Raminder Singh Shows His Lion’s Will to Win on the Path to the Trophy in the 2024 Lucky Hearts Poker Open Championship 3l1x2l

One of South Florida’s own has taken home the top prize in the Championship at the Lucky Hearts Poker Open. Raminder Singh added to his robust trophy case by capturing the giant guitar pick trophy, along with the largest cash of his poker career worth $486,353. That puts his total career earnings close to $3 million. He topped a field of 1,188 entries to win the title, including a talented group of players on the final day of the tournament that concluded when the final three agreed to a chop when Singh had secured the chip lead against Dan Martin (second place), and Jesse Lonis (third place).

We caught up with Singh after he had the trophy in hand  for an interview about his victory, and here is what he had to say right after the win. “It feels really great, I don’t really ever play any big tournaments that go into the week. I need to have a pretty fine schedule to skip all my work and play, so normally I don’t play these. But this time my friends, they convinced me to play in this. This was the time to play. I’ve been in good form, I’ve been playing well, I couldn’t miss this tournament,” said Singh.

He can often be found playing in tournaments with his Team Singh shirt, and he showed a lion’s will down the homestretch of the tournament in his determination to win the trophy, even when chops had been previously offered. “Team Singh, the lion on my shirt was basically invented by my nephews. Harry, Jason, and Sandy, and like 20 of their friends and others that are in the network that call me uncle, so I’m the universal uncle. They are all my nephews. Even locally here, a lot of the players I play against – It’s in the family. Singh means lion actually in our language,” said Singh.

When you have over 90 tournament wins on your poker resume it’s probably time to get a trophy case, and this is the victory that’s got him thinking that way. “With this prestigious win, to be honest with you I may really have to think about a trophy case with this giant trophy. This is my No. 1 win. This is by far my largest score,” said Singh.

He continued, “I have a lot of respect for the players here, and the staff. Amazing fields, and it’s amazing the way they organize these tournaments and these series. It’s local here, so it’s so good, like a 45-minute drive for me. I really enjoy it here, Hard Rock is my favorite place to play poker.”

We followed with a question about how all those previous journeys to the end of a tournament helped him finish the job today, and he replied with this. “Your experience does help, in every field of your life, not just poker. This is the first time I’ve played until Day 4 in a tournament, but I have played the WSOP main a couple of times. This was really an interesting structure where the blind levels moved from 90 minutes and then to 60 at the final table, and we were very deep. I’m a businessman at my core, so i strongly believe in horses for courses. When you play a turbo it’s a different minefield, when you play a $3,500 it’s a different level of players and a different structure, so you have to adjust your patience and that animal instinct that’s inside that’s trying to really, really be aggressive. You’ve got to control it more, and tame it back a little. You’ve got to sit back and read people more,” said Singh.

If you spend any amount of time watching Singh play at a poker table you can quickly tell he is the conversation captain anywhere he is seated. We asked him about that outgoing personality, and here is how Singh responded, “To be honest I just like to talk as humans. I’m a businessman as I said. I was very introverted growing up, but I got some very good mentors in my life that helped me develop my people skills, and I enjoy life. If you love to talk it’s not so much about the hands or the strategy, it’s more about life.”

Our table-side chat finished with trying to settle the score if Singh still considers himself an amateur after so much success in closing out poker tournaments, but it doesn’t sound like he’s about to give that moniker up anytime soon. “An amateur is an amateur is an amateur for life [laughs]. So I would love to keep that title of a true poker amateur unless I win the WSOP main event one day. If I win that tournament then I will retire that title, and take whatever title comes with that,” said Singh.

The victory is also Singh’s 11th SHRP major series trophy, retaking the lead atop the all-time winners list.

2015 SHRPO – $250 No-Limit Hold’em – ($6,716)
2015 RRPO – $350 NLHE Black Chip Bounty – ($11,400)
2015 RRPO – $350 No-Limit Hold’em Big Stack – ($15,298)
2018 RRPO – $1,100 No-Limit Hold’em – ($37,706)
2019 SHRPO – $600 No-Limit Hold’em Deep Stack – ($200,000)
2020 LHPO – $600 No-Limit Hold’em Six Max – ($22,520)
2021 SHRPO – $200 Double Green Chip Bounty NLH – ($6,256)
2022 Showdown – $150 Big Stack No-Limit Hold’em – ($5,008)
2022 RRPO – $600 Deep Stack Turbo No-Limit Hold’em – ($7,897)
2023 Showdown – $400 Deep Stack No-Limit Hold’em – ($12,230)
2024 LHPO – $3,500 No-Limit Hold’em Championship – ($486,353)

