LIVE Reporting: Pure Poker Tour Series #6

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:


  • Final Table Faces

    Level:18 (6000/12000/12000)
    Entries:7/120
    Prizes:$57,000 ($33,000 prizes, $24,000 bounties)

    While a couple of these pictures have already been posted on the bustouts for 9th and 8th places, here is a look at the nine players who made the final table tonight.

  • Jason Law Out in 8th Place for $1,203

    Level:17 (5000/10000/10000)
    Entries:7/120
    Prizes:$57,000 ($33,000 prizes, $24,000 bounties)
    Jason Law

    They are quickly down to 7 players left on the final table after Jason Law hit the cage for 8th place. I missed the action as it happened immediately after the 9th place bust.

  • Daniel O’Leary Out in 9th Place for $981

    Level:17 (5000/10000/10000)
    Entries:8/120
    Prizes:$57,000 ($33,000 prizes, $24,000 bounties)
    Daniel O’Leary

    Daniel O’Leary ran into on the first hand at the final table. He shoved from the big blind after an early open and a call from the small blind Wilfred McNeely. The original opener folded but McNeely snapped it off with aces into kings for O’Leary. The board missed O’Leary and McNeely rivered an ace for the set.

  • Final Table Time

    Level:17 (5000/10000/10000)
    Entries:9/120
    Prizes:$57,000 ($33,000 prizes, $24,000 bounties)

    Zhi Jiang was the bubble to the final table tonight to bring them down to 9 remaining. The final 9 are now moving to the feature table on the stage to finish it out.

  • Final Table Bubble

    Level:17 (5000/10000/10000)
    Entries:10/120
    Prizes:$57,000 ($33,000 prizes, $24,000 bounties)

    They are down to 10 after Ed Zurawell hit the rail shortly after Level 17 began. After the next elimination, they’ll break down to the final table and move to the feature table on the stage.

  • Final 11 Stacks

    Level:17 (5000/10000/10000)
    Entries:11/120
    Prizes:$57,000 ($33,000 prizes, $24,000 bounties)

    They are down to 11 left at the break following Level 16. Benny Sarnelli was the first player out in the money tonight for $670 and there is one more payout at that amount for 11th place. Deven Lane is the chip leader at the moment with 560k while Dean Martel is a distant second with 430k.

    Stacks for the Final 11

    T-SPlayerChips
    11 – 1
    11 – 2Mal Hagan419,000
    11 – 3Jason Law102,000
    11 – 4Ron Lauzon155,000
    11 – 5
    11 – 6Deven Lane560,000
    11 – 7
    11 – 8Zhi Jiang259,000
    11 – 9
    12 – 1Daniel O’Leary200,000
    12 – 2
    12 – 3
    12 – 4Steve Chung348,000
    12 – 5Wilfred McNeely235,000
    12 – 6Dan Martel430,000
    12 – 7Ed Zurawell84,000
    12 – 8
    12 – 9Ian Alvarado165,000
  • Sarnoski Bubbles the Money

    Level:16 (4000/8000/8000)
    Entries:12/120
    Prizes:$57,000 ($33,000 prizes, $24,000 bounties)

    Keith Sarnoski was the bubble tonight. He shoved fumes against Deven Lane, and had the best of it with eights over fours, but Lane spiked a four for a set and the win. The remaining players are all guaranteed at least $670.

  • Deven Lane Gets a Double Plus

    Level:16 (4000/8000/8000)
    Entries:13/120
    Prizes:$57,000 ($33,000 prizes, $24,000 bounties)

    It was a huge hand that saw three players all in. Karim Koval was the short stack with ace-jack off, Deven Lane was the second stack with pocket jacks, and Haven Taylor was the big stack with pocket fives. The jacks held and Lane took the bounty from Koval and grabbed a double from Taylor.

    That left Taylor short and she was out the following hand to bring the field down to 13. The clock is now paused for hand-for-hand play with 2 minutes coming off the clock manually for each hand played.

