Bryden Baxter opened from early position to 10,000 and action folded to Ali Imsirovic in the small blind who called. Richard Kirsch then jammed for 83,000 and Baxter called while Imsirovic folded.
Richard Kirsch:
Bryden Baxter:
The board ran out , giving Kirsch a double up, while leaving Baxter with fewer than 10 big blinds.
Matas Cimbolas raised to 10,000 from the hijack and Thomas Boivin called from the small blind. Chino Rheem then three-bet to 45,000 from the big and Cimbolas just called, which left him approximately 80,000 behind. Boivin got out of the way and it was heads-up action to a flop of .
Rheem moved all in and Cimbolas snap-called off.
Matas Cimbolas:
Chino Rheem:
Cimbolas had the superior pocket pair but the running turn and river gave Rheem a runner-runner straight to win the pot and score the knockout.
Brock Wilson opened to 11,000 in early position, Brandon Lulov called in middle position, and Vlad Mezheritsky moved all-in for approximately 40,000 in the hijack. Action folded around to Wilson who folded, and Lulov called.
Vlad Mezheritsky:
Brandon Lulov:
Mezheritsky looked to be in good shape for the double but the board ran out and Lulov flopped a set to take the pot and eliminate his opponent.
The Wynn High Roller Series continued Monday night with Event #4: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em, which attracted an impressive 73 entrants during Day 2c of the Wynn Millions Main Event.
After a long, grueling night of intense high stakes poker action, Bin Weng was the last player standing and took home $189,800 for his efforts. The champion beat out a field that included many of the regular high roller crushers such as Ali Imsirovic and Sean Perry.
As is almost always the case in high-stakes tournaments, Event #4 featured a talented final table full of accomplished poker pros. Weng entered the final table with the chip lead and never relinquished his advantage.
The champion knocked out four of the final nine players en route to his first-ever high roller victory. He defeated Ren Lin heads-up for the title. Lin received $138,700 for his runner-up finish.
The final table also included three-time World Series of Poker bracelet winner Jeremy Ausmus, who took fifth place for $58,400. Darren Elias, considered by many as the G.O.A.T. of the World Poker Tour, finished in seventh place ($36,500).
Weng now has $1.35 million in lifetime live tournament cashes according to the Hendon Mob.
Wynn High Roller Series Event #4 Final Table Results
Place
Player
Prize
1
Bin Weng
$189,800
2
Ren Lin
$138,700
3
Tony Tran
$94,900
4
Ilyas Muradi
$73,000
5
Jeremy Ausmus
$58,400
6
Ivan Zufic
$43,800
7
Darren Elias
$36,500
8
Benjamin Diebold
$29,200
9
Brekstyn Schutten
$21,900
The Wynn High Roller Series will continue Tuesday at 2 p.m. with Event #5: $15,000 No-Limit Hold'em, the final tournament of the series.
Ali Imsirovic raised to 10,000 from early position and action folded around to Sergio Aido, who three-bet jammed for 84,000 from the big blind. Imsirovic thought for about a minute before making a reluctant call.
Sergio Aido:
Ali Imsirovic:
Aido was ahead and held firm as the board ran out .
Luxurious is the first word that pops into your head when thinking about Wynn Las Vegas. It is one of the newer hotel complexes on the famous Las Vegas Strip and one of the most lavish.
The project was named Le Rêve, French for "the dream" when it was in its infancy before becoming Wynn Las Vegas, or simply the Wynn, before its grand opening in April 2005. Wynn Las Vegas and its neighboring Encore are considered one of the world's finest hotels.
Needless to say, the Wynn poker room is one of the best places to play poker in Las Vegas with 24/7 non-stop poker action on tap.
The poker room at Wynn Las Vegas is located at Encore and is an expansive room. It offers an elevated poker experience with 28 tables, each equipped with USB charging points.
Cash games run 24 hours per day, including No-Limit Hold'em, Pot-Limit Omaha, and Mixed Games. $1/$3, $2/$5, and $5/$10 No-Limit Hold'em games are always plentiful, as are $1/$2 and $5/$5 Pot-Limit Omaha. $9/$18 Mixed Games run several times per week, and you can find $10/$25 No-Limit Hold'em cash games taking place most weekends.
Cash game players are urged to sign up for the Wynn Las Vegas' Red Card loyalty scheme because doing so earns you $1.50 per hour in comp points.
The Wynn caters to multi-table tournament players, too. Daily tournaments with buy-ins of $200 to $300 run outside of festivals and series, but it is the primary tournament festivals where the Wynn shines.
A trio of seasonal festivals run in Spring, Summer, and Fall and come with some massive guaranteed prize pools. Buy-ins for these special series tend to fall between $400 and $2,200 and are accompanied by guarantees in excess of $750,000.
In June 2021, the inaugural Wynn Millions took place, a $10,000 buy-in event with a $10 million guaranteed prize pool. Some 1,328 players bought in, creating a $12,483,200 prize pool where the eventual champion walked away with an incredible $2,018,666.