Ankush Mandavia Wins 2021 Card Player Poker Tour Venetian Main Event

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Posted: Tue, Feb 23, 21, 2:17 AM

Ankush Mandavia has won the 2021 Card Player Poker Tour Venetian $2,500 buy-in no-limit hold’em main event. The 33-year-old poker pro from Kalamazoo, Michigan defeated a field of 652 entries to. Our great partnership with an experienced and tested poker platform allows us to offer our poker players No Rake, which is an absolute game changer. The first year we will be totally free for a limited amount.

Ankush Mandavia has won the 2021 Card Player Poker Tour Venetian $2,500 buy-in no-limit hold’em main event. The 33-year-old poker pro from Kalamazoo, Michigan defeated a field of 652 entries to earn the title and the top payout of $260,000 after striking a heads-up deal with Anselmo Villarreal. This was the fifth-largest score of Mandavia’s career, and it brought his lifetime earnings to just shy of $5.4 million.

In addition to the trophies and the money, Mandavia was also awarded 1,260 Card Player Player of the Year points as the champion of this event. This win alone was enough to catapult him into fourth place in the POY race standings.

“It’s amazing. This is actually my first tournament back,” said Mandavia after coming out on top. “When I went to register and got a player’s card they told me it had been exactly one year since I last played here. That’s kinda crazy, but it feels good.”

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The huge turnout of 652 entries for this event saw the $500,000 guarantee nearly tripled, with a final prize pool of $1,467,000 paid out among the top 72 finishers. Just 27 players made it to the final day of the event, with Mandavia sitting in 18th place when action resumed.

The action was fast and furious during the early levels, with 17 eliminations in the first four hours of the day. Plenty of big names hit the rail as the field was quickly narrowed down to a final table, including Justin Lapka (25th – $9,682), Scott Stewart (24th – $11,589), Frank Marasco (23rd – $11,589), Jordan Cristos (19th – $11,589), TK Miles (17th – $11,589), Stanley Lee (13th – $16,137), and start-of-day chip leader James Anderson (11th – $19,071).

By the time the official eight-handed final table was set, Tim Capretta had worked his way into the chip lead, with Mandavia sitting on the next-largest stack. Three-time World Series of Poker bracelet winner Kristen Bicknell and World Poker Tour main event winner Alex Foxen, who are a couple, both made the final table. This was not the first time the pair achieved that feat here at Venetian. In 2018, the two poker pros made the final table of a $5,000 buy-in Mid-States Poker Tour event together, finishing in first and second for a combined total of $439,000.

Qing Liu was the first to be eliminated at the final table, with his pocket aces being cracked by Bicknell’s pocket jacks. Liu earned $24,939 while Bicknell climbed into the middle of the pack. Seven-handed action continued for quite a while, with multiple short-stack double-ups along the way. Mandavia overtook the lead during this stretch, winning a massive pot with a floped straight against the turned set of Capretta.

Yosif Nawabi’s run in this event came to an end when his A9 ran into the pocket queens of Alex Foxen, just moments after Foxen had spiked a gutshot to double up through Nawabi. The pocket pair held up and Nawabi was knocked out in seventh place ($35,208).

Coin

Alex Foxen was the short stack when the next key hand arose. With blinds of 80,000-160,000 and a big-blind ante of 160,000, Foxen raised to 680,000 as the first to act. Capretta called from the hijack and the flop brought the 1082. Foxen shoved for 550,000 and Caprett called with AJ. Foxen rolled over the J8 for a leading pair of eights. The 10 on the turn kep him ahead, but the A on the river gave Capretta the winning hand. Foxen earned $45,477 for his sixth-place showing. The score increased his career earnings to $17,395,831.

A preflop race determined the next player to be eliminated. Derek Gregory called all-in from the big blind facing a shove from Kristin Bicknell out of the small blind. Gregory held the QJ, while Bicknell had 33. Gregory failed to improve and was knocked out in fifth place ($60,147).

Kristen Bicknell climbed into the chip lead early in four-handed action, while Mandavia had fallen to the bottom of the leaderboard. He found a double-up with pocket eights against Bicknell’s A-7 offsuit to give himself some breathing room. Bicknell, on the other hand, continued to see her stack dwindle as short-handed action continued. In the end, she got all-in with 55 racing against the AK of Anselmo Villarreal. The board came down K63710 and Villarreal’s pair of kings sent Bicknell home with $90,954 for her latest deep run, brought her career tournament earnings to $5,525,426.

