Rytis Strigunas Secures the PartyPoker Championship Main Event Title

Matthew Pitt
Senior Editor
3 min read
PartyPoker Championship Winter Edition

The PartyPoker Championship (PPC) Winter Edition is over after the champion of the $500,000 guaranteed Main Event crowned its champion on January 17. Six Day 1s accommodated 1,089 entrants, who created a guarantee-busting $544,500 prize pool that the top 164 finishers shared. Ireland-based Rytis Strigunas is the player that will forever be known as this Main Event's champion, and the player that has $78,160 of the prize pool nestled in his PartyPoker account.

PPC Winter Main Event Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Rytis StrigunasIreland$78,160*
2Victor Oliveira GiraoBrazil$72,827*
3Dan WilsonUnited Kingdom$42,314
4Hristo DimitrovBulgaria$27,649
5Dalton HoboldBrazil$18,947
6Simon BeckmannAustria$14,635
7Jesus Martinez UceroEstoinia$11,540
8Fabian SchmidtAustria$9,146
9Ramon KropmannsBrazil$7,213

*reflects a heads-up deal

The first of the six PPC Winter Main Event flights shuffled up and dealt on Christmas Day, although Strigunas did not enter the mix until Day 1E on January 16. Striganus turned his 500,000 starting stack in the $530 buy-in tournament into 4,109,314 chips, which were enough for seventh place on the Day 1E leaderboard. He built upon his solid start, navigating his way through the 164-strong Day 2 field and finding himself at the final table.

Strigunas left plenty of elite-level grinders in his wake as he marched towards the nine-handed final table. Elio Fox, Ognyan Dimov, Roman Hrabec, Jerry Odeen, and Team PartyPoker's Matt Staples reached Day 2 but fell outside of the top 100 finishing places.

Michael Gathy
Michael Gathy was one of a hist of stars to cash in the PPC Winter Main Event

Tomi Brouk, Fabiano Kovalski, four-time WSOP bracelet winner Michael Gathy, Niklas Astedt, Preben Stokkan, and Alexandros Theologis went deep but fell short of a place at the final table where the bulk of the prize money lay in wait.

The eliminations of Ramon Kropmanns ($7,213) and Fabian Schmidt ($9,146) reduced the field to only seven players, with all seven stars now guaranteed to take home a prize weighing in at $11,000 or more. Jesus Martinez Ucero ($11,540) was the first recipient of such a five-figure prize.

Austria's last representative, Simon Beckmann, bowed out in sixth ($14,635) before Brazil's Dalton Hobold ($18,947), who had been among the chip leaders from start to finish, fell in fifth.

Dalton Hobold
Dalton Hobold came unstuck in fifth place

The field grew even shorter with the untimely demise of Hristo Dimitrov ($27,649) before progressing to heads-up when the 2016 Irish Open Main Event champion Dan Wilson ($42,314) crashed out.

Originally, first and second place was scheduled to pay $89,415 and $61,571, respectively, a difference of almost $28,000. That pay jump proved too much for the heads-up duo of Strigunas and Victor Oliveira Girao, and the pair struck a deal. The deal ultimately resulted in Girao finishing second for $72,827, and Stigunas walked away with the title of champion, an accolade that came with $78,160 in prize money.

New Online Tournament Schedule Incoming?

It looks like PartyPoker is revamping its online tournament schedule and doing so imminently. A popup appears when you log into your PartyPoker account saying to watch this space for more details.

Furthermore, PartyPoker's social media team tweeted on January 15 that a new tournament schedule with new weekend tournaments, leaderboards, and MTT-related promotions is incoming. PokerNews will bring you details of the new look PartyPoker MTT schedule as soon as it becomes available.

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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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