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2018 World Series of Poker

Event #20: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em
Dias: 4
Event Info

2018 World Series of Poker

Resultados Finais
Campeão
Mão Vencedora
aa
Premiação
$537,710
Event Info
Buy-in
$5,000
Premiação
$2,408,700
Entries
518
Informações do Nível
Nível
34
Blinds
120,000 / 240,000
Ante
240,000
Informações do Jogador - Dia 4

Jeremy Wien Conquers Event #20: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em for $537,710 After Epic Heads-Up Battle

Nível 34 : 120,000/240,000, 240,000 ante
Jeremy Wien
Jeremy Wien

After one of the finest wars of attrition the World Series of Poker has ever seen, Jeremy Wien emerged victorious in Event #20: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em, defeating a field of 518 players for a $537,710 payday and his first gold bracelet.

"It's pretty surreal. I never really actually expected that it will ever happen but I dreamed about it," Wien said.

While the field boasted a ton of great poker players, there was mainly one rival who proved to be an incredibly tough obstacle for Wien: Spanish professional player David Laka. When the two found themselves heads-up, betting on Wien would be a very long shot. Not only he was a 4-1 underdog but Laka is also a short-handed and heads-up specialist.

Everything was lined up for Laka to become the champion. The 21-year-old was steamrolling the final table - until he clashed with Wien.

"I'd actually played the heads-up tournament last week. It gave me a lot of confidence that I could compete against these guys," Wien said, noting that he won his first match and lost in the second round.

Wien played an unorthodox style heads-up. With the full big blind ante, not many players tend to fold their buttons. Wien utilized a completely opposite strategy. Through 138 hands they played heads-up, Wien gave 32 walks to his rival. Yet, he still managed to keep his chances very much live. Each time he worked his stack back up, and while Laka downed him back to where they started, Wien just kept coming back.

"I had a plan, which was to be more deliberate and folding my button. We were joking that they announced that David got a walk for a 100th time."

Remarkably, Wien's comeback wasn't a case of many double ups as one would imagine as he entered most of his hands out of position. Wien needed help only once when he got it in preflop with ace-nine against pocket tens, facing his elimination. An ace on the flop saved him in the tournament, pushing him to the lead. Since then, it was anyone's game as both players were mostly neck and neck and the lead kept switching back and forth.

It took over four hours until the heads-up culminated. With increasing blinds, the stacks were as shallow as 25 big blinds on average. Then it happened: Laka was dealt pocket queens while Wien peeled aces. They didn't stuff it in pre, but the cards were turned on their backs on a jack-high flop. Aces held and Wien had his opponent barely covered to finally tackle him.

"He did tell me at the last break that he's a heads-up specialist," Wien said, adding that he tried not to look up at the players he was facing off against. "Obviously, I know who Jake Schindler and David Peters are."

"I have a style that's very different than them," Wien said. "I'm very nitty. It's a little different heads-up but in general, throughout the tournament, I played pretty tight and tried to pick my spots. It worked this week."

Final table results:

PositionPlayerCountryPrize
1Jeremy WienUnited States$537,710
2David LakaSpain$332,328
3Eric BlairUnited States$228,307
4Jake SchindlerUnited States$159,575
5John AmatoUnited States$113,510
6Shawn BuchananCanada$82,199
7David PetersUnited States$60,618
8Richard TuhrimUnited States$45,538

The heads-up took almost half of the whole final table play. The eight-handed final table started with players guarding fairly shallow stacks and it was likely that the deadlock would break soon. Richard Tuhrim couldn't gain any traction and left in the first level, but the tournament would hit a stalemate for a bit. Then, in level 29, three players were eliminated in the span of just four hands. First, Peters and Shawn Buchanan fell to David Laka in seventh and sixth place, respectively.

Buchanan's exit looked to be the key moment of the final table. The Canadian pro raised and then four-bet shoved fives into jacks and Laka had just enough chips to send him to the rail, winning the tournament's largest pot at the time. After Peters and Buchanan were gone, Eric Blair knocked out John Amato on the very next hand and suddenly only four men were sitting at the table.

Laka soon took care of Jake Schindler in a huge cooler that saw Schindler's kings getting cracked by ace-king on the river, propelling Laka into a commanding chip lead. Blair and Wien put up very little resistance to the leader who at one point won 11 out of 12 consecutive hands.

Blair dropped to a short stack and lost his chips to Laka who appeared unstoppable until he found himself up against Wien. When the scheduled 60-minute dinner break arrived, despite being hungry, Wien's plan was to skip the break so he wouldn't have to give his opponent time to study previous hands.

