Mariusz Czech wins the 2026 Grosvenor UK Open Main Event for £160,862

2026 UK Open Main Event

Consistent National Poker League (NPL) grinder Mariusz Czech earned the biggest result of his career, winning the £1,500 Grosvenor UK Open Main Event to earn a new high score of £160,862 (roughly $220,000). This beats his previous high mark of £52,500 ($69,099) he received for finishing 3rd in the 7,584-entry, £125 Goliath in 2018.

Czech, who finished in 13th place in last year’s NPL, took his career earnings up over the $500,000 mark.

Somehow, despite being one of the UK’s most active grinders over the last two years, Czech only had a single victory to his name: a 32-player Hold’em/PLO mix title for £1,200 ($1,500). Now, he has claimed one of the UK’s most prestigious honors.

2026 UK Open by the numbers

Though the 2025 UK Open smashed its £1,000,000 guarantee by attracting 951 runners to create a £1,220,000 prize pool, the 2026 UK Open missed the mark by £46,408, providing a ton of value to the attending players.

84 players from the 669-entry field earned a healthy £3,600 min-cash, 2.4x the buy-in, with pros like Brandon Sheils, Jamie O’Connor, and Yucel Eminoglu sneaking in over the line. 2025 champion Andrew ‘Stato’ Hulme finished 64th for £3,700, while 2023 Goliath champion Alex Todd made a respectable Day 3 run, finishing 25th for £5,240.

Other notable deep runners included Robert Cowen (40th, £4,100), Brandon Harris (36th, £4,390), Tom Middleton (31st, £4,770), Conor O’Driscoll (19th, £5,820), Lei Wang (13th, £7,630), and Adam Neal (£11th, 9,060).

2026 Grosvenor UK Open Main Event final table results

The final five players made an ICM deal, guaranteeing each player at least £78,780 to £113,237. Per Grosvenor’s rules, they had to play for at least 10% of the remaining prize pool, which worked out to roughly £47,600.

PlacePlayerPrize
1Mariusz Czech£160,862*
2Rhys Keen£78,780*
3Andrew Mapp£107,800*
4Keith Littlewood£95,160*
5Luke Tatum£88,110*
6David Ledden£30,610
7Philip Clarke£22,500
8Donald Jones£17,170
9Calogero Morreale£13,540

UK Open Main Event final table action

Calogero Morreale, the 2023 NPL Player of the Year, finished in ninth place after losing a short-stack flip with pocket eights against Rhys Keen’s king-queen. He would take home £13,540 for three days’ work.

Donald Jones was the next to go, becoming Czech’s first victim. Jones’ ace-queen was defeated by Czech’s king-jack, and Jones was sent home packing with £17,170. A short time later, Phil Clarke was out in seventh for £22,500, committing his final three big blinds with king-five, unable to beat Keen’s ten-deuce. David Ledden would finish in sixth, bubbling the final-table deal and just missing out on a career-high score. Czech’s pocket tens would outflip Ledden’s ace-jack, and Ledden pocketed £30,610.

After the final five players secured their riches, with all five players taking home over $100,000, they got down to quick business. With no ICM left, as there was about $65,000 extra for the champion, play opened up, and everyone went for the victory.

Luke Tatum, who won the £1,100 PLO High Roller for £17,890 earlier in the week, benefited the most from the deal as he took a couple of quick beats to exit in fifth. It was an incredible week for Tatum, who only recorded his first five-figure score last November. Tatum bested his previous career-high score twice and added well over £100,000 to his career earnings.

Fellow UK grinder Keith Littlewood, who finished second in last year’s NPL standings, was eliminated in fourth for a career-high £95,160. His pocket nines couldn’t beat Keen’s ace-jack, as Keen flopped him out of the tournament.

Andrew Mapp was eliminated in third, shoving his final 18 big blinds with king-jack, only to fall victim to Czech’s ace-seven suited. Mapp won’t complain about his £107,800 score, which was more than the total of his 50 previous cashes combined.

Czech went into heads-up play with nearly a 2-to-1 chip lead, though Keen had a lot more to play for, having only taken £78,780 in the deal, compared to Czech’s £113,237. Nevertheless, the two swapped the chip lead back and forth until the two players verbally agreed to chop all but £7,000 of the extra £47,600. They did a blind flip, and Keen’s five-deuce of diamonds couldn’t beat Czech’s ten-six, with a match-sealing ten on the flop. With that, Czech claimed the 2026 UK Open Main Event.

Other UK Open results

Accomplished UK/Hong Kong pro Timothy Chung took down the 65-player High Roller to claim £46,440 and the week’s second-largest prize. The £340 Mini Open also awarded a mammoth £42,690 top prize.

EventEntrantsChampionPrize
£1,500 UK Open Main Event669Mariusz Czech£160,862
£2,500 High Roller65Timothy Chung£46,440
£340 Mini Open719Anonymous£42,690
£300 G300616Anonymous£26,930
£550 UK Open Cup274Pranav Agarwal£23,411
£1,100 PLO High Roller46Luke Tatum£17,890
£220 8-Game79Suketu Patel£4,730
£220 Seniors77Matthew Cartwright£4,510
£200 Closer69Aqueel Butt£3,720
£115 Ladies UK Championship74Lydia Cugudda£2,260
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