Norbert Szecsi remporte le WSOPE Mixed Event (86,596�) devant Shaun Deeb, Julien Sitbon 4e
A Royal Flush at the final table helped Norbert Szecsi win his second WSOP gold bracelet after victory in Event #6: No-Limit Hold'em/Pot-Limit Omaha Mixed Event. He takes home �86,596 in prize money after besting a field of 241 players.
Since winning his first bracelet in 2013 in a $1,000 No-Limit Hold'em event, Szecsi has had two runner-up finishes in WSOP events in 2014 and 2016. Now he has gone one step further and added another gold bracelet to his collection.
WSOP Player of the Year leader Shaun Deeb takes home �63,731 for his second-place finish, just missing out on a third bracelet of the year. A fourth top-three finish does not make him mathematically certain to win the Player of the Year title just yet, but it would take a herculean effort from another player over the remainder of the WSOPE festival to deny the four-time bracelet winner.
Here are the final table results:
Place | Name | Country | Payout (EUR) | Payout (USD) |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Norbert Szecsi | Hungary | � 86,596 | $99,585 |
2 | Shaun Deeb | United States | � 63,731 | $73,291 |
3 | Netanel Amedi | Israel | � 36,705 | $42,211 |
4 | Julien Sitbon | France | � 25,618 | $29,461 |
5 | Samuel Albeck | Germany | � 18,276 | $21,017 |
6 | Jaroslav Peter | Czech Republic | � 13,334 | $15,334 |
7 | Vittorio Castro | Italy | � 9,953 | $11,446 |
8 | Van Tiep Nguyen | Czech Republic | � 7,606 | $8,747 |
Final Day Recap
Eight players remained at the start of play, with Netanel Amedi leading the way with Szecsi not far behind him, and it was Amedi who increased his stack over two million over the opening exchanges. However, Shaun Deeb battled back to lead at the first break of the day in a very fluid opening two levels.
Van Tiep Nguyen didn't manage to get anything going on the final day's play and was the first elimination of the day at the hands of Julien Sitbon, losing a flip to bust in eighth. It was Nguyen's second final table of the 2018 WSOPE after finishing fifth in Event #2 earlier. He was closely followed by Vittorio Castro who picked his spot with kings in Pot-Limit Omaha only to run into the aces of Szecsi.
Samuel Albeck doubled before Jaroslav Peter was cruelly sent to the rail. Having already doubled early in the day, Peter got his stack in with un-suited aces against the eights and fours of Amedi in Pot-Limit Omaha, only for Amedi to turn a set of eights.
At this stage Amedi and Deeb were above two million in chips, but Amedi would push out his American opponent and move closer to three million with five players left.
Those five soon became four with the elimination of Albeck, his ace out-kicked by that of Deeb to bust in fifth. It soon became a real arm-wrestle between Deeb, Amedi and a resurgent Szecsi before Amedi once more exerted his dominance eliminating Julien Sitbon in fourth place.
Sitbon got it in with queens against Amedi's jacks in Pot-Limit Omaha, but the Frenchman improved to trip aces on the flop. However, a jack on the river gave Amedi a set and eliminated Sitbon.
By the next break the stacks were level once more, with no breakthrough seeming likely. That was until an incredible hand which saw Amedi left with next to no chips.
Szecsi was the shortstack at the table and he three-bet jammed only to get called by the of Amedi. The flop came with the Hungarian's rail screaming for his outs. The turn was the but the river was the giving Szecsi a Royal Flush and a lifeline back into the contest.
Amedi was eliminated in the very next hand by Szecsi, who had gone from last to first in three hands to start heads-up.
Heads-up play was a cautious and patient affair with both players knowing that one pivotal hand could change the entire dynamic of the contest. Deeb quickly turned the tables however to move out into an early lead, but the pendulum swung back the way of Szecsi after out-kicking Deeb when both players turned trips.
The very next hand Deeb three-bet all in on an ace-high turn only to run into Szecsi's top set meaning the WSOP Player of the Year-elect was drawing dead, and secured the Hungarian's second career bracelet and �86,596 in prize money.