"I was initially thinking: 'Let's get a dinner break, let's relax, let me regroup," Wien admitted. But then he realized that he'd played a very tight table image through the whole tournament and didn't want to let Laka find out about some of the gutsy plays he'd made heads-up.

He may have starved through, but the reward was truly sweet. Now that he's a bracelet winner, Wien plans to come back for the tag team event and try to win another gold together with his wife.

David Laka
Jeremy Wien and David Laka shake hands after their epic heads-up battle

Tags: David LakaDavid PetersEric BlairJake SchindlerJeremy WienJohn AmatoRichard TuhrimShawn Buchanan

David Laka Eliminated in 2nd Place ($332,328)

Nível 34 : 120,000/240,000, 240,000 ante
David Laka
David Laka

Hand #290: Jeremy Wien limped and David Laka made it 840,000. Wien called the raise and they went to the {J-Hearts}{8-Clubs}{2-Hearts} flop.

Laka fired 1.25 million and Wien processed the situation for well over two minutes before check-raising to 2.5 million. Laka shoved all in and Wien called.

David Laka: {Q-Diamonds}{Q-Spades}
Jeremy Wien: {A-Hearts}{A-Diamonds}

Both players had been dealt a high pair and after six minutes, the cards were turned on their backs.

Laka was in a bad shape and the {3-Clubs} turn and {6-Hearts} river didn't help him. Wien had him slightly covered and just like that, the gruelling heads-up was over. David Laka took home $332,328 for his runner-up finish while Jeremy Wien is the newly crowned champion, joining the WSOP bracelet winners' club.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Jeremy Wien us
Jeremy Wien
WSOP 1X Winner
13,000,000 6,700,000
David Laka es
David Laka
Eliminado

Tags: David LakaJeremy Wien

Eric Blair Eliminated in 3rd Place ($228,307)

Nível 30 : 50,000/100,000, 100,000 ante
Eric Blair
Eric Blair

Hand #152: Eric Blair moved all in for his last seven big blinds and David Laka called the extra 595,000 in the big blind.

Eric Blair: {8-Diamonds}{9-Hearts}
David Laka: {J-Clubs}{10-Spades}

Laka was slightly ahead and the {5-Spades}{A-Spades}{J-Spades}{6-Diamonds}{4-Diamonds} board confirmed his victory. Eric Blair bowed out in third place, taking home $228,307 for his efforts. Laka has more than a four-to-one chip lead coming into heads-up play. Players are taking a short break before the final match.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
David Laka es
David Laka
10,600,000 800,000
Jeremy Wien us
Jeremy Wien
WSOP 1X Winner
2,400,000
Eric Blair us
Eric Blair
Eliminado

Tags: David LakaEric Blair

Jake Schindler Eliminated in 4th Place ($159,575)

Nível 29 : 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
Jake Schindler
Jake Schindler

Hand #101: Eric Blair opened to 200,000 in the cutoff with Jeremy Wien calling the button. Jake Schindler then three-bet all in for 1,140,000 from the small blind. David Laka four-bet all in 3,850,000 with Blair folding and the two went heads up with no more action.

Jake Schlinder: {k-Spades}{k-Diamonds}
David Laka: {a-Hearts}{k-Clubs}

The flop of {2-Spades}{4-Spades}{8-Spades} kept Schlinder in the lead as did the {6-Diamonds} turn. However, the brutal {a-Clubs} on the river cracked Schlinder's kings and made him the fourth-place finisher for $159,575.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
David Laka es
David Laka
7,300,000 2,800,000
Jake Schindler us
Jake Schindler
WSOP 1X Winner
Eliminado

Tags: David LakaEric BlairJake Schindler

John Amato Eliminated in 5th Place ($113,510)

Nível 29 : 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
John Amato
John Amato

Hand #91: John Amato open-jammed 1.06 million on the button and Eric Blair reshoved in the small blind. Amato showed {J-Clubs}{4-Clubs} and was trailing Blair's {A-Clubs}{10-Hearts}.

The {A-Diamonds}{Q-Diamonds}{J-Hearts} flop hit both players but Blair stayed ahead. Nothing changed on the {6-Spades} turn nor {9-Hearts} river and Amato exited in fifth place.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Eric Blair us
Eric Blair
3,400,000 1,200,000
John Amato us
John Amato
Eliminado

Tags: Eric BlairJohn Amato

Shawn Buchanan Eliminated in 6th Place ($82,199)

Nível 29 : 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
Shawn Buchanan - David Laka
Shawn Buchanan - David Laka

Hand #89: Eric Blair opened to 175,000 from under the gun, getting no callers and collecting the blinds and antes.

Hand #90: Shawn Buchanan opened to 160,000 on the cutoff with David Laka putting in a three-bet to 400,000 on the button. It folded back to Buchanan who took a few seconds before shoving all in for 2,030,000 with Laka calling instantly for his remaining 1,630,000.

