WSOP Day #12: ICU nurse wins $1.4M and first gold bracelet Hellmuth hunts for 18th

Brek Schutten won his first WSOP bracelet and Phil Hellmuth is on the hunt for number 18 in the 2024 WSOP $3K Limit event Brek Schutten won his first WSOP bracelet and Phil Hellmuth is on the hunt for number 18 in the 2024 WSOP $3K Limit event Brek Schutten wins first WSOP bracelet in $25K High Roller Dave Woods Posted on: June 9, 2024 06:01 PDTfbXlinkLink copiedredditmailclosemore

The biggest prize of the 2024 WSOP so far came in the $25K High Roller, where a swath of big-name players put their hats in the ring, creating a field of 272 runners and a first prize of $1,405,641. They were all licking their wounds well before the final table started on Saturday night. Daniel Negreanu and Phil Ivey both busted before the money; Andrew Lichtenberger ($64,249) went out in 22nd and Alex Foxen ($64,249) joined him on the rail in 18th.

Santhosh Suvarna was the wildcard. The player who’s made his name on high-stakes cash shows and streams like High Stakes Poker and Hustler Casino Live’s Million Dollar Game has proved he can hold his own even when you can’t just keep rebuying, quietly racking up close to $8 million in tournament winnings since he started playing seriously in 2022. He went out in 13th for $79,084, or one mid-sized bet in his more usual games.

It’s all about the bracelet for Santhosh Suvarna but he came up short in the $25KJapan’s Masashi Oya has a very similar number on The Hendon Mob. When the final table started, he was just $30K in front of Suvarna, and was looking for his second bracelet after winning the $100K buy-in at WSOP Paradise. He had to settle for sixth and $229,002, which takes his Hendon Mob over the $8 million mark. He couldn’t win a race when it mattered, blanking with against Taylor von Kriegenbergh’s .

Masashi Oya made the final table of the $25K High Roller at the 2024 WSOPKriegenbergh’s challenge ended in fourth and ICU nurse Schutten went on to win his first bracelet, his biggest career win to date ($1,405,641), and the biggest prize of the 2024 WSOP so far. He bagged it with that was always ahead of Tyler Stafman’s .

Schutten might be focusing more on poker these days, but he still pulls the odd nursing shift, and we’d like to think this is karma for his commitment to helping those who really need it.

Dreams come true at the WSOP

Put your big names to one side for now. The real beauty of the WSOP is that anyone can play on the biggest stage of them all, for poker’s biggest prizes. 574 hopefuls entered the $1,500 Limit 2-7 Lowball Triple Draw event and by the time 568 had been shaken out, it was odds-on that the event would make a dream come true for one player. Only Sean Yu had won a bracelet before. Heather Alcorn, 2019 Dealer of the Year, was in the mix.

Alcorn fell just short of adding a bracelet to her WSOP Circuit ring, losing to a three-outer from Alexander Wilkinson. Alcorn stood pat on the second draw, with Wilkinson drawing one on his third draw. He found the to send Alcorn to the rail.

Alcorn: Wilkinson:

Wilkinson was taken out by eventual winner Aaron Cummings, who popped his WSOP cherry. Cummings has 38 cashes dating back to 2008, and this win is bigger than all of those combined. As quoted on WSOP.com, he said after winning, “We had a blast; I just ran the best…There’s not a whole lot of poker in Montana, so I just sneak down here every once in a while for fun.”

Tice shot, sharpshooters remain in Shootout

Meanwhile, the $1,500 Shootout got down to the final 16. And, while there’s not usually a whole lot of anti-sweating going on at the WSOP, Jeremy Becker will have been very happy to see Landon Tice go out on Day 2. Those two have a big 100% crossbook bet going on at the moment and we’re covering that live throughout the summer. The two have been trading blows for the first 12 days of the series, and Tice’s cash in the Shootout extends his slight lead. We’ve not had a knockdown yet, but had Tice made Day 3, we would have been close to one.

Erick Lindgren, Espen Jorstad, Scott Seiver and Toby Lewis were names who couldn’t find a second win to get them to Day 3. Maria Ho joined them on the rail, laid bare the agony of her bustout and had some great words for every player currently nursing wounds in Las Vegas.

There are some sharpshooters left in the final 16. Darius Samual raised some eyebrows when he admitted he’d sunk half his bankroll into the $25K Heads-Up Championship, and many more when he went on to win it. Jeremy Ausmus has six bracelets already and probably cares more about getting his seventh than the money. Scott Ball (2), Daniel Strelitz (2) and Vitor Dzivielevski (1) round out the players looking to add to their bracelets.

Brad Albrinck doesn’t have a bracelet but will be looking for one to go with his three Circuit rings. Daniel Sepiol is also after his first but his name might ring a bell. He won the 2023 WPT World Championship for $5,282,954.

