Jeffrey Hakim Takes Down the 2024 WSOPP $2,500 Mini Main Event for First Bracelet
Table Of Contents
For Jeffrey Hakim, the dream of winning a World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet had lingered for years. In his twenties, Hakim poured countless hours into the grind, chasing glory across poker tables worldwide. But as life pulled him in new directions, the dream of a bracelet quietly endured—a spark waiting for the right moment to reignite.
That moment came in the $2,500 Mini Main Event at the 2024 WSOP Paradise. With 2,031 entries, the tournament shattered its $5 million guarantee, building an impressive $5,077,000 prize pool. After navigating the massive field, Hakim found himself among the final 17 players on Day 3, all vying for the $575,050 top prize and the WSOP gold bracelet.
Consistently among the chip leaders throughout the final day, he battled his way to the heads-up stage against Alina Paliahoshka. In the end, Hakim triumphed, securing his first WSOP bracelet and fulfilling a dream years in the making.
“I’m feeling great; it’s tough to put into words,” Hakim said, his voice filled with emotion. “This is an accomplishment I’ve been striving for so long. I play much less these days, but this victory is for the kid inside me. I dedicated so much time and effort to this in my twenties, so to accomplish it now feels like a sense of vindication.”
The significance of the bracelet overshadowed even the $575,050 payout. “It’s the bracelet,” Hakim said. “That’s what I’ll remember after all these years—the win. Winning your first bracelet is the most important and sweetest thing.”
Event #1: $2,500 Mini Main Event Final Table Results
Place | Player | Country | Prize (USD) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Jeffrey Hakim | United States | $575,050 |
2 | Alina Paliahoshka | Belarus | $445,400 |
3 | Andrei Piatrushchanka | Belarus | $344,000 |
4 | Viktor Ustimov | Russian Federation | $261,500 |
5 | Ryan Gebow | United States | $202,100 |
6 | Mathew Frankland | United Kingdom | $152,300 |
7 | Paul Newey | United Kingdom | $120,600 |
8 | Matas Cimbolas | Lithuania | $91,020 |
9 | Aram Oganyan | United States | $70,135 |
10 | Dong Chen | China | $51,080 |
Day 3 Action
The first knockout came when David Miscikowski's pocket nines were flushed out by runner-up Paliahoshka's ace-king, sending Miscikowski out in 17th place for $23,300.
Shortly after, Andrei Piatrushchanka found himself in a dream spot with pocket aces, scoring a double knockout. Joshua Zucchet, holding ace-king, and Diogo Coelho with pocket fives were unable to crack Piatrushchanka's aces, hitting the rail in 16th and 15th place for a payout of $29,320.
Coming into the final day, Hakim held the chip lead, but after being inactive for most of the first level, he still had a very healthy stack but was no longer the chip leader. Hakim found himself at risk in a massive flip with his pocket queens against his opponent Dong Chen’s ace-king suited. The board ran out clean for Hakim to put him atop the leaderboard once again. Hakim commented on the hand, saying, “It’s crazy, finding myself at risk and having to hold, or else we wouldn't be having this conversation, and I would have been out in 14th”.
The players reached the final table of 10 players after Jerry Wong put his last 3,875,000 chips in the middle from the big blind after Piatrushchanka jammed on the button with king-jack suited. The board was safe for Wong, until the river brought a jack to extend the chip lead for Piatrushchanka and leaving the WSOP Bracelet winner and Day 1b chip leader just short of the final table.
Final Table
Chen, who won his first WSOP bracelet in Paradise a year ago, was involved in another flip, this time being the player at risk. Holding ace-queen suited, Chen was unable to beat the pocket jacks of Ryan Gebow, who flopped a full house that had Chen drawing dead on the turn and was eliminated in ninth.
After another WSOP bracelet winner hit the rail in ninth place, Aram Oganyan, Matas Cimbolas joined him shortly after, finishing in eighth.
The short stack coming into the day Paul Newey managed to find several doubles throughout the day to ladder up but eventually fell in seventh after Paliahoshka spiked a queen on the river.
After Mathew Frankland ran into Viktor Ustimov’s pocket aces to finish sixth, Gebow found himself facing an all in bet from Piatrushchanka on the river. Gebow, who made a straight on the river, found the call, only to see the bad news that Piatrushchanka made a flush on the river, to send Gebow out in fifth. That hand gave Piatrushchanka an overwhelming chip lead with four players remaining, giving him nearly 60,000,000 of the 101,500,000 in play.