  • Final Two Tables

    Level:16 (4000/8000/8000)
    Entries:18/120
    Prizes:$57,000 ($33,000 prizes, $24,000 bounties)

    They are down to 18 left in the Big Bounty now with Level 16 just underway. That puts them 6 eliminations off the money, and five away from hand-for-hand bubble play. It looks like Steve Chung is the leader right now with more than 410k, but Mal Hagan looks to be close to 400k on the other table as well.

    Final 18 Players in Bounty

    T-SPlayer
    11 – 1Haven Taylor
    11 – 2Mal Hagan
    11 – 3Colten Yamagishi
    11 – 4Ron Lauzon
    11 – 5Keith Sarnoski
    11 – 6Deven Lane
    11 – 7Benny Sarnelli
    11 – 8Zhi Jiang
    11 – 9Karim Koval
    12 – 1Daniel O’Leary
    12 – 2Tai Santos
    12 – 3Brian Morgan
    12 – 4Steve Chung
    12 – 5Wilfred McNeely
    12 – 6Dan Martel
    12 – 7Ed Zurawell
    12 – 8Jason Law
    12 – 9Ian Alvarado
  • 120 Entries Confirmed

    Level:9 (600/1200/1200)
    Entries:47/120
    Prizes:$57,000 ($33,000 prizes, $24,000 bounties)

    The entries are all counted and official at 120. That puts 12 paid spots at the end of the night with 37 players still competing for one of those prizes.

    Big Bounty Payouts

    PlacePrize
    1$9,187
    2$6,331
    3$4,115
    4$3,165
    5$2,437
    6$1,931
    7$1,519
    8$1,203
    9$981
    10$791
    11$670
    12$670
  • Just under 15 Minutes to Enter

    Level:8 (500/1000/1000)
    Entries:52/120
    Prizes:$57,000 ($33,000 prizes, $24,000 bounties)

    The field is up to 120 entries now with a bit more than 10 minutes remaining in the dinner break. They’ll return to action in Level 9 with blinds at 600/1200/1200 and right now it looks like 12 players will get paid later tonight, but there’s still time for a few more entries before it all shuts down for the day.

  • Biggest One-Day Field of the Series

    Level:7 (400/800/800)
    Entries:59/112
    Prizes:$53,200 ($30,800 prizes, $22,400 bounties)

    There are about 10 minutes to play in Level 7 with entries open for another full level plus the break to follow Level 8. That puts the end of entries for this one about an hour away, but the field is already the biggest single-day field of the series with 112 on the board.

  • Up to 89 Entries in Level 5

    Level:5 (300/500/500)
    Entries:64/89
    Prizes:$42,275 ($24,475 prizes, $17,800 bounties)

    The Big Bounty field is getting big with 89 entries on the board early in Level 5. That puts the combined prizes at more than $42k with a bit more than two hours left to enter this one. This looks like it could be one of the biggest single-day fields of the series so far.

  • 54 Entries to Start Level 3

    Level:3 (200/300/300)
    Entries:50/54
    Prizes:$25,650 ($14,850 prizes, $10,800 bounties)

    They are up to 54 entries in the Big Bounty now at the start of Level 3. Among the players in the mix so far are Ali Razzaq, Mo Alamelhuda, Stefan Maloney, DJ Sharma, Ron Lauzon, Haven Taylor, Thomas Taylor, Zhi Jiang, Deven Lane, Preston Stevenson, Benny Sarnelli, Evan Thomas, Michael St. Pierre-Porter, Justin Pennell, Juno Lau, Ryan Comely, Garry Sandhu, Suru Patel, Andy Wong, Pav Braich, Ian Alvarado, Ed Zurawell, Steve Chung, Daniel O’Leary, and Graham Lupton.

