$10,000 WPT Seminole Hard Rock Finale Level 24: 20,000/40,000 with a 5,000 ante Players Remaining: 6 of 342 Average Stack: 2,280,000 (56 big blinds)
The six remaining players are in their seats, and the final table is set for action.
WPT Co-commentators Mike Sexton and Vince Van Patten were on set for the introductions, flanked by Executive Tour Director Matt Savage and Seminole Hard Rock Poker Tournament Director Tony Burns. Photos were taken, well wishes were exchanged, and the starting command was given to the dealer. The cards are in the air with 17:19 left in Level 24.
Follow along with this page for updates on all the significant action, or watch the live stream with cards up on a 30-minute delay by clicking here.
$10,000 WPT Seminole Hard Rock Finale Level 24: 20,000/40,000 with a 5,000 ante Players Remaining: 6 of 342 Average Stack: 2,280,000 (56 big blinds)
The $10,000 WPT Finale began with 342 players but only six remain with a chance to put their name on the WPT Champions Cup. They return at noon to the Paradise Live Theater and play down until we have our next big winner.
Richard Leger returns with the chip lead but there are other talented players trying to catch him. Chino Rheem is second in chips and already has his name on the Championship Cup. Adrian Mateos has a WSOP Europe Main Event bracelet (plus bonus EPT Grand Final title) while Aditya Prasetyo is making a fun habit of collecting WSOP C rings.
WSOP bracelet winner Bryan Piccioli returns with the shortest stack but the slow structure will allow him to pick his spots to move up the counts.
Players will take their seats at noon, fans are welcome to join the crowd, and we’ll be here with updates from start to finish.
With the $10K WPT Finale set to get underway at noon, here’s a look at the six players left with a chance for the title. Those six have combined for nearly $10.5 million in career earnings, two WPT titles, two WSOP bracelets (including a WSOP Europe Main Event), three WSOP Circuit rings, and one November Niner.
Seat 1: Chino Rheem Chip Count – 3,430,000
Rheem became well-known thanks to an appearance at the 2008 WSOP November Nine when he finished 7th, then followed that up with a WPT win at the Five Diamond Classic the next month. He added another WPT title in 2013 with a win in the WPT World Championship.
Seat 2: Bryan Piccioli Chip Count: 535,000
Piccioli earned a WSOP bracelet during the 2013 WSOP APAC in Melbourne Australia and made the WPT final table last month during the Bay 101 Shooting Star event. He also has a WSOP final table appearance from 2013 in a $1,500 No Limit Hold’em event.
Seat 3: Richard Leger Chip Count: 4,010,000
Leger is the sole Florida resident at the WPT Finale final table and he went deep in the WPT Seminole Hard Rock Poker Showdown Championship in 2012. He’s looking for his first career tournament victory, his closest coming during the 2014 Coco Poker Open.
Seat 4: Adrian Mateos Chip Count: 850,000
Mateos biggest success came with he scored the WSOP Europe Main Event championship in 2013. That win netted him €1,000,000 and he followed that up with an EPT Grand Final Main Event title for another €1,000,000.
Seat 5: William Benson Chip Count: 2,230,000
Still waiting on his first tournament title, Benson made the last four tables during the 2015 WPT Seminole Hard Rock Lucky Hearts Poker Open. He came close to a WSOP circuit ring when he finished 2nd during a 2012 Biloxi tournament.
Seat 6: Aditya Prasetyo Chip Count: 2,620,000
Prasetyo has a half dozen tournament victories to his credit and he earned his third WSOP Circuit ring less than a month ago. He has three runner-up finishes in other WSOPC events as well as a second place finish during the 2014 Seminole Hard Rock “Rock ‘N’ Roll Poker Open” $1,650 tournament.
Wednesday was the busiest day of the Seminole Hard Rock Poker Showdown. Five trophies were awarded and only two more remain before the series concludes.
Scott Clements took the first title of the day. He came back at noon to finish the final table of the $2,200 Pot Limit Omaha. About five hours later, Clements was $47,400 richer.
The only event that kicked off on Wednesday was the last open event of the series. Jeremy Costa bested a field of 175 players to take home $10,657 in the $250 No Limit Hold’em Turbo.
Vanessa Wang took down the other three digit buy-in of the day. She came back for Day 2 of the $150 No Limit Hold’em re-entry and chopped heads-up for $16,118. She chopped it evenly with Billy Haworth, but since Wang had more chips, she took credit for the win and the title. The total field size was 625 and 67 survived to play Day 2.
The biggest buy-in of the entire series wrapped up on Wednesday as well. David Malka topped a field of 94 players to win $658,000 in the $25,000 High Roller No Limit Hold’em. Malka has been on a heater of late. This is his second final table of the series and his second tournament win in the last three weeks.
Malka defeated former November Niner Sylvain Loosli heads-up to take home the trophy.
While everything was going on in the ballroom, the $3,500 WPT Seminole Hard Rock Poker Showdown Championship was playing its final table out in the Paradise Live theater. Justin Young came out on top of a stacked final table and defeated Garrett Greer heads-up to win $654,161 and a seat in the Tournament of Champions.
Thursday doesn’t have nearly as many tournaments running, but there is still a ton at stake. The final table of the $10,000 WPT Seminole Hard Rock Finale kicks off at noon in the Paradise Live theater. It will be live streamed on WPT.com.
The only other event left on the schedule is the WPT Tournament of Champions. That kicks off on Friday at noon and is only available to those players who have won a WPT main tour event.
