First Wsop
The 2020 World Series of Poker Online continued on Thursday with Event #23: $500 No-Limit Hold’em Knockout attracting a 1,452-entrant field which created a prize pool of $667,920. Following 11 hours of play on the virtual felt, New Jersey’s Raymond “Avant9201” Avant topped the field to collect his first WSOP bracelet and the $93,776 first-place prize.
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- First and foremost, WSOP now offers the single best match bonus in the Garden State. The only caveat is that players must use the e-wallet Neteller as their payment processor of choice – a small price to pay for a $1,000 match bonus and $10 in free cash.
- Cashing in my first two WSOP events is cool and all, but I’m not really here to min-cash when I can be playing big cash games. The day after, a few of my friends decided to show me their “hit & run the strip” strategy. They said they were going to take me to each casino, let me crush the game for an hour, and then make me do the same.
The 2020 World Series of Poker Online bracelet event final tables are streamed live nightly on the Poker Central YouTube channel, PokerGO Facebook page and World Series of Poker Twitch channel. Commentary is provided by David Tuchman. Skip ahead to the action and watch both final tables in the embedded players below.
Toya “HandyCapper” McLeod would be eliminated on the money bubble in 208th place before WSOP bracelet winners Chris “Robotbob47” Moorman, Jean “lilp181” Gaspard, Joe “fanofdapoker” McKeehen, Kenny “Chopuh” Huynh, Layne “scoop87” Flack, Michael “miw210x” Wang, Robert “bustinballs” Kuhn, Eric “circleball” Baldwin, Terrell “heezahustla” Cheatham, Allan “Treeoflife” Cheung, Tyler “dumbram” Patterson, Greg “FossilMan” Raymer, Calvin “projector52” Anderson, Daniel “DNegs” Negreanu all fell short of the final table.
Avant entered the final table with a slight chip lead ahead of WSOP bracelet winner Dan “pepperprince” Zack. Unfortunately for Zack, he would double Scott “intheblack14” Epstein on one of the first hands at the final table, before being eliminated in ninth-place by Upeshka “gomezhamburg” De Silva. After Michael “mikeob81” O’Brien fell at the hands of Epstein, Avant would become a one-man-wrecking-crew as he eliminated Dilip Kumar “dogmai” Natarajan, Zachary “Kings702” Grech, and Byung Jun “YESUM1987” Kim in quick succession. Down to four players, De Silva’s run would end when his ace-king was outdrawn by Epstein’s nine-deuce. Event #10 winner Ryan “Im.Sorry” Torgersen was at his third final table of the series, but would have to settle for third when he ran his queen-three into Avant’s aces and was drawing dead to runner-runner on the flop. Heads-up play began with both players fairly even in chips, but Avant quickly pulled ahead before the final hand. The final hand saw Epstein all-in with pocket fours against Avant’s ace-five suited, and when a five fell on the flop, Avant would be crowned the Event #23 champion.
Event #23 Final Table Results | ||
Place | Player | Prize |
1st | Raymond “Avant9201” Avant | $93,776 |
2nd | Scott “intheblack14” Epstein | $58,074 |
3rd | Ryan “Im.Sorry” Torgersen | $41,243 |
4th | Upeshka “gomezhamburg” De Silva | $29,690 |
5th | Byung Jun “YESUM1987” Kim | $21,693 |
6th | Zachary “Kings702” Grech | $15,995 |
7th | Dilip Kumar “dogmai” Natarajan | $12,023 |
8th | Michael “mikeob81” O’Brien | $9,095 |
9th | Dan “pepperprince” Zack | $7,004 |
To go along with the $93,776 first-place prize that Avant collected, he also picked up $1,700 in knockout bounties, along his first WSOP bracelet.
WSOP Online $100,000 Leaderboard (through Event #20)
Robert “BustinBalls” Kuhn is still leading on the back of his Event #3 win, while Ryan “Im.Sorry” Torgersen sits in second place. Michael “MiguelFiesta” Lech is third overall while Roland “prngls12” Israelashvili and Philip “tomte” Yeh round out the top five. To view the full leaderboard, click here.