Shawn Buchanan: {5-Spades}{5-Hearts}
David Laka: {j-Spades}{j-Diamonds}

The flop came {9-Diamonds}{6-Diamonds}{6-Clubs}, followed by the turn of {k-Diamonds}, with the river falling the {9-Spades}, ending Buchanan’s bracelet hopes as the sixth-place finisher as Laka gains a healthy chip lead.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
David Laka es
David Laka
4,300,000 2,200,000
Shawn Buchanan ca
Shawn Buchanan
Day 3 Chip Leader
WSOP 1X Winner
Eliminado

Tags: David LakaShawn Buchanan

David Peters Eliminated in 7th Place ($60,618)

Nível 29 : 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
David Peters
David Peters

Hand #88: Peters shoved 475,000 on the button and David Laka looked him up from the big blind.

David Peters: {K-Diamonds}{10-Hearts}
David Laka: {Q-Diamonds}{7-Diamonds}

The {4-Spades}{5-Hearts}{5-Spades} was safe for Peters, but the {Q-Spades} was a disastrous card, shifting the odds towards Laka. Peters could only hope for a king on the river, but he wouldn't get one as the {4-Clubs} eliminated him in seventh place.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
David Laka es
David Laka
2,100,000 600,000
David Peters us
David Peters
WSOP 2X Winner
Eliminado

Tags: David LakaDavid Peters

Richard Tuhrim Eliminated in 8th Place ($45,558)

Nível 26 : 20,000/40,000, 40,000 ante
Richard Tuhrim
Richard Tuhrim

Hand #30: Richard Tuhrim shoved all in for 425,000 from middle position with Jeremy Wien then three-betting to 1,720,000. Everyone else folded the hands were turned up.

Tuhrim showed {k-Hearts}{10-Diamonds} and was dominated by Wien’s {a-Clubs}{k-Clubs}. The board ran out {2-Spades}{A-Diamonds}{7-Clubs}{5-Clubs}{8-Spades} giving Wien a pair of aces and busting Tuhrim in eighth place.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Jeremy Wien us
Jeremy Wien
WSOP 1X Winner
3,000,000 400,000
Richard Tuhrim us
Richard Tuhrim
Eliminado

Buchanan, Peters, Schindler and Co. Return for Final Table of Event #20: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em

Shawn Buchanan
Shawn Buchanan

The cream rises to the top, they say. A look at the final eight-men lineup in the Event #20: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em is certainly in line with the statement. Some of the world's most prolific players will take the centre stage in the Amazon Room, playing for the $537,710 first-place prize and, of course, the bracelet.

There's Shawn Buchanan, an accomplished Canadian player on both live and virtual felts. He's been trying to claim a bracelet for well over a decade. After several narrow misses including three second-place finishes, Buchanan still has a goose egg next to his name when it comes to the WSOP titles. But he's cashed in 46 tournaments and hopes he'll finally close it out with his 47th.

Buchanan sits at the top of the leaderboard after a brilliant Day 3. Having a better starting position than anyone else is one thing, but there are still seven other contenders challenging "Bucky".

Two of them belong to the heavyweight category. David Peters and Jake Schindler are regularly playing the largest and most expensive events all around the world. They have won over $40 million combined. Both of them have been performing strongly in the last two years. But there is one significant difference between Peters and Schindler: Peters is already a member of the WSOP winners' club while Schindler is yet to bink his first gold.

The three aforementioned stars from North America will be joined by four other U.S. players: Jeremy Wien, Eric Blair, John Amato and Richard Tuhrim. The only player from across the pond is Spanish pro David Laka who currently resides in the United Kingdom. Laka will collect his first WSOP cash today and he'll surely do everything in his power to start his collection with a top notch.

With all these players taking back to the felt, it's almost guaranteed that the final day will offer some tremendous battles. PokerNews live reporting team will be on the ground, providing hand-for-hand updates so make sure to come back at 12 p.m. local time to see the climax of one of the toughest events on the WSOP schedule.

Seat Assignments for the Final Day

SeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Richard TuhrimUnited States625,00016
2John AmatoUnited States1,005,00025
3Eric BlairUnited States1,825,00046
4Jeremy WienUnited States2,455,00061
5Jake SchindlerUnited States880,00022
6David PetersUnited States1,925,00048
7Shawn BuchananCanada2,580,00065
8David LakaSpain1,655,00041
PositionPrize
1$537,710
2$332,328
3$228,307
4$159,575
5$113,510
6$82,199
7$60,618
8$45,538

Tags: David LakaDavid PetersJake SchindlerShawn Buchanan