Place First Name Last Name Prize Amount
1 Raminder Singh $486,353*
2 Dan Martin $460,000*
3 Jesse Lonis $404,247*
4 Justin Datloff $229,900
5 Jonathan Jaffe $173,500
6 Mitch Garshofsky $132,300
7 Benny Glaser $102,000
8 Toby Joyce $79,400
9 Brian Hastings $62,500
10 Thomas Winschel $62,500
11 Samuel Wynder $49,700
12 Olivier Rebello $49,700
13 Luke McIntosh $40,000
14 Sean Troha $40,000
15 Andrew Moreno $32,500
16 Joel Deutsch $32,500
17 Harvey Castro $26,800
18 Eric Lea $26,800
19 Jim Collopy $26,800
20 Seth Fischer $26,800
21 Nicholas Mahabee $22,300
22 Jean Gaspard $22,300
23 Nickolas Vinson $22,300
24 Benjamin Perez $22,300
25 Fabian Gumz $18,700
26 Andrzej Rogowski $18,700
27 T.K. Miles $18,700
28 Frank Weigel $18,700
29 Justin Carey $18,700
30 James Orleans $18,700
31 Jon Borenstein $18,700
32 Eric Yanovsky $18,700
33 Benjamin Grise $16,000
34 Kristen Foxen $16,000
35 Petar Kalev $16,000
36 Ron Katz $16,000
37 Scott Baumstein $16,000
38 Joel Gola $16,000
39 Jordan Sparagana $16,000
40 Ross Corless $16,000
41 Elanit Hasas $13,700
42 Aaron Gunn $13,700
43 Steven Snyder $13,700
44 Kathy Liebert $13,700
45 Matt Lambrecht $13,700
46 Aaron Steury $13,700
47 Ian Gillespie $13,700
48 Dom Mosley $13,700
49 Joseph Brum Pacheco $12,000
50 Johnny Bromberg $12,000
51 Stephen Muschett $12,000
52 Jason Blodgett $12,000
53 Gus Raptis $12,000
54 Simon Wilson $12,000
55 Shane Santacroce $12,000
56 Cobi Cobian $12,000
57 Luke Brereton $10,600
58 Zhen Cai $10,600
59 Timothy Mina $10,600
60 Jorge Manzur Duarte $10,600
61 Alexander Ziskin $10,600
62 Eider Da Cruz $10,600
63 Vamsi Magam $10,600
64 Lou Ojeda $10,600
65 Steven Rosen $9,400
66 Timothy Mulroy $9,400
67 Brian Scott $9,400
68 Jeremy Joseph $9,400
69 Alejandro Gonzalez Olaechea $9,400
70 David Levy $9,400
71 Joris Ruijs $9,400
72 Aleksei Istomin $9,400
73 Frederick Attias $8,500
74 Carlo Rodriguez $8,500
75 Oleksandr Gnatenko $8,500
76 Tyler Denson $8,500
77 Anthony Bertuccio $8,500
78 Maykol Trujillo Garcia $8,500
79 Mark Abboud $8,500
80 Dennis Stevermer $8,500
81 Jonathan Moschel $7,800
82 Philippe Souki $7,800
83 Darryll Fish $7,800
84 Steven Richardson $7,800
85 Brandon Wittmeyer $7,800
86 Nicholas Chong $7,800
87 Michael Laufer $7,800
88 Jefferson Zaminhan $7,800
89 Tyler Campbell $7,100
90 Juan Membreno Orellano $7,100
91 Josh Arieh $7,100
92 Bassam Mourad $7,100
93 Brandon Navarrete $7,100
94 Nikita Kalinin $7,100
95 Gerald Cunniff $7,100
96 Ronnie Abro $7,100
97 Richard Flach $7,100
98 Carl Carodenuto $7,100
99 Victor Nissim $7,100
100 Justin Turner $7,100
101 Viktor Ustimov $7,100
102 Michel Bittan $7,100
103 Rayan Chamas $7,100
104 Stephen Kehoe $7,100
105 Joe Serock $6,600
106 Dan Heimiller $6,600
107 Haim Gabay $6,600
108 Andjelko Andrejevic $6,600
109 Spencer Champlin $6,600
110 Paul Varano $6,600
111 Connor Rash $6,600
112 Jose Gonzalez $6,600
113 A.J. Kelsall $6,600
114 Alejandro Arana $6,600
115 Jason Rocha $6,600
116 Sergio Giha $6,600
117 Michael VanderWoude $6,600
118 John Spaddavecchia Jr. $6,600
119 Stoyan Madanzhiev $6,600
120 Michael Scoma $6,600
121 Ariel Rosello $6,200
122 Angela Lynn $6,200
123 Michael Newman $6,200
124 Al Gomez $6,200
125 Blake Napierala $6,200
126 Richard Alsup $6,200
127 Nitis Udornpim $6,200
128 Frank Lagodich $6,200
129 Rodney Pinkham $6,200
130 Jeff Trudeau $6,200
131 Judith Bielan $6,200
132 Jessica Beyrer $6,200
133 Shawn Lucas $6,200
134 Benjamin Miner $6,200
135 Eric Siegel $5,900
136 Brendan Murphy $5,900
137 Todd Ivens $5,900
138 Norberto Charuf Diab $5,900
139 Tyler Rueger $5,900
140 Dani Genov $5,900
141 Yordan Petrov $5,900
142 Saber Salum Penayo $5,900
143 Dylan Linde $5,900
144 Bryan Schultz $5,900
145 Sebastien Aube $5,900
146 Brian Nerney $5,900
147 Jeffrey Hood $5,900
148 Javier Zarco $5,900
149 Daniel Smiljkovic $5,900