The final 16 here will combine and play out to the winner in standard tournament format. Which is a shame—we prefer David Williams’ idea.

Hands of the day

1. Schutten v Stafman

Brek Schutten had already experienced the agony of finishing second and missing out on a WSOP bracelet back in 2022 when he lost out to Jake Schindler in the $50K High Roller. He was behind to Tyler Stafman heads-up in the early hours of Sunday morning when the following hand went down.

Tyler Stafman lost out to Schutten in this big handSchutten raised preflop with and got a call only to see the dreamlike flop. The fact that Stafman had paired his ace with made it even better. Stafman bet 1,500,000 on the flop, Schutten check-raised to 3,500,000 and Stafman called.

Schutten checked the turn and snapped when Stafman moved all-in, drawing dead. That left Stafman with 11 big blinds, and although he doubled twice after, it was third-time lucky for Schutten.

2. Negreanu v Martinelli

This is an old hand (from June 5) but some new information came to light on Saturday and it needs re-airing.

It was in the $10K Dealers Choice, with just 10 players left, and the game was Limit Omaha High. Michael Martinelli raised from the cutoff and Daniel Negreanu called from a short stack. Negreanu check-called the flop and the turn. Martinelli bet again on the river and Negreanu folded with one single 5K chip left. Good fold? Ruh roh…

Tweet of the day

The WSOP is serious stuff for a lot of people, but it’s always good to remember that the reason we all play poker is because it’s fun. And this table was having a ball in the $300 Gladiators of Poker event.

Video of the day

Looking at your hole cards is overrated.

The day in numbers

$1,405,641

The biggest prize yet at the 2024 WSOP, in the $25K High Roller won by Brek Schutten

13,778

The field in the $300 Gladiators of Poker with one Day 1 flight to come. Last year’s total was 23,088.

11

These days, we’re up in arms at the prospect of playing 10-handed in the smaller buy-in events at the WSOP. One word: Snowflakes.

12

The number of bracelets held by the final 16 in the $1,500 Shootout: Jeremy Ausmus (6), Scott Ball (2), Daniel Strelitz (2), Vitor Dzivielevski (1) and Darius Samual (1). Who will win the 13th on June 13th?

Results

Event #21: $25,000 High Roller No-Limit Hold’em (6-Handed)

PlacePlayerPrize
1Brek Schutten$1,405,641
2Tyler Stafman$938,775
3Michael Rocco$639,620
4Taylor von Kriegenbergh$444,766
5Brandon Wilson$315,771
6Masashi Oya$229,002
7Ognyan Dimov$169,719
8Chongxian Yang$128,604

Full results on WSOP

Event #22: $1,500 Limit 2-7 Lowball Triple Draw (6-Handed)

PlacePlayerPrize
1Aaron Cummings$146,516
2Yuichi Kanai$95,981
3Alexander Wilkinson$64,256
4Heather Alcorn$43,984
5Sean Yu$30,800
6Anthony Lazar$22,075
7Danny Wong$16,204
8Steven Gray$12,188

Full results on WSOP

Ongoing events

Event #23: $1,500 SHOOTOUT No-Limit Hold’em

PlacePlayerChips
1Daniel Sepiol2,880,000
2Alexander Farahi2,450,000
3Elia Ahmadian2,450,000
4Daniel Strelitz2,450,000
5Kyriakos Papadopoulos2,445,000
6James Davidson2,425,000
7Darius Samual2,410,000
8Aaron Pinson2,400,000
9Vitor Dzivielevski2,400,000
10Matthew Rosen2,400,000
11Richard Dixon2,400,000
12Sean Ragozzini2,395,000
13Brad Albrinck2,375,000
14Robert Natividad2,375,000
15Jeremy Ausmus2,375,000
16Scott Ball2,000,000

Seat draws on WSOP

Event #24: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better Championship

PlacePlayerChips
1Robert Tanita2,990,000
2Joao Simao1,840,000
3Tyler Brown1,705,000
4Luis Velador1,700,000
5Sterling Lopez1,695,000
6Yuri Dzivielevski1,275,000
7Joshua Thibodaux1,030,000
8Jonathan Cohen855,000
9Brad Ruben565,000
10Magnus Edengren545,000
11Tsz Shing520,000
12Sean Winter495,000
13Sean Troha325,000

Event #25: $3,000 Limit Hold’em 6-Handed

1Brian Tate327,000
2Alex Keating306,000
3Florian Pesce294,000
4Jason Daly265,000
5Daniel Idema230,000
6Jared Bleznick226,000
7Xavier Kyablue218,000
8Jorge Ufano214,000
Notables
16David “ODB” Baker193,000
24Phil Hellmuth168,000
36Robert Mizrachi128,000
41Joe McKeehen121,000
68Erik Seidel36,000

Full chip counts on WSOP

Note: For events with multiple starting flights, we’ll bring you chip counts from Day 2 onwards.

