Poker Player Wins WSOP Main Event Satty in His Sleep...Literally

Jon Sofen
Senior Editor U.S.
3 min read
online poker wsop

For most, the saying, "I could win that poker tournament in my sleep," is laughable at best. But not for Eric Goldstein, who fell asleep Wednesday night, and then woke up to discover he'd won an $80 auto all-in satellite into the 2022 WSOP Main Event on WSOP.com.

Goldstein told PokerNews he forgot he was registered for the satellite, which only awarded one seat into poker's most prestigious annual tournament, a $10,000 buy-in event. The entire satellite took approximately four hands as the structure called for everyone to be automatically all in every hand until it concludes.

When a player is registered for an online tournament but doesn't show up to play, their hands are automatically mucked and, when in the blinds, the chips are removed from their stack. That wasn’t the case for this particular tournament. You could be online to watch or not even have your computer on, like Goldstein’s situation as he was asleep. Offline or online, each and every player was all-in every single hand.

Goldstein lives in Summerlin, an area of Las Vegas west of the Strip, and works as a compliance specialist in the marijuana industry.

"I got home from a long day of work and was watching the (Poker Players Championship) and a friend messaged me," Goldstein said. "So I registered with like 30 minutes until it started and had to go to work at 6 a.m., so I passed out early and woke up to a lot of messages that I had won it."

How'd He Do It?

eric goldstein online poker
Eric Goldstein

Goldstein, who plays under the screen name "GoldsteinE," was one of 126 players who entered the $80 buy-in mega turbo satellite. On Thursday, he logged onto the WSOP.com client to look through the hand histories to find out exactly how he won.

On the final hand, with a 61,000 to 3,000 lead over his heads-up opponent, "Basil_Hayden," he had K6 against 84. The board ran out J26Q10, giving the biggest stack a winning flush to finish off the tournament.

From the hand history screenshot Goldstein provided PokerNews, he won nine straight automatic all in hands, starting with pocket queens. The full miraculous run was as follows:

online poker player

The Next Moneymaker?

In 2003, Chris Moneymaker became the first to turn an online poker satellite win into a WSOP Main Event title, and it helped spark a massive poker boom. That satellite, which took place on PokerStars back when it was available in the US, cost $86 to enter, not far off from Goldstein's WSOP.com entry fee.

If Goldstein were to go on to win next month's world championship event, who knows, maybe poker will have its next Moneymaker. The intriguing storyline is already there if he comes out victorious.

Goldstein has just under $16,000 in live tournament cashes, according to Hendon Mob, barely more than the buy in for the Main Event, which begins July 3 at Bally's and Paris Las Vegas.

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Jon Sofen
Senior Editor U.S.

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