Find Out How Nick Wright Left Phil Hellmuth "Seething" on Latest Poker After Dark

Chad Holloway
PR & Media Manager
5 min read
Phil Hellmuth and Nick Wright

Two weeks ago on "Poker After Dark", it was the first part of the $10,000 buy-in "Fight Night" sit-n-go style format game, which started players with 125,000 in chips. Among those in action were sports personality Nick Wright, Maria Ho, Daniel Negreanu, Phil Hellmuth, and Jon Aguiar. They were also joined by UFC ring announcer Bruce Buffer and daily fantasy sports legend Peter Jennings.

Last week’s episode marked Part 2 as seven were cut down to the final three, which was the money bubble as only the top two would get paid – the winner was set to take home $50,000 and the runner-up $20,000.

Wright began the episode as the chip leader with 443,000, Hellmuth sat in the middle with 270,000, and Jennings brought up the rear with 182,000. The action resumed in Level 13 with the blinds as 10,000/15,000/15,000.

PlayerStack/Place
Nick Wright443,000
Phil Hellmuth270,000
Peter Jennings182,000
Jonathan Aguiar4th
Daniel Negreanu5th
Maria Ho8th
Bruce Buffer7th

Here’s a look at some of the most interesting hands from this week’s episode:

Jennings Gets It in Against Wright

Peter Jennings
Peter Jennings

In one of the first hands, Wright raised the button to 45,000 with the 97 only to have Jennings three-bet jam for 132,000 from the small blind holding the AJ. Hellmuth got out of the way and Wright called to create a 294,000 pot.

Jennings got it in good but Wright held two live cards. The KK2 flop wasn’t anything special, and neither was the 4 turn.

Jennings just needed to dodge either a nine or seven on the river, which he successfully did when the 6 bricked. Ship the double to Jennings!

Hellmuth Trips Up Jennings

Phil Hellmuth
Phil Hellmuth

With the blinds at 10,00/20,000/20,000, Wright raised to 70,000 from the button with the QJ and Jennings moved all in from the small blind for 75,000 with the KJ. Hellmuth was in the big and called with the 76 and with no option to raise, Wright called as well to see a 86K flop.

Jennings paired his king as was a big favorite, and he stayed in front on the 2 turn after the two active players checked the flop. On the turn, Hellmuth bet 25,000 and Wright called to see the river, which was the 6 giving Hellmuth trips.

Hellmuth bet 45,000, Wright folded, and Jennings discovered the bad news – that he finished as the bubble boy.

Hellmuth Has the Wright Stuff

Nick Wright
Nick Wright

Hellmuth limped the button for 10,000 with the 76 and Wright checked his option holding the J2 to bring about a flop of 74J.

Wright checked top pair and then called when Hellmuth, who flopped middle pair, bet 40,000. The 7 turn was gin for Hellmuth and he bet 55,000 after Wright checked for a second time. Wright quickly called and the 9 completed the board on the river.

Wright opted to lead out for 65,000 and Hellmuth just called to win the 395,000 pot. With that win, Hellmuth chipped up to 700K while Wright was left with just 175,000.

“Now I’d say you’re a massive favorite, Phil,” Wright admitted.

Wright Flops the Joint; Hellmuth on the Ropes

Phil Hellmuth vs. Nick Wright
Phil Hellmuth vs. Nick Wright

Hellmuth looked down at the Q3 on the button and moved all in to put the pressure on Wright, who paused for a bit before calling off for 160,000 with the 87.

Hellmuth was actually ahead and a slight 54% favorite, but the 9106 flop left him with just a 3% runner-runner chance of winning after Wright flopped the stone-cold nuts.

The K turn bumped Hellmuth to a 9% chance as a jack would give him a bigger straight, but the 7 river was not it. Wright doubled on the hand to 350,000 and Hellmuth dropped to 525,000.

In the very next hand shown, Hellmuth moved all in with the K3 from the button and Wright called off with the 44 to create a 790,000 pot. The board ran out 4A297 and Hellmuth was left with just 85,000.

A Hellmuth Comeback?

Phil Hellmuth vs. Nick Wright
Phil Hellmuth vs. Nick Wright

Not long after, Hellmuth got his short stack in with the 96 only to have Wright roll over the KK. The 2AK flop made things spicy as Wright flopped a set but Hellmuth a diamond flush draw. The 9 turn was no help to the “Poker Brat,” but the 10 river was as he made the flush to double to 140,000. Meanwhile, Wright dropped to 735,000.

“I wasn’t expecting that one,” Hellmuth said.

Soon thereafter, Hellmuth got it in again, this time with the KJ only to see Wright turn over the JJ. Wright was close to winning it again, but the KQ9 flop snatched it away by pairing Hellmuth. Neither the 3 turn nor 2 river helped Wright and Hellmuth doubled to 220,000.

A Classy Winner

Phil Hellmuth vs. Nick Wright
Phil Hellmuth vs. Nick Wright

Despite those wins, Hellmuth began to slide before the final hand of the SnG took place. It happened when Hellmuth had 40,000 in the middle and just 30,000 behind. Wright moved all in holding the A7 and Hellmuth had little choice but to call off with the K4.

The 6910 flop was nothing too exciting, but the 2 turn was as Hellmuth picked up a heart draw and had a 32% chance of staying alive. Unfortunately for him, his life isn’t a BeeGee’s song as the J bricked on the river to give Wright the “W”.

Hellmuth had to settle for second place for $20,000 while Wright claimed the title and $50,000 in prize money. With that, Wright got a little revenge on Hellmuth (though the PAD episode actually filmed before High Stakes Duel, so technically it was Hellmuth who would go on to exact revenge).

“Nick played really well, honestly, from start to finish,” Hellmuth said after the match. “Classy guy on top of it and I enjoyed the match. I just get tilted. I’m emotional right now, I’m seething because I lost.”

Hellmuth then shook hands with Wright to put an end to “Fight Night” on Poker After Dark.

Remember, Poker After Dark will air every Monday but is only available to PokerGO subscribers. If you’re not currently subscribed, you can get a monthly subscription for $14.99, a three-month plan for $29.99, and an annual subscription for $99.99. You can also save $10 off an annual subscription by using promo code “PokerNews” at checkout.

*Images courtesy of PokerGO.

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Chad Holloway
PR & Media Manager

PR & Media Manager for PokerNews, Podcast host & 2013 WSOP Bracelet Winner.

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