Bricklayer Duncan McLellan Cements Victory at UKIPT Isle of Man; de Melo Finishes 2nd

3 min read
Duncan McLellan

After five action-packed days of tournament poker, Duncan McLellan was crowned the first ever UKIPT Isle of Man champion on Monday. McLellan won ��94,090 after he beat Team PokerStars SportStar Fatima Moreira de Melo in a short heads-up battle.

McLellan, a bricklayer from Corby, said he planned to play a few more tournaments with the money while also hoping to take his grandson to Disneyland. Despite finishing second, de Melo recorded her best ever result, taking home ��59,660 for her second place finish.

UKIPT Isle of Man Final Table Results

PlaceNamePrize
1Duncan McLellan��94,090
2Fatima Moreira de Melo��59,660
3Richard Milne��43,120
4Christopher Jonat��34,870
5Harry Lodge��27,600
6Daniel Stacey��21,250
7Jamie O'Connor��15,810
8Adam Topping��11,455

The event saw big names like Daniel Negreanu, David Williams, Vanessa Rousso and Jason Mercier make their UKIPT debut at the spectacular Villa Marina on the seafront in Douglas. The 379-player field saw ��121,000 added to the prize pool to make up the ��500,000 guarantee.

PokerStars qualifier Jamie O'Connor led the eight-handed final table at the start of the day, but there was no major action until the end of the first level when de Melo doubled up with aces against Daniel Stacey's ace-jack.

The early stages saw the chip lead swap around several times as Christopher Jonat, O'Connor, McLellan and Richard Milne all took turns being the top dog.

Adam Topping was the first player eliminated. He had moved all in for 498,000 over the top of Milne's raise to 60,000. Milne called with A?K?, dominating Topping's A?Q? both before and after the board of 7?6?J?9?3?.

By this point, McLellan had been chipping up nicely, winning many pots uncontested and becoming the first player over the 2 million chip mark. Most other players had become content with laddering up while the two most aggressive players other than McLellan, O'Connor and Stacey, were both nursing short stacks and unable to fight back.

O'Connor was eliminated in seventh place after a perfect spot saw him squeeze all in. McLellan called with worse but came from behind to leave six players remaining.

On the very next hand, Stacey shoved with K?7? but his nemesis de Melo had picked up A?A? once again and quickly dispatched him on a 3?A?5?5?J? board.

Immediately after, McLellan attempted to bust Harry Lodge but the latter held a superior ace-ten to the chip leader's ace-deuce, managing to briefly survive. Lodge wouldn't last too much longer though as McLellan eventually got his man.

With four players left, Christopher Jonat was the sole Manx representative. Jonat, who is the head of the PokerStars Team Online, ran a big bluff against McLellan which failed. Left short, Jonat moved all in on the next hand with K?J? but ran into McLellan again, the latter this time holding A?Q?.

Three-handed, there was talk of a deal between McLellan, de Melo and Milne but after about 10 minutes the chip leader McLellan rejected this out of hand. The three restarted and straight away de Melo picked up queens when Milne had moved all in with king-five, no king was seen on the board and de Melo suddenly found herself heads-up.

The battle for the UKIPT championship saw McLellan start with just over a two-to-one chip lead and after he won a big pot early on, it looked as though de Melo would need to double up if she was to have any chance of claiming her first major title. Sadly for her, the A?10? of McLellan proved too strong for de Melo's 5?5? after he flopped a Broadway Straight to win the Isle of Man's first ever UKIPT.

The UKIPT's next stop sees it to return to Nottingham's Dusk Till Dawn club in a few weeks for a six-max event that's bound to attract another big crowd.

That's it for the PokerNews Live Reporting Team here on the Isle of Man, but stick around because the World Series of Poker Main Event Final Table is only a few hours away! In the meantime, here is Laura Cornelius interviewing the UKIPT's newest champion.

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