Bracelet winners

  • Event #1: $5,000 Champions Reunion – Asher Conniff (USA)
  • Event #2: $500 Casino Employees No-Limit Hold’em – Jose Garcia (USA)
  • Event #3: $500 Kickoff No-Limit Hold’em Freezeout – Daniel Willis (UK)
  • Event #4: $1,500 Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better (8-Handed) – James Chen (USA)
  • Event #5: $1,000 Mystery Millions - Malcolm Trayner (Australia)
  • Event #6: $25,000 Heads-Up No-Limit Hold’em Championship – Darius Samual (UK)
  • Event #7: $1,500 Dealer’s Choice – John Hennigan (USA)
  • Event #8: $5,000 Pot Limit Omaha (8-Handed) - Bryce Yockey (USA)
  • Event #9: $1,500 Limit Hold’em (8-Handed) - Nick Guagenti (USA)
  • Event #10: $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better Championship - Scott Seiver (USA)
  • Event #11: $1,500 Badugi - David Prociak (USA)
  • Event #12: $1,500 6-Handed No-Limit Hold’em - Simeon Spasov (Bulgaria)
  • Event #13: $10,000 Dealers Choice Championship - Robert Mizrachi (USA)
  • Event #14: $1,000 Super Turbo Bounty No Limit Hold’em - Thibault Perissat (France)
  • Event #15: $1,500 Pot-Limit Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better - Caleb Furth (USA)
  • Event #16: $5,000 No-Limit Hold’em - Brent Hart (USA)
  • Event #17: $800 No-Limit Hold’em Deepstack - TJ Murphy (USA)
  • Event #18: $1,500 Pot-Limit Omaha - Dylan Weisman (USA)
  • Event #19: $10,000 Limit Hold’em Championship - John Racener (USA)
  • Event #21: $25,000 High Roller No-Limit Hold’em (6-Handed) - Brek Schutten
  • Event #22: $1,500 Limit 2-7 Lowball Triple Draw (6-Handed) - Aaron Cummings

Coming up on Day #13

That’s it for Day #12Viktor ‘Isildur1’ Blom crashed out right at the death in the $10K PLO Hi-Lo 8 or Better Championship. He got it in with but found himself up against Tyler Brown’s. The railbirds couldn’t will a ten or enough clubs, and the runout saw the remaining 13 bag for Day 3. Joao Simao is in second and looking for his third WSOP bracelet. Brad Ruben is in ninth and after his fifth. They’ll play to the winner on Sunday.

Spare a thought for Scott Seiver as well. He busted in 24th and, despite winning his fifth bracelet this summer, can never find “happiness or satisfaction”. It’s the eternal burden of the player who’s now cashed for over $26 million in tournaments.

Brian Rast busted late on in the $3K 6-Handed Limit, leaving 76 runners still fighting. Brian Tate takes the biggest bag through to Day 2, David ‘ODB’ Baker has a stack, and a certain Phil Hellmuth will be cramming some #Positivity before bed. He’s currently in 24th place and looking to officially come of age in the WSOP with bracelet number 18. Robert Mizrachi has already won one bracelet this summer and is after another here; Erik Seidel is still alive and kicking (just).

The $1,500 Shootout plays out as a standard tournament now, with 16 players left, including Jeremy Ausmus, Daniel Strelitz, and Scott Ball. There’s $305,849 up top.

New events starting on Sunday? There’s another $25K High Roller, and this one’s eight-handed. The $1,500 Big O is going to be a lot of fun and the final flight of the $300 Gladiator will bring the masses out.

FAQ

Is there an app where I can play poker for real money?

BetOnline is one of the best real money poker apps for US players who want to play multiple tables at once, take part in big-money MTTs, and throw stuff at people.19 Jun 2024

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Is the 2024 WSOP schedule out yet?

The 2024 World Series of Poker (WSOP) schedule is here, jam-packed with 99 gold bracelet events. The 2024 WSOP takes place May 28 through July 17 at Horseshoe Las Vegas and Paris Las Vegas on the Las Vegas Strip. The 2024 WSOP Main Event is scheduled for July 3-17.Feb 16, 2024

WPT Tokyoは違法ですか?

WPT TOKYOの参加費はすべて施設利用や運営費用に充てられ、賞金は全てスポンサーから提供される、という仕組みのため、違法になりません。 さらに、メインイベントは順位によって獲得できる賞金額も予め決められていて、サイドイベントの入賞では海外渡航のサポートやトーナメントの参加費として使えるのみとなっています。2024/04/09

Does WPT still exist?

The WPT Prime Championship commences from the Wynn Las Vegas each year. The tournament truly sets a new bar for attendance and prize money for a live poker event. The 2023 edition of the WPT Prime Championship awarded more than $10 million for the $1,100 buy-in event.

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