 (6000/12000/12000) Entries: 8/160 Prizes: $91,200 It was a massive cooler that sent Colten Yamagishi to the rail in 9th place today. Mo Alamelhuda opened from the middle to 25k and Yamagishi called from the hijack.
Alamelhuda bet 22k on the 10♠5♦9♦ flop and Yamagishi called. They both checked the 3♠ turn, and Alamelhuda checked the [invalid notations] river. Yamagishi through for a bit then slid out a bet of 81k. Alamelhuda came over the top with a check-shove to put Yamagishi at risk.
Yamagishi tanked for quite a while before he announced “Call” but his pocket kings were no good against the pocket aces of Alamelhuda.
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Kozniuk, Yamagishi Chip Up
Level: 19 (6000/12000/12000) Entries: 9/160 Prizes: $91,200 Inthe first hand, Shane Kozniuk opened to 25k and got calls from Mike Malm and Mo Alamelhuda in the blinds. It checked around to Kozniuk on the 7♦3♣A♠ flop and he fired 30k to take it down.
In the next hand, Skyler York raised the cutoff to 25k and Colten Yamagishi called from the big blind. Yamagishi check-called 16k on the flop and they both checked the turn on the board of 3♣J♣K♣10♦.
Both players checked the 8♣ river and Yamagishi showed K♥Q♠ for the win.
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61 Entries
Level: 7 (400/800/800) Entries: 39/61 Prizes: $23,180 I’m not able to watch this one very closely for the time being as Event #4 is still playing out their final table but the field for Event #7 is up to 61 entries for prizes of more than $23k. Level 7 has just begun and there are about 2 hours left to enter this game.
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Current Chips
Level: 19 (6000/12000/12000) Entries: 9/160 Prizes: $91,200 Level 19 has just begun with the final table still full. Mo Alamelhuda leads the way with 751k but Skyler York isn’t far behind with 727k while Eric Wasylenko is playing 567k with Shane Brotherwood also in the 500k club.
T-S Player Chips 3 – 1 Shane Kozniuk 367,000 3 – 2 Shane Brotherwood 513,000 3 – 3 Skyler York 727,000 3 – 4 Mike Malm 485,000 3 – 5 Mo Alamelhuda 751,000 3 – 6 Colten Yamagishi 100,000 3 – 7 Jayvee Lumahan 260,000 3 – 8 Kyle Hartree 211,000 3 – 9 Eric Wasylenko 567,000 -
Final Table Faces
Level: 17 (4000/8000/8000) Entries: 9/160 Prizes: $91,200 -
Cui’s Kings Cracked; Final Table Time
Level: 17 (4000/8000/8000) Entries: 9/160 Prizes: $91,200 The final table is now set and they are moving to the feature table on the stage. Xinrui Cui was the bubble to the final table after his kings saw a brutal flop against Eric Wasylenko.
Money was all in before the flop when Wasy raised the cutoff, then shoved over the reraise from Cui on the button. Cui snapped it off and was in good shape with kings over ace-jack for Wasy. The flop had other ideas, however, as the board ran out [invalid notations] to send Vui home in 10th place.
Stay tuned for pictures of the final nine.