2019 Wsop Winner

1 day ago  In 2019, Bardah competed on the 39th season of the CBS show Survivor: Island of the Idols. WSOP Bracelet Winner Ronnie Bardah On Being Raised In A. World Series of Poker 2019: Hossein Ensan claims $10 million prize with his first Main Event victory. 2016 winner Qui Nguyen and 2003 champ Chris Moneymaker all threatened deep runs as well.

Over 60 Bracelets Have Already Been Won at the 50th Annual World Series of Poker! Here’s the WSOP 2019 Winners List from Event #11 – Event #20

  • Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania's James Anderson, 33, has become the winner of the 2019 World Series of Poker Event #75: $1,000+111 Little One for One Drop No-Limit Hold'em by outlasting a record-setting field of 6,246 to claim his first WSOP gold bracelet and a first-place prize of $690,686.
  • To celebrate the 50th WSOP there was a $50,000 No Limit Hold'em event as well as the Big 50, a $500 buy-in No Limit Hold'em event with a guaranteed $5 million prize pool and $1 million for the winner. There was also a tournament open only to past WSOP bracelet winners. A short deck tournament was also held for the first time. All No Limit Hold.
  • The 2019 World Series of Poker was the 50th annual tournament, and took place from May 28-July 16 at the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada. There were 90 bracelet events. To celebrate the 50th WSOP there was a $50,000 No Limit Hold'em event as well as the Big 50, a $500 buy-in No Limit Hold'em event with a guaranteed $5 million.

WSOP 2019 Winners List (Event #11-20)

The 50th annual tournament of the biggest poker event in the world, the 2019 World Series of Poker or WSOP, is celebrating its Golden Jubilee at the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada. The event began 28th May and will continue till 16th July 2019. The World Series of Poker is every poker player’s ultimate dream and this year at the 2019 WSOP there will be 90 bracelet events for players to earn the coveted title.

Halfway through the event, over 60 bracelets have already been won by players. Here are the winners of from events #11 to #20-

Event #11 – $5,000 No-Limit Hold’em

Winner: Daniel Strelitz ($442,385)

  • Entries: 400
  • Prizepool: $1,860,000

I’m feeling pretty good, I finally got it off my back. I came close a few times so it was kinda disappointing but it wasn’t like I was desperate for one. It wasn’t a void in my life or anything. It’s just a massive relief, I’m super happy. All my friends have bracelets and they have been needling me about the bracelet winners event this year. And now they’re saying that they have a ride to the event cause I’m the car. So, they don’t get to needle me anymore.

  • Winner: Daniel Strelitz ($442,385)
  • Runner-Up: Shannon Shorr ($273,416)

Daniel Strelitz won his first WSOP bracelet. He previously finished 2nd in an event in 2016 and had a 3rd in 2014. Strelitz beat poker pros like Maria Ho and Shannon Shorr at the final table

Event #12 – $1,000 No-Limit Hold’em Super Turbo Bounty

Winner: Daniel Park ($226,243)

  • Entries: 2,452
  • Prizepool: $1,471,200

I can’t believe it right now. It’s so unreal. I wasn’t thinking about playing the Main Event but this is going to force me to play it. I’ve always wanted to play the Main Event. I always used to watch it on TV … I never thought I would actually be able to play it.

2019 Wsop Winner
  • Winner: Daniel Park ($226,243)
  • Runner-Up: Erik Cajelais ($139,731)

Daniel Park, a South Korean-American, beat former WSOP bracelet winner Cajelais to win his first WSOP bracelet while Jennifer Dennis from Oklahoma. At one point Park was down to just a single 100K chip after posting his blind but came out strong to win the event.

Event #13 – $1,500 No-Limit 2-7 Lowball Draw

Winner: Yuval Bronshtein ($96,278)

  • Entries: 296
  • Prizepool: $399,600

It feels amazing. It’s exactly what I thought it would be like. I’m not surprised I’ve always felt I could win one of these tournaments. Glad to finally wrap one up, I’m definitely really happy about it. This has been a really big goal of mine since I started playing poker. It’s been my number one goal.

  • Winner: Yuval Bronshtein ($96,278)
  • Runner-Up: Ajay Chabra ($59,491)

Yuval Bronshtein, with 53 WSOP cashes and 10 WSOP final tables, finally ended up with a WSOP bracelet in his hand after years of grind, knocking out Ajay Chabra heads-up.

Event #14 – $1,500 HORSE

Winner: Murilo Thiago Souza Figueredo ($207,003)

Winner of 2019 wsop final table
  • Entries: 751
  • Prizepool: $1,013,850

It’s amazing. They’re the best players from Brazil. I’ve known them for a long time. We’ve been playing poker together for more than 13 years. Winning here with them watching, I don’t even have words to describe it.

