Jesse Hampton raised all in for his last 42,000 chips from early position and the action folded around to Dutch Boyd in the big blind who made the call.
Dutch Boyd:
Jesse Hampton:
Hampton was in the lead with a pair of tens and held on with the flop of . However, the on the turn paired Boyd's only overcard and Hampton was in trouble. The on the river was no help and he was eliminated in ninth place.
Dutch Boyd opened with an ace showing and Tim Marsters announced a raise with a seven. The action was back on Boyd who called his all in for 80,000. Here is how their boards ran out:
Dutch Boyd:
Tim Marsters:
Marsters made an eight low while the best Boyd could do was a jack low. Boyd was sent to the rail in seventh place but will still take home over $25,000 for his efforts.
Hye Park raised on the button and Jeff Madsen defended from the big blind. The flop came and Madsen checked to Park who continued with a bet. Madsen called and the landed on the turn.
Madsen checked again and Park stuck in his last 95,000. Madsen quickly called and tabled for two pair. Park turned over for a pair and a flush draw. The river was the and Park was unable to improve, heading to the rail in sixth place.
Brian Hastings opened from the cutoff, Lee Markholt called from the small blind, and the flop came down .
The action was checked to Hastings who fired in a bet and was instantly raised by Markholt. Hastings made the call and the turn fell the .
Markholt now moved all in for his remaining 65,000 and Hastings went into the tank. After a few minutes of thought, Hastings made the call and the players turned over their hands.
Markholt turned over for a pair of tens with king high and Hastings tabled for tens over threes. The river came down the and Hastings' threes took down the pot, eliminating Markholt in the process.
Brian Hastings opened from the button and Jeff Madsen moved all in from the small blind. Hastings made the call and they turned over their hands.
Brian Hastings:
Jeff Madsen:
The flop came down huge for Hastings as the dealer fanned out . Madsen got out of his seat before the hit the turn and would stay out of his seat when the hit the river. Hastings took down the pot with his kings, eliminating Madsen from the tournament in fourth place.
Brian Hastings opened from the button, Tim Marsters three-bet from the big blind, and Hastings made the call. The flop came down and Marsters bet. Hastings made the call.
The fell on the turn, Marsters bet, and Hastings moved him all in. Marsters made the call and the players turned over their hands.
Marsters turned over for a pair of aces and Hastings showed for a turned straight with seven low. The river came the and Hastings scooped the pot, eliminating Marsters in third place.
Brian Hastings raised it up on the button and Andrew Brown defended his big blind. The flop came and Brown check-called a continuation bet from Hastings.
The turn brought the and Brown checked again. Hastings tossed in another bet and Brown continued to call. The on the river paired the board and Brown checked for the third time. Hastings barrelled one more time and Brown took a minute to ponder his decision. He eventually threw his cards to the muck and Hastings raked in the pot.
Brian Hastings raised on the button and Andrew Brown moved all in for his last 300,000 chips from the big blind. Hastings called and the cards were face up with Brown at risk.
Brian Hastings:
Andrew Brown:
The flop came and Hastings remained in the lead with his pair of tens and no low draw possible.
The on the turn gave Brown the advantage with nines-up and a flush draw, but the on the river counterfeited Brown's two-pair. Hastings would be pushed the pot with his better jacks-up, and Brown would be eliminated in second place for $144,128 in prize money.
A total of 354 runners showed up for Event #76: $3,000 H.O.R.S.E. at the Rio All-Suites and Casino for the final mixed tournament of the series. When the final curtain came down, it was Brian Hastings taking home the prestigious World Series of Poker bracelet and an astounding $233,202 first-place cash prize. Hastings bested Andrew Brown heads-up, who took home a respectable $144,128 for his efforts.
Hastings came into the final day of the tournament as the chipleader with 19 players remaining. He was the shortest stack at one point during four-handed play, but rallied back to win it all.
When asked how he was feeling after winning his fourth WSOP gold bracelet, Hastings was very delighted. "It feels amazing, this was my last event of the summer and I had a couple of runs before this, but to end it this way just feels great."
Hastings had an uphill battle in front of him when heads-up play began, but that didn't stop him from pulling through. "I came into heads-up with a four- or five-to-one chip disadvantage, but the cards ran my way and I made a few hands. Andrew is a good player and things just went my way."
This being the fourth gold bracelet of his career, Hastings said it had a little more meaning than the previous ones. "I'm at a different stage in my life right now. I'm getting married this year (to his fiance Sonya), I'm looking at buying a house, so this will go a long way to that." Sonya was Hastings' biggest supporter on his path to victory, standing on the rail throughout the entire 12-hour day, cheering him on.
Final Table Results
Place
Player
Country
Prize (USD)
1
Brian Hastings
United States
$233,202
2
Andrew Brown
United States
$144,128
3
Tim Marsters
Australia
$97,340
4
Jeff Madsen
United States
$67,121
5
Lee Markholt
United States
$47,275
6
Hye Park
United States
$34,027
7
Dutch Boyd
United States
$25,040
8
Bruno Fitoussi
France
$18,849
Final Day Action
The official final table bubble, who took ninth place, was Jesse Hampton after he moved all in with tens during the hold'em round and could not hold against Dutch Boyd. Bruno Fitoussi would be the next person to hit the rail when his aces failed to hold up in Omaha hi-lo against Lee Markholt.
Boyd had a roller coaster of a final table but could not survive a runout in razz against Tim Marsters, who would take down the hand with his eight low. One of the leaders coming into the final table was Hye Park who would end his day on the hold'em round when he ran into Madsen's two pair, being eliminated in sixth.
It was Markholt making his way to the payout desk in fifth when he ran a bluff into Hastings who made a very bold call. Four-time bracelet winner Jeff Madsen would be yet another player to hit the rail during the hold'em round, running into Hastings' big slick, and getting eliminated in fourth.
Marsters found himself taking an exit during the Omaha hi-lo round when he shoved his stack in on the turn and was called by Hastings who had him drawing to just a quarter of the pot. Marsters did not get there on the river and Hastings sent him home in third.
The heads-up play started with Brown having a four-to-one chip lead on Hastings and all the momentum. Hastings slowly battled for chips at the first of heads-up, but after two big hands he quickly took over the lead. Once in the lead, Hastings never turned back as he whittled away at his opponent's stack. Brown would head out the door during the Omaha hi-lo round when he moved all in before the flop. Hastings made the call and would make a stronger two pair on the river to capture the pot and eliminate Brown in second place.
The PokerNews live reporting team will be back tomorrow to bring you full coverage of Event #78: $1,000,000 The Big One for One Drop.