Timothy Little raised to 2,100,000 in early position and on the big blind, Steven Stolzenfeld went all-in for 8,300,000. Little called and the cards were tabled.
Steven Stolzenfeld:
Timothy Little:
The flop and turn came out leaving Steven Stolzenfeld drawing to one out. The river gave Little a flush and Stolzenfeld was eliminated in 6th place.
David Guay raised under the gun to 2,000,000 and Frank Lagodich defended the big blind.
The flop came out and Frank Lagodich bet 5,900,000 which Guay called.
The turn of was bet by Lagodich again for 5,900,000 and Guay called once more.
The river came out and after a little bit of time Lagodich went all-in and Guay snap-called. Frank Lagogdch tabled for top pair top kicker, but Guay turned over for a full house.
Guay won the pot and Lagodich was eliminated in fifth place.
Jeff Platt's chip stack was hovering around a few blinds for a while after some shoves and no calls. There were a few times he was unwilling to call a shove, but finally, there was a shove and a call as Platt moved all in for 8,400,000 from under the gun and big stack David Guay called from the big blind.
Jeff Platt:
David Guay:
Platt's large rail yelled for the board to hold but the flop came to hit Guay and send him into the lead. The turn was the to give Platt a gutshot. The dealer paused for dramatic effect before dealing the on the river which was not enough for Platt as his memorable run ended in a fourth place finish.
Timothy Little moved all in from the button for about 11,000,0000 and was called by David Guay in the big blind.
Timothy Little:
David Guay:
Guay had the lead as the flop came . The turn was the to make a chop pot likely but the came on the river to give Guay two-pair and end the night for Little in third place and set up heads up play with very tight stacks.
From the button Anthony Denore raised to 2,800,000. David Guay three-bet to 10,600,000, Denore four-bet all in and Guay called.
David Guay:
Anthony Denore:
It was a cooler situation by heads-up standards as Guay was pipped by Denore's better pocket pair and would need help.
The flop came for no help. The turn was the leaving Guay only drawing to a nine but the river was the and just like that heads-up play was abruptly over and Guay was eliminated in second place.
After eight and a half hours of play on Day 4 of Event #43: $1,000 Double Stack No-Limit Hold'em at the 2021 World Series of Poker, it was cash game player Anthony Denove who took down the first-place prize of $446,983 and his first WSOP bracelet.
The cash game player, who up until this week had $76k in live earnings, with his biggest recorded cash being $6,000 has more than tripled his lifetime earnings with his win here today. “It’s been my dream to win a bracelet,” Denove said overcome with emotion. “I’ve been playing cash for six years but I do really love tournaments.”
Denove, who also recently became a father, was the start of the final table chip leader, full of big names like Michael Wang, Jeff Platt, and David Guay who had come in seventh place in this event in 2019.
“I knew a lot of those players would not be making any mistakes in a lot of spots,” he said when asked about the lineup. “I try not to be too conscious of it, helps keep my expectations in check.”
Event #43: $1,000 Double Stack Final Table Results
Place
Winner
Country
Prize (in USD)
1
Anthony Denove
United States
$446,983
2
David Guay
Canada
$276,269
3
Timothy Little
United States
$210,004
4
Jeff Platt
United States
$160,662
5
Frank Lagodich
United States
$123,710
6
Steven Stolzenfeld
United States
$95,878
7
Kenneth Inouye
United States
$74,796
8
Joshua Harrison
United States
$58,735
9
Michael Wang
United States
$46,430
10
Matthew Raffoul
Canada
$36,949
The action with the final 17 players was fast and furious and players were eliminated rather quickly. Bracelet winners Jonathan Dokler (15th-$23,877) and Sejin Park (13th-$29,602) came into the day with bigger stacks, but ultimately found themselves on the wrong side of some coinflips and were eliminated before the final table. Within a few hours, the final table of ten was set.
Final Table Action
The action went quickly at the final table, starting out with Denove raising in the cutoff and Matthew Raffoul putting his entire stack in the middle. Start of day chip leader Michael Wang in the big blind thought for a long time before deciding to do the same and put his whole stack in the middle and Denove called covering them both. Denove’s pocket kings were well ahead of the ace-ten of Raffoul and pocket nines of Wang, and Denove flopping a set left his opponents drawing very thin. Neither of them improved and they were eliminated. Raffoul in tenth place for $36,949 and Wang in ninth place for $46,430.
The next player to fall was Joshua Harrison when his ace-eight could not hold against the king-queen held by Frank Lagodich. A king on the flop sealed Harrison’s fate and he departed in eighth place for $58,735.
Start of the final table short stack was able to ladder up a few spots, but in the end, Kenneth Inouye got in his remaining chips with queen-ten suited against David Guay’s ace-eight suited and Guay filled up on the turn to have Inouye drawing dead before the river even came. Inouye received $74,796 for his seventh-place finish.
Steven Stolzenfeld was next to leave when he got his remaining chips in with pocket eights against Timothy Little’s ace-five suited. The board paired Little’s ace and the river brought an eight to give Stolzenfeld three of a kind, but it was no good as the eight he got was a flush completing card for Little. Stolzenfeld departed in sixth place for $95,878.
Lagodich had lost almost all of his chips in a massive pot against Guay but had managed to double up three times, putting him in the top three for chips with five people left. But a big pot emerged with Guay when he had top pair versus middle set and all the chips went in the middle, leaving Lagodich to depart in fifth place for $123,710.
PokerGO commentator Jeff Platt spent most of the time on the short stack when players were five-handed, and he departed shortly after Lagodich when his ace-nine could not hold up against the king-jack of Guay. Platt congratulated the other players as he departed in fourth place for $160,662.
Things were pretty even between Guay and Denove for chips with Timothy Little being the shortest stack three-handed. Eventually, Little got his chips in with ace-three against Guay’s ace-eight. The board came all high cards, looking as if it was going to be a chop, but an eight came on the river to pair up Guay and Little departed in third place for $210,004.
Heads-up play chip counts started very even, but within thirty minutes Denove was comfortably ahead. With Denove acquiring a 2:1 chip lead, Guay picked up pocket nines and Denove picked up pocket tens, and all of the chips got in before the flop. Guay could not find improvement on the board, and the seventh-place finisher of this event in 2019 ended his second final table run in the double stack in second place for $276,269.
Guay and Denove shook hands and Denove went to his rail, full of emotion as he went to go talk to his father on the rail about the tournament that he won to get his first WSOP bracelet.
Denove said he will come back to try to play the Main Event, but first, he is going to go home and spend some time with his wife and daughter.
PokerNews’ coverage of this event is finished, but stay tuned for updates on all other WSOP events right here at The Rio All-Suite Hotel and Casino.