  • Winner: Murilo Thiago Souza Figueredo ($207,003)
  • Runner-Up: Jason Stockfish ($127,932)

Murilo Thiago Souza Figueredo, a professional poker player from Brazil, won his first WSOP bracelet and first career WSOP cash. Figueredo and Stockfish played an astonishing 6 hours total heads-up – 2 late at night and 4 after a restart the next day

Event #15 – $10,000 Heads-Up No-Limit Hold’em

Winner: Sean Swingruber ($207,003)

  • Entries: 112
  • Prizepool: $572,800

To win this event, first try, first bracelet, it’s incredible. I honestly thought my biggest edge coming into this tournament was that people really didn’t know me. I’m not really known in the poker world. I think a lot of opponents looked me up and thought, this is gonna be an easier match.

  • Winner: Sean Swingruber ($207,003)
  • Runner-Up: Ben Yu ($127,932)

Sean Swingruber, a cash-game player from Los Angeles, beat Ben Yu, a 3-time WSOP bracelet winner, to claim his first WSOP bracelet. It was also Swingruber’s largest-ever WSOP cash.

Event #16 – $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em Six-Handed

Winner: Isaac Baron ($407,739)

  • Entries: 1,832
  • Prizepool: $2,473,200

I’m feeling pretty good. It’s been a long time coming getting this first bracelet. I’ve wanted it for a while and am just glad it was pretty easy today. I’m not sure what it means for my career, but it feels good. I’ve wanted a bracelet for a long time. I started out watching the World Series. I’ve played these tournaments for 12 years and have never gotten one, so it feels good … I don’t really know how to put it into words. It feels like a long time coming.

  • Winner: Isaac Baron ($407,739)
  • Runner-Up: Ong Dingxiang ($251,937)

Notes: This is the first WSOP bracelet for

Isaac Baron, a poker pro from Los Angeles known online as “westmenloAA”, took home his first bracelet. Baron previously won Card Player’s Online Player of the Year award in 2007 and also finished 3rd at the 2014 PCA and runner-up at WPT Bay 101 in 2015

Event #17 – $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em Shootout

Winner: Brett Apter ($238,824)

  • Entries: 917
  • Prizepool: $1,237,950

I feel like I’m in a dream. I wanted this ever since I first started playing poker. Ever since I won yesterday, and knew I was going to the final table, it hasn’t felt real. I’ve just been trying to live up every moment at the final table. I was just soaking up every moment with all my friends here, playing heads up for a bracelet, and I just knew that I wanted to play my absolute best every second since it was going to be something I would never forget. I wanted no regrets.

  • Winner: Brett Apter ($238,824)
  • Runner-Up: Anatolii Zyrin ($147,594)

Brett Apter won his first WSOP bracelet, defeating 8-time WSOP bracelet winner Erik Seidel on his way to the title. The 31-year-old from Tennessee played heads-up against Zyrin for over 2 hours where Zyrin held a 4-1 chip lead.

Event #18 – $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo 8-or-Better Championship

2019 Wsop Bracelet Winners

Winner: Frankie O’Dell ($443,641)

  • Entries: 183
  • Prizepool: $1,237,950

It was a war because you have warriors in there. You have one of the Mizrachi f****ing great player brothers, then you got one of the guys who knows almost everything on Stud and Omaha Hi-Lo. Then you have me, old school poker … there’s only one person who has three limit Omaha eight bracelets and you’re talking to him. So until someone passes me or catches me, I’m not going to say nothing. I’m just going to leave it right there.

  • Winner: Frankie O’Dell ($443,641)
  • Runner-Up: Owais Ahmed ($274,192)

Notes: 12 years after he won his last WSOP bracelet, Frankie O’Dell took home his third WSOP bracelet beating former bracelet winners and pro players like Owais Ahmed, Robert Mizrachi, Jake Schwartz, David Benyamine and Shaun Deeb.

Event #19 – $1,500 Millionaire Maker No Limit Hold’em

Wsop

Winner: John Gorsuch ($1,344,930)

  • Entries: 8,809
  • Prizepool: $11,892,150

I’m a poker player for right now. Poker is awesome. I can play poker all day, all night long. This kind of helps figure out whether or not I want to keep doing it. I don’t play cash stakes at all. You’ve got to run good in tournaments otherwise your cash flow dries up quick if you don’t supplement it with cash [games].

