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Bay 101 Casino News

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The plan to reopen casinos outside passed on a 10-1 vote on Tuesday, and Bay 101 and Casino Matrix card rooms will be able to follow suit of other open California casinos by entertaining guests outside. The move comes as San Jose looks to increase taxes and the number of tables at card rooms. The new Bay 101 casino is the first phase of a bigger expansion project. The development calls for two hotels and 237,000 square-feet for a tech campus. The first hotel, a seven-story Embassy. Bay 101 Casino Review. Bay 101 Casino has moved from its previous location at 1801 Bering Drive to its new digs at 1788 North First Street in San Jose, California. The contemporary new card-room is located just across the highway from the old cardroom and covers approximately 68,000 square feet.

The 2020 running of the Bay 101 Shooting Star $5,200 buy-in no-limit hold’em main event drew 290 entries, building a $1,331,000 prize pool despite the growing concerns around the country regarding the spread of COVID-19. The field was narrowed down to stacked final ten that were set to return on Friday, March 13 to play down to a winner. Before play resumed, though, the remaining players negotiated a ten-way chop of the remaining prize pool based on ICM numbers. The Casino’s live bloggers covering the event explained that the decision was “due to circumstances surrounding the Coronavirus.”

World Poker Tour champion and World Series of Poker bracelet winner Craig Varnell held the chip lead at the time the deal was made, and was awarded the largest payout of $159,710 and the title. The score brought his career earnings to $2,643,430.

Two-time WSOP bracelet winner Kristen Bicknell was second in chips when the deal was made, and was awarded $141,520 as the second-place finisher in the final results listings. The cash was enough to see Bicknell surpass $5 million in career live tournament earnings, making her only the third female player to ever do so behind Vanessa Selbst and Kathy Liebert. After the deal was made, she took to Twitter to note how tough the situation was to assess.

One of the strangest chop situations I could have imagined. Would have loved to play it out and personally don't think ending play at this point would reduce any possible spread, but I could be wrong

— Kristen Bicknell (@krissyb24poker) March 13, 2020

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Bicknell also Tweeted that it was, “Unfortunate to not play this out, I hope all are safe and well! Thanks to [Bay 101 Casino] and [Tournament Director Matt Savage] for hosting another great event and handling this the best that they could.”

There were plenty of other highly accomplished players who were involved in the deal, including WPT and WSOP winner Tyler Patterson, who took home $113,860 for fourth place. Patterson described the result as a “Covid-19 induced ICM chop” on Twitter.

Swedish poker pro Michael Tureniec was awarded $91,180 as the sixth-place finisher, while three-time WPT champion and two-time bracelet winner Anthony Zinno cashed for $55,600 as the eighth-place finisher. Bracelet winner and two-time WSOP Circuit ring winner Anthony Spinella earned $50,000 for ninth place, while Lexy Gavin earned her largest career cash of $41,060 for tenth place.

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

RankPlayerChipsPOY Points
1 Craig Varnell $159,710 912
2 Kristen Bicknell $141,520 760
3 Navin Mohan $132,780 608
4 Tyler Patterson $113,860 456
5 Anshul Kulshrestha $101,430 380
6 Michael Tureniec $91,180 304
7 John Andress $88,800 228
9 Anthony Zinno $55,600 152
9 Anthony Spinella $50,000 76
10 Alexis Gavin $41,060 0

Bay 101 Casino News

Winner photo via Bay 101 News’s tournament blog.

Bay 101 News

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