Jay Patel Goes From the $5 Online Grind to London Poker Festival Champion

Matthew Pitt
Senior Editor
3 min read
Jay Patel

The decision Jay Patel made to invest in some poker coaching has reaped the rewards, and substantial rewards at that. Patel was grinding $5 online poker tournaments only a few months ago but can now call himself the 2024 London Poker Festival Main Event champion, an accolade that came with £79,370 in prize money.

Patel, possibly frustrated with the online poker grind, contacted Jamie Nixon, a member of Team Grosvenor Poker, and hired him as his poker coach. Whatever Nixon taught Patel worked wonders, as the student became the master and raked in a career-best score by some distance.

It has been quite the start to 2024 for Nixon's students. Sia Browne captured two titles at the Irish Poker Tour Galway Festival, and then another at the Westport Poker Festival, while Joseph McKenna triumphed in the Grosvenor 25/50 in Liverpool. Now Patel has found himself in the winner's enclosure.

London Poker Festival Main Event Final Table Results

RankPlayerPrize
1Jay Patel£79,370*
2David Costello£60,028*
3Gianmarco Kovari£60,602*
4Andrean Kostadinov£25,000
5Dillan Patel£20,000
6Douglas Hogan£17,500
7Stefan Dimitrov£15,000
8Thomas Winstone£12,500
9Jiaze Li£10,300

*reflects a three-way deal

The London Poker Festival Main Event drew in an 822-strong crowd, who created a £500,910 prize pool. The top 84 finishers won a slice of the pie, with payouts starting at £1,900.

Plenty of well-known grinders reached the money places, including Jack McDermott, James Rann, Martins Adeniya, Joe Hindry, Dara O'Kearney, Paddy Power Poker's Conor O'Driscoll, and Harry Lodge.

Each of the nine finalists locked in at least £10,300 for their efforts, and it was Jiaze Li who claimed that sum. Li is best known for winning the 2021 GUKPT Main Event that was part of that year's Grand Final.

Thomas Winstone busted in eighth for £12,500, with Stefan Dimitrov falling one place later and scooping a £15,000 score.

PokerStars and Paddy Power Share Schedule for 2024 Irish Poker Open

Sixth place and a career-best £17,500 went to Douglas Hogan, who almost doubled his lifetime live poker tournament earnings with this impressive result. There was another career-high payout at the final table because Dillan Patel received £20,000 for his fifth-place finish. Patel's previous best haul came in the 2022 Irish Poker Tour High Roller in London, which netted him £8,430.

Once Andrean Kostadinov fell in fourth for £25,000, the three surviving players agreed to a deal that massively reduced the pay jumps.

The deal worked out in Gianmarco Kovari's favor because he crashed out in third and banked an impressive £60,602.

David Costello's . Costello banked £60,028 thanks to the deal, more than twice the amount he received for his fifth-place finish in the 2016 Irish Poker Open.

With Kovari out of the way, Patel and David Costello locked horns heads-up. Whether it was the Poker Gods, Lady Luck, or Patel putting Nixon's training into action, Patel came out on top, got his hands on his first live trophy and a cool £79,370. Costello consoled himself with a £60,028 runner-up prize, more than twice the amount he received for his fifth-place finish in the 2016 Irish Poker Open.

London Poker Festival Results

Although Patel's Main Event victory was by far the largest payout, five other champions took home five-figure scores.

Sebastien Jung won £19,000 after taking down the £500 London Poker Cup, Glen Gaines raked in £18,400 (including bounties) in the mystery bounty event, while Guillaume Soumier received £17,213 for his victory in the £1,650 Omaha Championship.

Shout out also to Christopher Yong, who took down The London £250 for £16,000 only a couple of days after triumphing in the London Festival Opener for £5,000.

EventBuy-inEntrantsPrize PoolChampionPrize
Main Event£700822£500,90Jay Patel£79,370
London Poker Cup£500152£68,175Sebastien Jung£19,000
Mystery Bounty£500252£110,565Glen Gaines£18,400*
Omaha Championship£1,65048£75,000Guillaume Soumier£17,213
The London 250£250287£61,565Christopher Yong£16,000
£1K One Dayer£1,00053£46,508Peter Murphy£15,115
London Festival Opener£150146£18,505Christopher Yong£5,000
Omaha 7-Max£30071£18,690Anonymous£4,955
Omaha 7-max 4/5 Card£30056£14,745Lorenc Boci£3,735
Omaha 7-Max£30042£11,057Tan Le£3,702
NLHE Turbo£15095£12,040Anonymous£3,510
NLHE Turbo Freezeout£15084£10,645Iulius Buzetoiu£3,195
Women's Championship£20057£10,005Lydia Cugudda£2,755
NLHE£15079£15,000Marios Nicolaou£2,420
Last Chance Turbo£15055£6,970Alex Isen£1,725
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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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