Here is a look at Thursday’s schedule:
12 p.m. – Final Day – $10,000 WPT Seminole Hard Rock Finale
Seminole Hard Rock Poker Showdown Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino Hollywood $25,000 High Roller No Limit Hold’em (Re-Entry) Total Entries: 94 Prizepool: $2,350,000
David Malka is the champion of the $25,000 High Roller event, outlasting a field of 94 entries to win the $658,000 top prize. Malka also collected the glass trophy for this event, one of the last pieces of hardware to be awarded during this series.
This event began on Tuesday evening with just a few tables in play, but the field ballooned to nearly 100 entries by the time registration closed. Among the elite field were a couple WSOP Main Event Champions — Joe Hachem and Joe McKeehen — along with former WPT Players of the Year Darren Elias, Faraz Jaka, and Mukul Pauja. None of them were able to finish in the money, however.
The same can be said for defending champion of this event, Jason Mercier. The Florida pro was eliminated by Malka on the direct money bubble, shoving his short stack with into Malka’s . Mercier flopped a flush draw on the , but that’s as close as he’d get to salvation. The turn and river bricked off, and Mercier’s elimination left the final 13 players in the money.
That knockout signaled the end of a long Day 1 around 5:00 a.m., and the survivors returned to play for the title on Wednesday, beginning at 4:00 p.m. Local high-stakes player Brian Benderoff was the chip leader when Day 2 began, and he rode his big stack to a seventh-place finish, good for more than $80,000.
When the final six players broke for dinner, Nick Petrangelo was the chip leader. Things went sour for him in the levels after the break, though, and he was eliminated on a cooler in fourth place, holding an overpair and a straight draw against Malka’s flopped straight. The turn and river failed to keep Petrangelo afloat, and his knockout gave Malka more than 60% of the chips in play with three remaining.
The champ continued his late domination of the final table, whittling Tim West down to less than 10 big blinds before Sylvain Loosli eliminated him in third place. Despite his opponent scoring the penultimate knockout, Malka still entered the heads-up duel with a 4:1 chip lead over the 2013 WSOP November Niner.
The battle lasted about a half hour before a coin flip decided the match. On the final hand, Malka shoved with ace-ten, and Loosli called all in with pocket sixes. The first four cards kept the Frenchman in the lead, and he was one card from drawing nearly even in the match. The river was the , though, giving Malka the pot, the knockout, and the title.
Malka is a 28-year-old pro from Los Angeles. Although he’s been playing poker since he was 19, he’s only recently started to dabble in tournaments, citing the desire to travel and the thrill of tournament poker as his motivations. Things seem to be going well so far. This most recent victory is the largest of his young career, and it brings his total earnings to just over $1 million.
Here are the full results:
1st: David Malka – $658,000 2nd: Sylvain Loosli – 481,750 3rd: Tim West – $298,450 4th: Nick Petrangelo – $206,800 5th: Nick Yunis – $133,950 6th: Yevgeniy Timoshenko – $101,050 7th: Brian Benderoff – $82,250 8th: Steffen Sontheimer – $70,500 9th: Lazaro Hernandez – $68,150 10th: Jake Schindler – $65,800 11th: John Dolan – $63,450 12th: Dan Shak – $61,100 13th: Fedor Holz – $58,750
$25,000 High Roller No Limit Hold’em (Re-Entry) Level 23: 30,000/60,000 with a 10,000 ante Players Remaining: 1 of 94
David Malka opened to 135,000 on the button, and Sylvain Loosli three-bet to 345,000 in the big blind. Malka moved all in with the covering stack, and Loosli called all in for just over 2,000,000, putting himself at risk. It was a race:
Malka: Loosli:
The board ran out , and the ace on the river gave Malka the pot and the title. Loosli was eliminated as the runner-up.
Malka posed for winner’s photos with his shiny new trophy, and he was handed a payout ticket for $658,000, by far the largest score of his tournament career. A recap of his victory will be published shortly.
$25,000 High Roller No Limit Hold’em (Re-Entry) Level 23: 30,000/60,000 with a 10,000 ante Players Remaining: 3 of 94
David Malka raised to 135,000 on the button and Sylvain Loosli three-bet to 345,000 out of the big blind. Malka took a few moments in the tank and then put in a four-bet to 655,000 and Loosli tossed his hand into the muck.
A few hands later, Sylvain Loosli raised to 150,000 out of the small blind and David Malka defended his big blind. The flop was and Loosli bet 125,000. Malka raised to 315,000 and Loosli folded.
Malka dragged the pot and extended his already massive chip lead, crossing over the 7 million chip mark.
David Malka – 7,200,000 Sylvanil Loosli – 1,275,000
$25,000 High Roller No Limit Hold’em (Re-Entry) Level 23: 30,000/60,000 with a 10,000 ante Players Remaining: 3 of 94
On a flop of , Nick Petrangelo checked from the small blind and David Malka bet 235,000 from the big blind. Sylvain Loosli called on the button and Petrangelo went into the tank for a minute.
Petrangelo eventually moved all in for about 2,000,000 and Malka hesitates for a few moments before moving all in for about 3,500,000. Loosli quickly folded and the cards were tabled.
Malka showed , good for the nut straight and had Petrangelo drawing to runners with his . The turn was the , giving Petrangelo some outs, but the river was the and Petrangelo hit the rail in fourth place.
Petrangelo took home $206,800 for his finish and Malka takes a massive chip lead into three-handed play.
David Malka – 5,750,000 (95 bb) Nick Petrangelo – Eliminated