At this point, the eventual champion, Hakim, saw himself as the short stack, but that changed quickly after Hakim held to double up through Ustimov with a dominating ace. A few moments later the two players found themselves in an all in encounter once more, with Ustimov being the one at risk with pocket sevens, against Hakim’s king-queen suited. Ustimov flopped a set, but the flop also gave Hakim a flush draw. The turn brought a Broadway draw as additional outs for Hakim, and the river sealed Ustimov’s fate as it brought in Hakim’s flush, eliminating Ustimov in fourth.
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With only three players remaining, it was brought to Hakim’s attention that his two opponents, Piatrushchanka and Paliahoshka, not only knew each other but were actually dating. This created an interesting dynamic. Hakim commented on that after his victory, saying, “It's crazy, but it's an incredible feat, and congrats to them.” He mentioned he was more familiar with Piatrushchanka after playing with him on Day 2, but the final table was his first opportunity to play against Paliahoshka.
After the players took a short break, Piatrushchanka still held a commanding chip lead, but in the matter of two hands, things all went south for him. Hakim defended his big blind after Piatrushchanka opened on the button. Hakim check-called a bet on the ace high flop, then check-raised Piatrushchanka after a six hit on the turn. The river brought a four, and Piatrushchanka snap called the jam from Hakim with two-pair aces and fours, but Hakim had turned a set of sixes to secure the double.
The very next hand, Piatrushchanka called a four-bet for his remaining 35,000,000 chips with pocket tens against Hakim’s ace-queen. It was a clean flop for Piatrushchanka, but an ace on the turn and queen on the river gave Hakim two pair, taking Piatrushchanka from a commanding chip lead to out in third in a matter of minutes.
Heads Up
After her boyfriend's abrupt exit, it was up to Paliahoshka to bring the couple a WSOP bracelet. However, the 87,900,000/13,600,000 chip difference was too much of an ask for Paliahoshka.
Just a few hands into heads-up play, Hakim open-jammed, and Paliahoshka quickly called. After the board was dealt, Hakim's pocket threes remained best to give him his first WSOP bracelet.
Despite finishing second and third, the Belarusian couple's run was incredible. They will take home a combined $789,400 for their efforts.
After the big win, Hakim’s WSOPP trip isn't over yet, saying, “I’ll definitely be playing the Main Event, playing the 10K PLO, that's the only ones I know for sure, but just going to take it day by day”.
That is for our coverage of the $2,500 Main Event, but be sure to follow PokerNews for the rest of our coverage here at WSOPP, especially the Main Event starting on Thursday, December 12.
In this Series
- 1 Ivey & Negreanu Looking for 2nd Bracelets of Year in WSOP Paradise Triton Million
- 2 Texas Mike Retains Chip Lead After Day 2 of Triton Million, With Dvoress Close Behind
- 3 Brazil’s Matheus Cardoso Machado Wins WSOP Paradise Event #4: GGMasters Online Championship ($432,623)
- 4 Battle Rapper Alejandro Lococo Beats Pros in WSOP Paradise Triton Million for $12M
- 5 Specialist Lautaro Guerra Wins Record-Breaking $100K PLO SHR at WSOP Paradise
- 6 Jeffrey Hakim Takes Down the 2024 WSOPP $2,500 Mini Main Event for First Bracelet
- 7 Monkey Off Eric Wasserson's Back as He Claims First Bracelet in $25,000 Dealers Choice Championship for $353,340
- 8 Nine Bigs and a Dream: China’s Lei Yu Spins Short Stack to Win WSOP Paradise $5K NLH
- 9 Alex Foxen Adds Another Career Highlight by Winning the $100,000 Triton Main Event ($3,850,000)
- 10 Stephen Chidwick Wins 2nd Bracelet in WSOP Paradise $50K PLO Championship ($1,357,080)
- 11 Pair of Former WSOP Player of the Year Winners Battle Heads-Up for 4th Gold Bracelet
- 12 Which Newcomer Is Taking Poker's High Roller Scene by Storm?
- 13 Brazil’s Pablo Silva Wins WSOP Paradise Super Saver $1M Invitational ($200,000)
- 14 Michael Addamo Leads $25k WSOP Super Main Final Table; Liv Boeree in the Hunt
- 15 Addamo Rolls Back the Years in WSOP Paradise $25,000 Super Main Event
- 16 Johannes Straver Rides Into the WSOP Paradise Sunset With GGMillion$ Championship Title
- 17 24-Year-Old Bluffs Poker's Toughest Opponent to Win WSOP Super Main for $6M
- 18 Family Man Nick Schulman Ships Sixth Bracelet in Event #15: $5,000 The Closer