Championship: Raminder Singh Wins in a Three-Way Deal! 1sg3u

$3,500 LHPO Championship (Re-Entry)
$2,000,000 Guaranteed | Results
Level 34:  300,000/500,000 with a 500,000 ante
Players Remaining:  3 of 1,188

Jesse Lonis (left), Raminder Singh (center), and Dan Martin (right)

After playing three-handed for a little while, the remaining players opted to took at the numbers and eventually reached a deal:

Here were their chip counts at the time:

Raminder Singh  –  27,100,000  (54 bb)
Dan Martin  –  21,700,000  (43 bb)
Jesse Lonis  –  10,600,000  (21 bb)

Here were the resulting payouts:

Raminder Singh  –  $486,353
Dan Martin  –  $460,000
Jesse Lonis  –  $404,247

As the chip leader, Raminder Singh is the official winner of the 2024 Seminole Hard Rock Lucky Hearts Poker Open Championship, and he retakes the lead in SHRP major series trophy victories with 11.

A recap of the LHPO Championship will be posted later tonight.

Championship: Raminder Singh Back in the Lead 1w4m1p

$3,500 LHPO Championship (Re-Entry)
$2,000,000 Guaranteed | Results
Level 33:  200,000/400,000 with a 400,000 ante
Players Remaining:  3 of 1,188

Raminder Singh

Dan Martin raised to 900,000 from the button and Raminder Singh called in the small blind.

The flop was 5h4c3s, Singh checked, Martin bet 1,100,000, and Singh called.

The turn was the Jh, Singh led out 1,400,000, and Martin called.

The river was the 2h, Singh bet 1,900,000, and Martin folded.

Raminder Singh  –  27,100,000  (68 bb)
Dan Martin  –  21,700,000  (54 bb)
Jesse Lonis  –  10,600,000  (27 bb)

Championship: Dan Martin Doubles Through Jesse Lonis 3u1511

$3,500 LHPO Championship (Re-Entry)
$2,000,000 Guaranteed | Results
Level 33:  200,000/400,000 with a 400,000 ante
Players Remaining:  3 of 1,188

Dan Martin

Jesse Lonis made it 1.6 million to go preflop from the small blind Dan Martin moved all in for 12,575,000 om the big blind, and Lonis called to cover. The two players then flipped over their cards.

Martin: Ac4h
Lonis: AhJs

Board: Kd5c4c8s6d

Martin spiked the four to double up and survive with 26.15 million, and Lonis was at 11.3 million after the hand.

Dan Martin – 26,150,000 (65 bb)
Jesse Lonis – 11,300,000 (28 bb)

Jesse Lonis pays out the double to Dan Martin

Championship: Raminder Singh vs. Dan Martin 44175n

$3,500 LHPO Championship (Re-Entry)
$2,000,000 Guaranteed | Results
Level 33:  200,000/400,000 with a 400,000 ante
Players Remaining:  3 of 1,188

Raminder Singh

The minimum price of ission was in the pot preflop when the first three cards were dealt 7s4s2h. Both Dan Martin (small blind), and Raminder Singh (big blind) each contributed 500,000 more before the turn fell Kc.