  • Winner: John Gorsuch ($1,344,930)
  • Runner-Up: Kazuki Ikeuchi ($830,783)

John Gorsuch, from Florida, won his the first WSOP bracelet after being down to less than two big blinds seven handed before launching his epic comeback. The 42-year-old went all-in blind when he was short. He shoved UTG and won with two pair. The next hand he was in the big blind with pocket nines, got in a three-way all-in pot and flopped a set.

Event #20 – $1,500 Seven-Card Stud

Winner: Eli Elezra ($93,766)

  • Entries: 285
  • Prizepool: $384,750

When we went to Cabo, I told my buddies, I’m gonna win a bracelet this year and I’m gonna win it in stud. I saw more [stud] hands than everyone who played with me. And as I say, stud loves me back.

  • Winner: Eli Elezra ($93,766)
  • Runner-Up: Anthony Zinno ($57,951)

Pro player Eli Elezra won his 4th WSOP bracelet beating other poker veterans like Zinno, Rep Porter, David Singer and Scott Seiver.

Also Read:
WSOP 2019 Winners List (Event #1-10)
WSOP 2019 Winners List (Event #21-30)

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2019 wsop winner

WSOP 2019 Winners List (Event #11-20)

LAS VEGAS -- Hossein Ensan defeated Dario Sammartino heads-up to clinch the 2019 World Series of Poker main event title and the $10 million first-place prize.

2019 Wsop Main Event Winner

Ensan, 55, started each of the three days of the final table well ahead of everyone else, and despite ceding that lead to Sammartino early in their heads-up battle, Ensan fought his way back into the lead and held it through the last few hours of the match.

On the 301st hand of the final table and 100th hand between Ensan and Sammartino, Ensan raised to 11 million and Sammartino called. The flop fell Ts-6s-2d, Sammartino checked and Ensan bet 15 million. Sammartino checked again on the 9c turn, Ensan bet 33 million and Sammartino moved all-in for 140 million. With king hearts-king clubs, Ensan called quickly; Sammartino's 8s-4s was behind, but could still hit a straight or flush with one card to come.

With the Qc river, Ensan's fans and friends in the crowd exploded into celebration, as a pair of kings was enough to win the pot and the tournament.

'It's unbelievable, I cannot understand this moment. ... I must go to sleep and wake up, and then maybe I know I have the bracelet,' said Ensan. 'Maybe it's a dream. I don't know.'

2019 Wsop Winner

The 2019 WSOP main-event final table was unlike any that came before it, with loud, boisterous chants going on throughout play. Such was the level of respect and good spirits that after the event concluded, both sets of supporters chanted in unison for each player.

'He's a really good guy,' Sammartino said of Ensan shortly after the tournament concluded. 'I met him a long time ago; we are friends and I really love him, so I'm really happy for him. Of course I wanted to win this, but he is the winner, so bravo.'

2019 Wsop Results Winner

Early on in Tuesday's action, the tournament swung in Sammartino's direction during a key hand against Alex Livingston, in which Sammartino turned two-pair, tens and sixes, and doubled up for the second time on the day against Livingston's pocket kings. Livingston would soon be eliminated in third place, when his ace-jack failed to defeat Ensan's ace-queen. Livingston settled for third place and $4 million.

After two dominant days in a row to start, Ensan saw his advantage slip. He ceded the top position to Livingston briefly before regaining it in short order going into heads-up play. On the second hand of that battle, Sammartino hit two running pairs on the turn and river to win a pot worth over 180 million to claim the lead -- and he wouldn't give it back for some time.

Wsop 2019 Win

Ensan fought his way back to the top, though, and became just the second German champion in WSOP main event history, following in the footsteps of Pius Heinz, the 2011 champion who took home $8.7 million. He is also the third Iranian-born player to capture the main event title; Mansour Matloubi (1990) and Hamid Dastmalchi (1992) are also previous winners. At 55, Ensan is also the oldest world champion since 1999, when Ireland's Noel Furlong won at age 61.

The main event drew 8,569 players, the second-largest field in the tournament's history, with a total prize pool of $80,548,604.

Winner Of 2019 Wsop Final Table

Final results:

2019 Wsop Winner List

  1. Hossein Ensan (Germany), $10 million

  2. Dario Sammartino (Italy), $6 million

  3. Alex Livingston (Canada), $4 million

  4. Garry Gates (United States), $3 million

  5. Kevin Maahs (United States), $2.2 million

  6. Zhen Cai (United States), $1.85 million

  7. Nick Marchington (England), $1.525 million

  8. Timothy Su (United States), $1.25 million

  9. Milos Skrbic (Serbia), $1 million