Check back with us for daily WSOP Online recaps or dive straight into some throwback World Series of Poker action as WSOP Classic is now available on PokerGO. Watch all your favorite Main Event coverage from 2003 through current.
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Psychological Comfort at the WSOP
Professional poker player Amir Vahedi, who final tabled the main event in 2003, famously stated, “In order to live, you must be willing to die.” If you believe you will be unwilling to bet or even call all-in in marginal situations for fear of being eliminated, then it would probably be best if you did not play the tournament at all. That being said, however, no one wants to be eliminated after two hours or on the money bubble, especially if you are playing the tournament in part for the experience.
What I recommend, then, is that you do what you can to avoid close situations where you may have to put your tournament life at stake without sacrificing any meaningful edge. I’ll give you an example from my own tournament last year: blinds were still 25/50, and everyone at the table had roughly the 10,000 chips with which he started. Several players limped in, and an aggressive player raised to 350 from his button. I was in the big blind with a pair of Tens.
I felt that my opponent’s range could be relatively wide in this situation, as attacking limpers from the button is a favorite move of many aggressive players when stacks are deep, but also that it would certainly include all pocket pairs that dominated mine. Re-raising in this situation would be justifiable, but stacks were so deep that my opponent could probably even call my reraise with a somewhat wide range since he would be in position post-flop. This could result in my having to make a large continuation bet on a scary board and/or call a large bet that would often, but not often enough to warrant a fold, come from a hand that had me beat. In short, I did not trust myself to handle a decision like this well during the first hour of my very first WSOP main event.
I elected simply to call instead, inviting the limpers to call as well. Pocket Tens are a strong hand, and I was surely losing some value by not reraising them pre-flop. However, I felt I could gain this value back the times that I flopped a set. Given that I was likely to see a flop against several opponents, including one aggressive player who was at least representing a big hand, I felt I could win a fairly large pot the times that I flopped a set and get away cheaply otherwise. This was a lower variance line that made my hand much easier to play and avoided a potentially dangerous situation without sacrificing much if any expected value.
As we approached the money bubble, I found myself in a similar situation. The prize money for even the lowest pay-outs was $15,000, which would have been a tremendous boon to my bankroll. At the same time, however, I promised myself before I even began playing satellites to the main event that if I played, I was going to play to win, even if that meant an increased risk of winning nothing at all.
The chip leader at the table was very aggressive and throughout the day had shown a willingness to put people to decisions for all of their chips. He definitely had a good understanding of bubble dynamics and had been picking on some of the more scared players at our table. Prior to the bubble, I had played back at him a few times, so he knew that I knew what he was up to. I had about 42,000 chips at the 400/800 level, whereas he had well over 200,000. From middle position, he made his standard raise to 2500. The big blind was rather weak, and I felt the chip leader could raise him with a very wide range.
Wsop First Place Prize
I, in the small blind, had a pair of 5’s. I contemplated a reraise, but felt my opponent was very capable of four-betting a wide enough range that I would actually have a difficult decision with my measly pocket pair. I then considered calling and playing for set value, as I had done earlier with the T’s, but this time it was likely to be a heads up pot against an opponent who had not shown very much strength so far. Thus, I was going to be bluffed off of the best hand often but not necessarily win a big pot if I did hit a set. Ultimately, I elected to fold, as I could not devise a profitable way to play what was likely to be the best hand.
Wsop World Series Of Poker
Wsop First Hand Knockout
The important thing here is that I folded pre-flop, giving up in equity what was at most a fraction of the antes and my opponent’s raise. I did not 3-bet and then reluctantly fold what may have been the best hand in a much larger pot, and I did not call planning to check-fold the 85% of flops that did not contain a 5, which would have cost me a large fraction of my bet. I did my best to avoid the rough spot altogether. It is also important to note that with a larger pair, say pocket 9’s, I would have played more aggressively and been willing to take the increased risk of elimination on the money bubble. With a better pair, folding pre-flop is simply sacrificing too much.