Harveys Lake Tahoe Poker Tournaments

Michael Pearson is now a two-time winner of the World Series of Poker Circuit Harveys Tahoe Main Event. Pearson took down the 2019 edition of the $1,700 buy-in tournament Monday, coming out on top of a field with 424 total entries and taking home the first-place prize of $133,285.

Deposit bonuses are cash rewards you receive when you Poker Tournaments Harveys Lake Tahoe put money into a a USA online casino. Normally this is a percentage Poker Tournaments Harveys Lake Tahoe of the amount you deposit and could be Poker Tournaments Harveys Lake Tahoe 100% or more. Thus if you deposit €/£/$500 and are given a 100% deposit bonus, you will actually receive €/£/$1,000. Coaching & Training Coaching Advice Cash Game Poker Coaches Tournament / SNG Poker Coaches Poker News & Discussion News, Views. Harvey's Lake Tahoe - Nov. All the action took place over a two-day period inside the Harveys Lake Tahoe poker room and special events area, which is part of this year’s only WSOP Circuit stop in Northern Nevada.

Pearson also takes home his second career WSOP Circuit ring, with the first coming in the 2016 Harveys Tahoe Main Event. The San Francisco resident outlasted a final table full of accomplished tournament players, and bested Jeremy Kottler in the heads-up battle to take down the championship.

Pearson, who was down to his last four big blinds at one point with 13 players left, came all the back and scored the second-biggest cash of his career at the Harveys Casino poker room in Lake Tahoe, Nevada.

“You’re going to win and lose some pots in a tournament,” Pearson said. “But when you’re all in, you’ve got to win those. So I just tried to do that. Every time I was all in, I won the hand.”

Pearson was the short stack going into four-handed play, but rode a wave of big pots in the most important part of the tournament. Pearson doubled up through eventual fourth-place finisher Joe Brindle ($44,058), getting the best of a pocket nines versus ace-jack all-in showdown. Brindle exited on the next hand.

Minutes later, Pearson knocked out third-place finisher Charlie Coultas, and went into the heads-up battle against Kottler with the chip lead. Pearson never looked back after that, coming away with the win on a final day that took just four hours to conclude.

PlaceWinnerCountryPrize (USD)
1Michael PearsonUnited States$133,285
2Jeremy KottlerUnited States$82,379
3Charlie CoultasUnited States$59,824
4Joe BrindleUnited Kingdom$44,058
5Mitch GarshofskyUnited States$32,911
6Josh BurkhalterUnited States$24,942
7Nick PupilloUnited States$19,182
8Lee MarkholtUnited States$14,972
9Wes NallyUnited States$11,864
10Joe BurkeUnited States$9,547

Final Table Action

Day 3 started with a 10-handed final table, with Nick Pupillo seated on Pearson’s left. Other notable players at the table included Kottler (2nd, $82,379), Coultas (3rd, $59,824), Mitch Garshofsky (5th, $32,911) and Lee Markholt (8th, $14,972).

“It was tough. I did not like my seat draw at all,” Pearson said. “Nick has already busted me twice this year. So I didn’t like the positioning. But I just tried to be patient .”

Coultas came into the final day with a big chip lead, with 3,480,000 in chips, more than two million more than the next closest competitor, which was Wes Nally with 1,400,000.

The eliminations came fast and often on Day 3, as Joe Burke went out in 10th place just minutes into the day. Nally hit the rail next, and the tournament was eight-handed before the first level of the day, Level 26 (20000/40000/40000) was done.

Markholt, Pupillo and Josh Burkhalter all headed to the exit before the end of Level 27, and the Main Event was down to five players when the remaining field went on the first break of the day.

Brindle came back from the break as the chip leader, and went over the five million chip mark at one point. A couple of big pots devastated Brindle’s stack in Level 28, however, with both Kottler and Pearson doubling through Brindle.

Tournaments

Brindle’s exit in fourth place left Pearson, Kottler and Coultas as the final three, with Coultas on the short stack. Coultas lost the last of his 20 big blind stack to Pearson minutes into Level 29, with Coultas king-five suited getting the wrong end of an all-in preflop showdown against Pearson’s ace-jack.

Lake Tahoe Poker Tournament

Coultas elimination left Pearson with 7,500,000 chips against Kottler’s 5,000,000 in the heads-up battle, which was over before the end of the level as Pearson kept chipping away at Kottler’s stack.

Harveys Lake Tahoe Poker Room

The final hand saw Pearson’s ace-king get the best of Kottler’s ace-queen, which sealed the second career Harveys Tahoe Main Event win for Pearson.