  • Good Start for Big Bounty

    Level:1 (100/100/100)
    Entries:38/39
    Prizes:$18,525 ($10,725 prizes, $7,800 bounties)

    Level 1 is nearly complete with 39 entries on the board. That puts the combined prizes over $18k with about 4 hours left to get into the game.

  • Head-Hunting Wednesday

    Event:Event #11: $560 NLH Big Bounty ($300 + $200 + $60)
    Date:Nov 27, 3 PM
    Blinds:30 Minutes
    Starting Stack:25k
    Late Entry:8 Levels (~7:45 PM)
    Day 1 Ends:One-Day Event

    The side game on Wednesday is the NLH Big Bounty. The action starts at 3 PM with $200 on every player’s head and $300 going to the prizes later in the day.

    Late entry runs for the first 8 levels and closes after the dinner break when they sit down for Level 9. That should put the final entry at about 7:45 PM.

    The opening stack is 25k and levels will be 30 minutes long throughout the game. This is a straight bounty game with no progressive component, so every bustout earns the winner another $200.

    I likely won’ be over on this game until later in the play as Day 2 of the High Roller will be running alongside this one, but I expect I’ll make it over to cover the end of this on at least.

  • Garry Sandhu Wins 6-Max for

    Level:22 (10000/20000/20000)
    Entries:1/73
    Prizes:$55,480
    Garry Sandhu Wins 6-Max

    Garry Sandhu was the chip leader for most of the final table tonight, though Ali Razzaq did take a lead during heads-up play. Sandhu and Razzaq were the two top stacks for most of the FT so it wasn’t much of a surprise that they got heads up tonight.

    Sandhu survived an all-in when he flopped two pair and Razzaq turned an ace. The money went in on the river when Sandhu shoved, and after Razzaq called, he was down to about 350k. He fought back to about 600k with a double shortly after, but that was as close as he got. In the final hand, his pocket threes were racing against king-queen for Sandhu and the threes looked to be holding until Sandhu found a king on the river.

    Final Results from 6-Max

    PlacePlayerPrize
    1 Garry Sandhu$17,757
    2 Ali Razzaq$11,650
    3 Daniel Lefebvre$7,767
    4 Graham Lupton$5,548
    5 Stephen Dauphinais$4,161
    6 DJ Sharma$2,995
    7 Mike Malm$2,330
    8 Michael “Berny” Bernstein$1,830
    9 Colten Yamagishi$1,442
  • Ali Razzaq Out in 2nd Place for $11,650

    Level:22 (10000/20000/20000)
    Entries:1/73
    Prizes:$55,480

    The 6-Max is now over with Ali Razzaq taking the runner-up spot today. He was close to a double back to even but drowned on the river. The money went in preflop with Razzaq on pocket threes against the king-queen for Sandhu. The 107J4K board ran clean for Razzaq’s pair until the river king sunk him for second place.

  • Razzaq Doubles, Still Short

    Level:21 (10000/20000/20000)
    Entries:2/73
    Prizes:$55,480

    Ali Razzaq just flushed to a double, giving him about 550k now. Garry Sandhu limped in, then snapped it off when Razzaq shoved for 245k. Sandhu was well ahead with ace-king of clubs against queen-nine of spades fro Razzaq. Sandhu turned his king on the board of 492KQ but it was Razzaq’s flush card as well. Sandhu still has the lead by about 1.5m to 500k.

  • Sandhu Back to the Lead

    Level:21 (10000/20000/20000)
    Entries:2/73
    Prizes:$55,480

    Ali Razzaq had chipped up into a slight lead but he’s down to about 350k now after a big hand. He opened to 50k and got the call from Garry Sandhu. Sandhu check-called for 40k on the 6K7 flop.

    Sandhu check-raised from 50k to 200k on the A turn and Razzaq called. Sandhu put it all in on the 10 river and Razzaq hit the tank for about a minute before announcing “Call”. Sandhu’s king-seven for two pair was best against the ace0nine top pair for Razzaq and Sandhu doubled to a big lead and left Razzaq pretty short.

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