Thiago "IneedWasabi" Macedo Wins 2021 GGPoker WSOP Online Event #4

Matthew Pitt
Senior Editor
4 min read
Thiago Macedo

Thiago "IneedWasabi" Macedo secured his first and Brazil's second World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet when he finished with all the chips in play in Event #4: $800 Double Chance NLH online at GGPoker.

Some 1,643 players bought into the event on Day 1, creating a $1,248,680 prize pool as a result. Macedo got his hands on $161,637 of that princely sum in addition to, of course, a coveted gold WSOP bracelet.

Event #4: $800 Double Chance NLH Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Thiago "IneedWasabi" MacedoBrazil$161,637
2Andreas "Duckzzz" NasmanFinland$121,209
3Mathias "Senor Perez" SiljanderFinland$90,894
4Tomi "BAAABUUSKIII" BroukFinland$68,161
5Ivan "Kewww" BabintsevUkraine$51,114
6Stoyan "UncleToni" ObreshkovBulgaria$38,330
7Ido "idollar" AboudiIsrael$28,743
8Sung keung "skpang781" PangHong Kong$21,554
9Sergei "Igor Gofman" PillpenkoRussia$16,163

Simao Wins First Bracelet in GGPoker WSOP Online Event #2

Macedo was in disguise until the final table real-name policy exposed him as "IneedWasabi." Macedo had bagged the third-largest stack at the end of Day 1 and found himself among the chip leaders throughout proceedings. However, Macedo sat down at the nine-handed final table eighth in chips and with plenty of work to do.

The final table was a star-studded affair, and any of the nine finalists would have made a worthy WSOP champion.

Pillpenko Goes From Hero to Zero

Russia's Sergei "Igor Gofman" Pillpenko sat down at the final table as the chip leader, but he was the first player out of the door. Pillpenko lost most of his stack to Mathias "Senor Perez" Siljander before committing the remainder of his short stack with ace-eight, finding a caller in the shape of Tomi "BAABUUSKIII" Brouk, and losing to a ten on the turn.

Sung Keung "skpang781" Pang was the next to fall, the man from Hong Kong busting at the hands of Stoyan "UncleToni" Obreshkov, who you may recall, reached the final table of last year's WSOP Main Event International event.

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Seventh-place went to Ido "idollar" Aboudi; Obreshkov did the damage here once again. Obreshkov was the chip leader after Aboudi's elimination, but he came unraveled, fell in sixth place, and had to make do with a $38,330 prize.

Ukraine's Ivan "Kewww" Babintsev's exit in fifth-place left only four players in the hunt for the bracelet. Babintsev was down to approximately 6.25 big blinds when he looked down at king-queen and decided to move all-in from under the gun. Siljander looked him up from the big blind with ace-seven and caught a seven on the flop. Game over for Babintsev, but game on for Siljander.

Brouk Busts in Fourth Place

Tomi Brouk
Tomi Brouk

The dangerous Finn, Brouk, saw his bracelet run end in a fourth-place finish worth $68,161. Brouk min-raised to 800,000 on the button, and Macedo defended his big blind. Macedo check-called a 600,000 continuation bet on a king-ten-king flop before both players checked the five of clubs turn. Macedo led for 1,056,000 on the seemingly innocuous four of spades river, only for Brouk to jam all-in for 4,244,902. Macedo tanked for more than two minutes before making the call with king-nine for trips. Brouk could only muster queen-jack.

Macedo then claimed his second final table scalp, that of Siljander. With the 250,000/500,000/60,000a blinds eating into the players' stacks, Siljander made a move for his 4,500,000 stack from the small blind with what turned out to be nine-eight. Macedo called with the dominating king-nine. A king on the flop left Siljander drawing extremely thin; he was drawing dead by the turn.

That hand boosted Macedo's stack to 24,391,359, but he had plenty of work ahead of him in the heads-up battle with Finnish star Andreas "Duckzzz" Nasman, who had 41,328,641 chips in front of him.

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Macedo clawed his way level before forging a lead for himself. The Brazilian got the job done during Level 45 when the blinds and antes were 400,000/800,000/100,000a.

The Brazilian champion elect limped in with queen-nine and called a 2,400,000 raise from Nasman, which the Finn made with king-jack of spades. The flop came down nine-queen-six with two spades, Nasman betting 1,650,000, and Macedo calling. Both players check a red eight on the turn, but Nasman ripped it in for almost 7,500,000 on the king of clubs river, a bet that Macedo quickly called.

An impressive performance from Nasman, but one that ultimately saw him fall at the final hurdle. A huge congratulations to Macedo, who won his first WSOP bracelet and joined his fellow samba star, Joao Simao, in the WSOP bracelet winner's club.

2021 GGPoker WSOP Online Continues on August 7

You do not have long to wait if you want to follow more updates from the 2021 GGPoker WSOP Online festival because the fifth event of 33 scheduled tournaments shuffles up and deals on August 7.

Event #5 is the $315 Bounty No-Limit Hold 'em Deepstack and is sure to attract some of the biggest names in the poker world. PokerNews' Live Reporting Team will be on the ground from when the first cards are pitched to when the champion is crowned. Be sure to join us.

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Matthew Pitt
Senior Editor

Matthew Pitt hails from Leeds, West Yorkshire, in the United Kingdom, and has worked in the poker industry since 2008, and worked for PokerNews since 2010. In September 2010, he became the editor of PokerNews. Matthew stepped away from live reporting duties in 2015, and now concentrates on his role of Senior Editor for the PokerNews.

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