2019 Ante Up Poker Tour Spring Poker Classic

Main Event
Day: 2
Event Info

2019 Ante Up Poker Tour Spring Poker Classic

Final Results
Winner
Mantas Stikelis
Winning Hand
aq
Prize
$18,189
Event Info
Buy-in
$360
Entries
319
Level Info
Level
22
Blinds
40,000 / 80,000
Ante
80,000

Mantas Stikelis Wins 2019 Ante Up Poker Tour Spring Poker Classic Main Event

Level 22 : 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
Mantas Stikelis
Mantas Stikelis

Mantas Stikelis, from Lithuania, just won the 2019 Ante Up Poker Tour Spring Poker Classic Main $360 Event after outlasting 319 players. He earned $18,189 for for his first place finish. He will also appear on the cover of March 2019 issue of Ante Up Magazine and secure a spot in the 2019 Ante Up World Championship for his victory.

Overall, the tournament saw a field of 319 entries, creating a prize pool of $95,700 and smashing the $75,000 guarantee.

When asked how he felt about his victory, Stikelis answered: “Great. I ran so pure at the final table. I was winning every showdown.”

Stikelis is a poker professional and when he is not home, he is traveling the world to follow the game.

“I live in Lithuania but I’m only there in the summer. We don't have much poker there, so in the winter, I’m usually traveling around the world to go to some stops and play online. I don't play high stakes though. The online days are way harder now.”

His decision to play the tournament was a last-minute one. In fact, he was only in Arizona to visit family.

“I didn’t plan on playing anything. I was just visiting my family and I saw they had this tournament online so I decided to jump in and it worked.’’

After taking a first shot at this event and not finding a bag, he fired another bullet and managed to bag the second biggest stack of his field. “I was raising and everyone kept folding,’’ he said. ‘’It was an easy field,’’ he added.

The final day started with 49 competitors returning to the tournament area. With 45 of them being guaranteed a min-cash of $526, the money bubble burst within the first level of Day 2. Eric Oconnell was responsible for bursting the bubble after eliminating Marcela Hinojos and right after, the players started hitting the rail fast and furious.

The unofficial table was reached at Level 19 of the tournament with the elimination of Mikai Smith ($1,483) and played slowed significantly from this point forward.

Final Table Action

Stikelis started the unofficial table as the chip leader and quickly started applying pressure on the rest of the table. Indeed, he was responsible for the first elimination of the table when he called with queen-jack Daniel Breeze’s shove. Breeze held ace-eight but Stikelis flopped a jack to win the pot.

Johnny Large (9th place - $2,105) and Gregory O’Donahue (8th place- $2,871) were his next victims. O’Donahue shoved with pocket jacks. Large called for less with pocket fours and Stikelis found a pair of queens on the cutoff in the perfect spot to call it off and win, sending both of his opponents to the exit.

This was not the only double knockout of the final table. In fact, Basketball star Earl Barron was credited for the elimination of Andrew Conway in 7th place ($3,828) and Michael Kahn in 6th place ($4,784) in a three-way all in. Conway and Kahn only had a few big blinds behind. Conway shoved with jack-seven and got called by Kahn with ace-nine. Barron found ace-king in the small blind to also call, and held, ending both of his opponents' tournament lives.

Greg Brewer was knocked out next. He ran his queen-jack into Stikelis's ace-nine. Stikelis flopped an ace and Brewer was sent packing in 5th place ($4,785).

Alex Flores, last year winner’s of this event was close to going back-to back. However, he was next to go. He shoved his last chips with ace-deuce and got called by Stikelis with ten-four. Stikelis turned two pair to rake in the pot and Flores was sent out in 4th place for $7,178.

Earl Barron (3rd place - $8,852) followed him to the rail soon after when he ran his ace-jack into Jesus Sicaeros ace-queen and couldn’t find any help.

The heads-up portion of play lasted only two levels. Stikelis held a lead against Sicaeros. Sicaeros managed to get some chips his way and gain some hope at the beginning. However, that didn’t last long and in the final hand Sicaeros turned a pair of aces and moved all in, in the dark, before the river was dealt, with ace-ten in a pot of over two million. Stikelis who had turned top two pair with ace-queen snap-called to win the tournament. Sicaeros earned $13,159 for his runner-up finish.

Final Table Payouts

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Mantas StikelisLithuania$18,189
2Jesus SicaerosUnited States$13,159
3Earl BarronUnited States$8,852
4Alex FloresUnited States$7,178
5Gregory BrewerUnited Stated$5,752
6Michael KahnUnited States$4,785
7Andrew ConwayUnited States$3,828
8Gregory O’DonahueUnited States$2,871
9Johnny LargeUnited States$2,105

Some other players who cashed include Gabriel Felipe (27th place - $718), Jonah Coe (23rd place - $813), Brian Perzinski (14th place - $1,196), and Joseph Villhauer (12th place - $1,483).

That wraps up the PokerNews live coverage for this event while cards are in the air in multiple other tournaments at this moment. The next Ante Up Poker Tour stop will be the Ante Up World Championship and Ante Up Norcal Classic at California's Thunder Valley Casino from July 7-29, 2019. Click here for more details.

Tags: Alex FloresAndrew ConwayAnthony ReateguiBrian PerzinskiEarl BarronEric OconnellGreg BrewerGregory BrewerHarry LodgeJack MaskillJeffrey TrudeauJesus SicaerosJoe McKeehenJonah CoeJoseph VillhauerJoshua TurnerMichael Kahn