UKIPT Birmingham: Ted Jackson-Spivack Wins the Main Event

Matthew Pitt
Senior Editor
2 min read
UKIPT Winner

Ted Jackson-Spivack is the last ever UKIPT Main Event champion after he triumphed in the Birmingham leg, defeating Ludovic Geilich heads up to secure the £35,000 first-place prize and the coveted winner’s trophy.

UKIPT Birmingham Final Table Results

PlacePlayerPrize
1Ted Jackson-Spivack£35,000
2Ludovic Geilich£23,600
3Krishna Nagaraju£16,464
4David Clarkson£13,480
5Graham Parkin£10,670
6Jeremy Wray£8,100
7Nathan Webb£5,920
8David Wilkes£4,330
9Ben Morrison£3,580

Twenty-two players returned to the Genting Casino Star City on Oct. 9. only five minutes after the restart Konrad Zalewski was sent to the rail when his ace-seven failed to improve enough to best the pocket jacks in Jackson-Spivack’s hand.

A steady stream of eliminations started with Dominic Kay, Adam Owen, Ali Zihni, Neil Raine, Timothy Chung and Team PokerStars Pro Jake Cody (falling in 11th place).

When Teymour Sabet crashed out in 10th place, the final table was set.

It took two hours for the first final table casualty, with that dubious honor going to Ben Morrison, whose ace-king lost to the pocket nines of Jackson-Spivack, then David Wilkes’ jacks were second best in an all-in pot involving Krishna Nagaraju who held queens.

Seventh place went to Nathan Webb after a clash with Geilich didn’t go as planned. Geilich also sent Jeremy Wray to the rail when he won a coin flip with an ace-king against a pair of tens.

The players gained even more elbow room at the table when Graham Parkin’s tens proved no match for Jackson-Spivack’s jacks, before David Clarkson’s ace-jack lost to Jackson-Spivack’s kings to leave only three players in the hunt for the title of champion.

Those three became two when Jackson-Spivack’s nine-eight of clubs went head to head with Nagaraju’s sevens and flopped two pair, which held through the turn and river.

Jackson-Spivack held a 4,000,000 to 2,000,000 chip advantage over Geilich. On the fourth hand of the heads-up battle, Geilich limped in with QQ and then instantly called when Spivack-Jackson set him all-in with what turned out to be K4. Geilich’s queens remained best on the 7105 flop, fell behind on the K turn and were completely crushed by the 4 river.

Lead image courtesy of the PokerStars Blog

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Matthew Pitt
Senior Editor

Matthew Pitt hails from Leeds, West Yorkshire, in the United Kingdom, and has worked in the poker industry since 2008, and worked for PokerNews since 2010. In September 2010, he became the editor of PokerNews. Matthew stepped away from live reporting duties in 2015, and now concentrates on his role of Senior Editor for the PokerNews.

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