Singh bet 1.3 million , and Martin check-called. The river then delivered the 8d, Singh bet 4.7 million, and Martin check-called after using a time chip.

Singh showed Kh8s, and Martin folded his cards. Singh was up to 18.2 million, and Martin was at 13.55 million after the hand.

Raminder Singh – 18,200,000 (45 bb)
Dan Martin – 13,550,000 (33 bb)

Championship: Updated Chip Counts x86o

$3,500 LHPO Championship (Re-Entry)
$2,000,000 Guaranteed | Results
Level 33:  200,000/400,000 with a 400,000 ante
Players Remaining:  3 of 1,188

Seat 3:  Raminder Singh  –  17,750,000  (44 bb)
Seat 5:  Jesse Lonis  –  27,500,000  (69 bb)
Seat 7:  Dan Martin  –  14,150,000  (35 bb)

With three players remaining, the average stack is about 19,800,000 (50 big blinds).

1st:  $626,500 + LHPO Trophy
2nd:  $416,300
3rd:  $307,800

Championship: Justin Datloff – 4th Place ($229,900) 1y2j6a

$3,500 LHPO Championship (Re-Entry)
$2,000,000 Guaranteed | Results
Level 33:  200,000/400,000 with a 400,000 ante
Players Remaining:  3 of 1,188

Justin Datloff

Jesse Lonis raised to 1.3 million from the button, Justin Datloff reraised all in for 6.4 million from the big blind, and Lonis called to cover him. The two players then flipped over their cards.

Lonis: AhKs
Datloff: 6c6s

Board: Kh8d4h8hJc

Datloff was eliminated in fourth place for a payday good to the tune of $229,900, and Lonis stacked up 23.3 million after collecting the pot.

Jesse Lonis – 23,300,000 (58 bb)
Justin Datloff – Eliminated in 4th Place ($229,900)

Championship: Jesse Lonis Takes Some More from Justin Datloff and Dan Martin 6q4g4a

$3,500 LHPO Championship (Re-Entry)
$2,000,000 Guaranteed | Results
Level 33:  200,000/400,000 with a 400,000 ante
Players Remaining:  4 of 1,188

Jesse Lonis

Jesse Lonis raised from the button and Justin Datloff called in the big blind.

They checked to the river of a 5c2h2dKd8h board where Lonis bet 1,450,000. Datloff called.

Lonis showed KsTs for kings and decues with a ten kicker, Datloff mucked, and Lonis won the pot.

A few hands later, Lonis raised to 1,200,000 from the small blind, Dan Martin three-bet to 3,500,000 from the big blind, Lonis reraised all in, and Martin folded.

Jesse Lonis  –  22,700,000  (57 bb)
Dan Martin  –  12,650,000  (32 bb)
Justin Datloff  –  5,000,000  (13 bb)

Championship: Jesse Lonis Doubles Through Justin Datloff 6bcw

$3,500 LHPO Championship (Re-Entry)
$2,000,000 Guaranteed | Results
Level 32:  150,000/300,000 with a 300,000 ante
Players Remaining:  4 of 1,188

Jesse Lonis raised to 650,000 preflop from the button, Justin Datloff reraised to 1.9 million on the big blind, and Lonis reraised all in for 7.2 million. Datloff called to cover so the two remaining players revealed their cards.

Lonis: 7d7h
Datloff: KhQc

Board: 8c7c6s10s6d

Lonis doubled up to survive with 15.15 million after collecting the pot, and Datloff was at 9.55 million.

Jesse Lonis – 15,150,000 (37 bb)
Justin Datloff – 9,550,000 (23 bb)

Championship: Justin Datloff Chipping Up 6b276g

$3,500 LHPO Championship (Re-Entry)
$2,000,000 Guaranteed | Results
Level 32:  150,000/300,000 with a 300,000 ante
Players Remaining:  4 of 1,188

Justin Datloff

Justin Datloff raised to 600,000 from UTG/cutoff and Dan Martin called in the big blind.

The flop came Qc8s4d, Martin checked, Datloff bet 425,000, Martin check-raised to 1,600,000, and Datloff called.

The turn was the Js and both checked.

The river was the Ah, Martin checked, Datloff bet 700,000, and Martin called.

Datloff tabled Ac8c for aces and eights, Martin mucked, and Datloff won the pot.

Justin Datloff  –  16,300,000  (54 bb)
Dan Martin  –  18,600,000  (62 bb)