Martins Adeniya Takes Down Lucky Hearts Poker Open Main EventBritish Poker Pro Tops Field of 1,162 Entries To Earn Career-Best Score of $512,600 |
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Martins Adeniya has live poker tournament results dating back to 2009, with multiple millions in earnings to his name. The UK poker pro locked up his biggest victory yet in the early weeks of 2025, topping a field of 1,162 entries to win the Lucky Hearts Poker Open $3,500 buy-in no-limit hold’em main event at Seminole Hard Rock Hollywood in South Florida. Adeniya cashed out for $512,600 as the champion, bringing his lifetime haul to nearly $2.3 million.
This surpassed the $333,625 payday that Adeniya secured as the third-place finisher in a $2,200 mystery bounty event at the 2023 Wynn Summer Classic to become his new largest payday.
In addition to the money and the hardware, Adeniya also earned 1,440 Card Player Player of the Year points for the win. That was enough to catapult him into the outright lead in the early 2025 POY race standing presented by Global Poker.
This tournament ran from Jan. 17-21. The strong turnout saw the $2,000,000 guarantee nearly doubled, with $3,718,400 in total prize money ultimately paid out among the top 146 finishers.
The LHPO main event final table
The next elimination also saw a couple of live connected undercards fail to overcome a good ace high. Kyle Taddei made his last stand with 10-9 facing the A-Q of Martins Adeniya. Aces and jacks with a king kicker won the pot for Adeniya in the end, while Taddei walked away with $92,000 as the seventh-place finisher.
Nattress’ run in this event concluded in sixth place ($119,000) when his Q-J was bested by the dominating A-Q of Spencer Champlin. Both players paired their live card, which meant that Champlin dragged the pot. Natress, who hails from Oregon, secured his first-ever live six-figure tournament score with this deep run.
Joost Schippers got his last chips in preflop with JJ
leading the A
5
of Champlin, but the pocket pair was unable to hold through an ace-high runout. Champlin made aces and fives on the river, in fact, to drag the pot and narrow the field to four. Schippers was awarded $156,000 as the fifth-place finisher.
Hogan was not quite as fortunate with a low A-X facing a pocket pair in his final hand. He shoved as the first to act with A4
for a bit more than eight big blinds. Adeniya called with 9
9
from the big blind. Hogan picked up a gutshot straight draw on the flop and made a pair of fours on the turn, but a brick river meant he was sent to the rail in fourth place ($205,000).
Caio De Lucca
Heads-up play began with a virtual tie, with Champlin having an ever-so-narrow lead when the final two took their seats after a short break in the action. The final two eventually agreed to redistribute the prize money a bit, making it $425,000 for second and $512,600 for the winner.
Adeniya had taken nearly a 3:2 lead by the time the final hand of the tournament arose, though. He limped from the button with 83
for 400,000 total and Champlin raised to 1,400,000 with K
2
from the big blind. Adeniya called and the flop came down Q
10
6
. Champlin checked and Adeniya checked behind. The turn brought the J
and Champlin bet 2,800,000 with his open-ended straight draw. Adeniya called with his backdoor heart draw and the river brought the 4
completed the board. Champlin moved all-in for 19,000,000 with his busted draw and Adeniya called fairly quickly with his flush to bring the event to a close. Champlin earned $425,000 as the runner-up.
Check out the payouts and POY points awarded at the final table:
Place | Player | Earnings | POY Points |
1 | Martins Adeniya | $512,600 | 1440 |
2 | Spencer Champlin | $425,000 | 1200 |
3 | Caio De Lucca Sobral | $275,000 | 960 |
4 | Ryan Hogan | $205,000 | 720 |
5 | Joost Schippers | $156,000 | 600 |
6 | Adam Nattress | $119,000 | 480 |
7 | Kyle Taddei | $92,000 | 360 |
8 | Ryan Hoenig | $71,000 | 240 |
9 | Ricardo Eyzaguirre | $56,000 | 120 |
Photo credits: Seminole Hard Rock Poker Blog.