Mandavia picked off a multi-street bluff from Villarreal to regain the lead during three-handed action. Villarreal was left quite short but doubled through Capretta to regain his footing. Not long after that hand, the two clashed again. With the flop showing AA9, Capretta made a bet of 1,000,00. Villarreal called and the turn brought the 3. Capretta moved all-in for 3,400,000. Villarreal made the call, having his opponent covered by a single 25,000 tournament chip. Villareal showed Q9 for aces and nines. Capretta had been making a move with K10. The river brought the 3 and Capretta was knocked out in third place, earning $132,030.

With that, Villarreal entered heads-up play with 13,855,000 to Mandavia’s 12,225,000. The two paused the action to discuss a deal. They ultimately agreed to redistribute the remaining prize pool, with Mandavia taking home $260,000 while Villarrael would earn $253,441. The two agreed to run a flip for the title, and Mandavia’s 108 beat out Villarreall’s A3. The board came down Q73810 to give Mandavia two pair for the win.

Here is a look at the payouts and POY points awarded at the final table:

PlacePlayerEarningsPOY Points
1 Ankush Mandavia $260,000 1,260
2 Anselmo Villarreal $253,441 1,050
3 Timothy Capretta $132,030 840
4 Kristen Bicknell $90,954 630
5 Derek Gregory $60,147 525
6 Alex Foxen $45,477 420
7 Yosif Nawabi $35,208 315
8 Qing Liu $24,939 210

Coin flips are practically inevitable in an online No Limit Hold'em tournament, however some players enter coin flips far too often and wonder why they are not successful in tournament play. Although odds are you will enter numerous coin flips in each tournament you play, it is important to enter them in the most advantageous situations possible.

These situations include knocking a short stack out, doubling up when you are short-stacked, or battling for a big stack entering the late stages. Although many people seem to be thrilled when entering a coin flip situation, most observers get the wrong idea. Most people are thrilled to enter these situations simply because they are not behind. As each separate coin flip provides a 50/50 shot at winning the pot, the players are not thrilled to be ahead with a small pair vs. over-cards, but rather are thrilled to not be dominated.

Knocking Out Short Stacks

Your best opportunity out of the three scenarios discussed here, is always whenever you hold more chips than your opponent. This will automatically guarantee that you cannot be eliminated on the hand in which the coin flip is taking place. If you are fortunate enough to be sitting on a large stack entering the mid to late stages of a tournament, you will have various opportunities to enter pots with the short stacks who will continue to play aggressively.

These short stacks will be battling the blinds, and any stack under ten big blinds will most likely only be making one move: all-in. These short stacks will be pushing with very marginal hands, and sometimes you will have to make a decision with a marginal hand as well because you will not always have hands such as JJ, QQ, AK, KK or AA that are an easy call. Some of the marginal hands you may be considering calling with when you have a short stack covered may be A10, KQ, KJ, 44, 55, or 66. If you are considering calling, make sure to think about a few things:

You must first consider the short stack's position, if he or she sits in early position you may wish to fold these semi-strong hands, and stick with pairs above 88, and AQ or AK. If the short stack pushes in very late position you will have no trouble calling his or her all-in with the six hands listed above. If you are sitting in the big blind and the raiser has only four to five big blinds, you also can consider a call with an even weaker hand such as K10, A9, or 33, simply because you are getting 2:1 on your money.

Pushing as a Short Stack

Short stacks are pressured by the blinds to push all-in very often as the blinds increase. This is another case when you may have to enter a coin flip situation because you will be called by a larger stack attempting to knock you out. If you hold around ten big blinds with one of the six hands listed above, your all-in is a strong move because you force the remaining players at the table to have a big hand, especially if you push in early position.

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If you shove all-in and the players do not hold JJ, QQ, KK, AA, AK or AQ, you will most likely be entering a coin flip situation, which is the best situation you can hope for. In this case you have the opportunity to double up to nearly an average stack, and enter the later rounds with a strong chance to survive. You may even have the other player dominated if they have a lower pocket pair or two weak face cards.

As a short stack, you can push with weaker and weaker hands while in late position. If everyone in front of you folds, you should be pushing any pocket pair and any two decent face cards. By pushing all-in, you put the other players in a tough spot, because it is unlikely they have premium hands.

Re-Raising Big Stacks

Another opportunity you may have in the late stages of tournaments to make a move may be while you hold a large stack. At this point the blinds will be fairly large, and the larger stacks are going to be pressuring the blinds, and hoping to steal them very often. These raises often occur in late position and can be made with any two cards.

If you are sitting in a blind or dealer position with a large stack directly in front of you, you have the opportunity to re-raise the big stack's pre-flop raise. The big stack is almost surely stealing the blinds, and therefore a hand such as A9, A10, KQ, KJ, and pair above 44 are worth a re-raise. The big stack will almost always recognized he or she is far behind and surrender the hand immediately, awarding you the blinds and raise for a simple play.

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