$2,500 High Roller
Day 2 Completed
$2,500 High Roller
Day 2 Completed
Eight players returned to Day 2 action for the 2019 Canterbury Park Fall Poker Classic $2,500 High Roller with their eyes set on victory out of the 28 entries to have joined. Four and a half hours later, a champion emerged in Ian Matakis, who earned $32,242 for his victory.
“This is an awesome birthday present,” Matakis said in an interview afterward. When Matakis joined the tournament yesterday he was 21 years of age. Now a year older and wiser, he was able to wade his way through a final table that he described as very tough, saying that “nobody was giving anything up, everybody was playing to win, and it was a lot of fun.”
Matakis’ journey to triumph saw him take a big stack into the later levels of Day 1 before running pocket jacks into the pocket queens of eventual third-place finisher Jon Hanner ($12,897), who then took over the chip lead and held onto it for the remainder of the evening. Matakis then found himself fourth in chips among the eight who returned for Day 2 with a slightly above-average stack.
Blake Bohn entered the day sixth in chips and became the first elimination when he shoved ace-queen into the pocket kings of Vic Peppe just 15 minutes into the day. Twenty-five minutes later, Daniel Schmidtknecht was the next to fall when he three-bet ace-ten into Joseph Beasy’s pocket queens and was unable to get there.
Meanwhile, Matakis started the day trending downward and eventually found himself short. He won a coinflip with pocket nines against eventual runner-up Jeff Petronack's ($19,345) ace-jack to get back in the mix, leaving Petronack short along the way. However, Petronack would soon find a double and claw his way back into contention as Kou Vang became the next to hit the rail when his ace-six was no good against Peppe’s ace-jack.
Play then went on for an hour, with Petronack taking the chip lead in that time. Peppe became the shortest stack and was the next to exit when he shoved ace-nine all in preflop and ran into Matakis’ ace-king. The tournament was then on the bubble with four remaining and three getting paid, and play continued for another 40-minute level until Beasy’s ace-queen was unable to get there against Petronack’s pocket fours.
It wasn’t long after the bubble burst until the then-short-stacked Hanner lost a coinflip with pocket eights to Matakis’ ace-king to send him home in third place and take the tournament heads up, with Petronack entering the match with nearly a two-to-one chip lead over Matakis.
However, Matakis took the momentum to begin the match. He pulled even, took the lead, and then pulled away before getting stacks in with king-jack suited against Petronack’s king-seven. A seven in the window scored Petronack a double and gave him back the momentum as he then accumulated up to nearly three-fourths of the chips in play at one point.
Matakis did not give up, though. He won a large pot with a turn shove and then picked off a river bluff from Petronack to get stacks back to nearly even. He never looked back, pulling away as the blinds got high enough that he shoved all in with eight-seven suited from the small blind on the final hand of the tournament. Petronack called with king-queen and Matakis flopped a nine-high straight. A jack on the turn gave Petronack outs to a redraw, but he would not fill up on the river to leave him as the runner up.
As for Matakis’ plans in the immediate future, he said with a smile: “I am going to hop in the Main (Event) right away. I would like to get tomorrow off if possible!”
PokerNews' coverage of the 2019 Fall Poker Classic at Canterbury Park continues with updates from the $1,100 Main Event.
Ian Matakis was in the small blind and announced he was all in, putting Jeff Petronack to the test for his remaining chips.
Petronack looked at his cards, at Matakis, and then at his stack. He smiled as he deliberated, thinking about his action for close to 30 seconds.
"I'm gonna call," said Petronack, turning over .
Matakis showed .
The flop fell , improving Matakis to a straight and leaving Petronack drawing extremely thin on staying alive in the tournament. The turn came .
"You still have a ten," said Matakis, pointing out that despite having flopped a straight, he still did not have the victory quite yet clinched. The river resulted in a missed straight draw for Petronack, giving him a pair of kings that were second-best against Matakis' nine-high straight to earn him the victory as Petronack became the runner up of the event, taking home $19,345 for his efforts.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Ian Matakis |
840,000
308,000
|
308,000 |
|
||
Jeff Petronack | Busted |
Players are back in their seats and cards are back in the air as Ian Matakis and Jeff Petronack are both ready to play, cutting the break a few minutes short to get back in on the action.
Level: 21
Blinds: 8,000/16,000
Ante: 8,000
The remaining two players are on a 10-minute break. Official chip counts have been provided.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Ian Matakis |
532,000
56,000
|
56,000 |
|
||
Jeff Petronack |
308,000
-56,000
|
-56,000 |
Jeff Petronack opened his small blind to 25,000 and Ian Matakis announced he was all in. Petronack immediately called, eager to show the bullets he was dealt.
Jeff Petronack:
Ian Matakis:
The board ran out , giving Petronack top set and securing his double by the turn to bring him back into contention.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Ian Matakis |
476,000
-140,000
|
-140,000 |
|
||
Jeff Petronack |
364,000
140,000
|
140,000 |
After winning a recent pot against Jeff Petronack, Ian Matakis defended his big blind to an open of 25,000 by Petronack. The flop came [4sadh] and Matakis checked. Petronack threw out a continuation-bet of 35,000 and Matakis called.
Action checked through the turn and river to take the hand to showdown.
Matakis tabled for a rivered pair of kings and Petronack sent his cards to the muck. With the pot, Matakis has now accumulated almost three-quarters of the chips in play with under 10 minutes remaining in the level.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Ian Matakis |
616,000
225,000
|
225,000 |
|
||
Jeff Petronack |
224,000
-225,000
|
-225,000 |
Jeff Petronack opened to 25,000 from the small blind and Ian Matakis defended his big blind to see a flop of . Matakis checked to Petronack, who made a continuation-bet of 35,000. Matakis called.
Both players checked through the turn and river to take the hand to showdown.
Matakis showed for an ace kicker to the board's pair of deuces. Petronack showed and earned the pot with two pair, fives up to take a slight chip lead as the match continues.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Jeff Petronack |
449,000
34,000
|
34,000 |
Ian Matakis |
391,000
-34,000
|
-34,000 |
|
Ian Matakis defended his big blind against an open to 25,000 by Jeff Petronack out of the small blind. The flop came and Matakis checked. Petronack made a continuation-bet of 40,000 and Matakis called.
The turn was and both players checked. The river fell and Matakis threw out a bet of what looked to be 41,000. Petronack threw his cards into the muck immediately and Matakis took back his bet, awaiting the pot that would give him an ever-so-slight chip lead as stacks now are almost dead even as the match nears 40 minutes in length.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Ian Matakis |
425,000
60,000
|
60,000 |
|
||
Jeff Petronack |
415,000
-60,000
|
-60,000 |