With 72 players remaining in the tournament, there are still a number of huge mystery bounties left. Two of the three $100,000 grand prize mystery bounties have already been pulled, but one still remains.
Additionally, there are three $50,000 and three $25,000 bounties out there for some lucky poker players to find. That means remaining players have a 1 in 12 shot at uncovering at least $25,000 in one pull. The minimum award is $500 for mystery bounties.
Word reached the PokerNews team about a big hand between Matt Affleck and Brittney Stout.
With a large pot building in the middle, Affleck made a big river bet. Stout tank-called and mucked the losing hand as Affleck turned over the ace-high flush. Affleck nearly doubled and Stout fell to 1,650,000.
With a big pot in the middle and on the board, Onur Unsal shoved his big stack from middle position and Ralph Massey quickly tossed in a chip to call for his last 475,000.
Unsal turned over for eights and sixes. Massey flashed before tossing the losing hand in the muck and gathering his things to leave.
Josh Light opened in early position to 60,000 and the player on the button made the call. Brittney Stout then jammed all-in from the small blind and had the entire table covered. Action returned to Light who made the call for around 800,000 and everyone else folded.
Josh Light:
Brittney Stout:
The flop was , not much help for Stout, but she picked up a flush draw with the on the turn. "Come on spade," she pleaded. But the on the river didn't improve her hand and Light earned a huge double-up. Stout, who once had over 2.4 million in chips, is down to under 800,000.
Last fall, the final 255 players from a 2,333-entry field returned for Day 2 action in the highly-anticipated Wynn Fall Classic $2,200 Mystery Bounty Event. All of those players were in the money and eligible for the “Mystery Bounty” portion of the tournament, which meant every time they eliminated an opponent they’d get a chance to draw an envelope from a spinning drum.
Inside were 255 sealed envelopes under constant supervision and surveillance. Each contained a card with a prize ranging from $500-$250,000. There was only a single quarter-million top bounty followed by three $100,000 prizes, six $50,000 envelopes, and a dozen $25,000 slips.
It didn’t take long for the big prize to be selected, just 40 minutes in fact. It happened after 43-year-old Omaha trucker driver Donald Nimneh used ace-queen to eliminate an opponent holding an inferior ace-jack.
“For some reason I just felt something. You know, I felt something,” he told PokerNews. “When I moved my seat because my table broke, they moved me over to that table, when I stuck my hand in and won the bounty I was on the button, so I said I was just gonna go draw. I stuck my eye on this envelope and I just picked it.”
He continued: “It was unbelievable. I mean it still hasn’t sunk in yet. I thought it was $25,000 at first because I saw the two-five, but then the more I kept looking I kept seeing zeros. When I opened it, I just went crazy, man.”
Originally from Liberia, Nimneh is a family man who wasn’t even going to play the tournament. It was only because of his young son altered some plans that it all came together.
“My son was the one that made this happen. He’s a boy scout and I was supposed to be at his camp today, but he decided because his sister was coming home, he was going to skip camp and spend the time with his sister. So, he told there was no need to come home, which is why I got into this.”
Prior to the six-figure score, Nimneh had a little over $20,000 in lifetime tournament earnings according to The Hendon Mob. That included some small wins in daily South Point tournaments and a February 2020 RunGood Poker Series (RGPS) Council Bluffs $160 NLH Closer victory for $3,569.
“I just play poker on the side because I like it,” he said with a smile. “I have a passion for it and it’s working well so far.”
Nimneh’s good luck with the bounty didn’t translate to the tournament itself as he lost most of his chips when his pocket aces were cracked by ace-king suited. A short time later, he was eliminated from the tournament in 122nd place for $5,284. On top of that, he had one other bounty for $5,000, meaning he left the Wynn a happy man with $260,284 in his bank account.
A player under the gun opened to 60,000 and another player in middle position three-bet to around 200,000. Action folded to Yutaka Morishima in the big blind and a four-bet shove to 610,000.
The player under the gun re-shoved and the player in middle position called.