John Monnette completed his bring in and Nick Schulman raised while Andrew Hasdal called and Monnette called to put himself all in .
John Monnette: Q♣10♣2♣5♥10♠Q♦K♠
Nick Schulman: 8♠9♥7♣J♦10♥J♥6♦
Andrew Hasdal: XxXx/7♠5♠9♦ (Folded on fifth)
Action checked around on fourth but on fifth Schulman bet and Hasdal folded.
Schulman had made a straight on fifth which saw Monnette drawing to a running full house. He picked up outs on sixth street but the king on seventh was not what he needed and the four time bracelet winner exited in fourth place.
Nick Schulman completed and Hojeong Lee raised which saw multiple bets go in for Lee to be all in.
Hojeong Lee: K♣J♣2♣A♦10♦3♥7♥
Nick Schulman: 5♦4♣Q♣3♣10♥5♦Q♠
Schulman made his pair on sixth and improved to two pair on seventh which left Lee drawing dead and last year's fourth place finisher finished his run in third place this year.
The final two players are now heads up for the bracelet.
Andrew Hasdal: J♠J♣/5♣2♣8♥6♣/J♥
Nick Schulman: K♠8♠/K♦2♦4♣6♠/Q♠
Nick Schulman completed and Andrew Hasdal raised. Schulman re-raised and Hasdal called.
Hasdal then called bets from Schulman on every street until seventh, wherein he raised all-in versus a final bet from Schulman.
Schulman agonized a bit before making the call and Hasdal tabled J♥J♠J♣ for a hidden set of jacks. It was good against the pair of kings of Schulman and Hasdal doubled up.
Andrew Hasdal: K♥K♦Q♠4♠10♥10♦
Nick Schulman: 5♣9♦8♣6♣7♦3♣Q♥
On fourth street, Hasdal bet and Schulman called.
Hasdal checked on fifth street, which saw Schulman bet and Hasdal raised, which saw Schulman re-raise, and Hasdal called only to see that Schulman made a straight and he was drawing thin.
The sixth street card gave two pair to Hasdal, and he was left drawing to a king or a ten on the river. Hasdal turned over the final card, and it was a 10♣ which saw Hasdal's rail erupt into cheers.
Schulman sighed in frustration as the chip counts got closer to even once again.
Andrew Hasdal: K♦8♣/J♣Q♣A♣8♥/Q♥
Nick Schulman: J♦10♥/10♦3♥J♥7♣/10♣
In what would be the final hand of the tournament, Andrew Hasdal completed and Nick Schulman raised. Hasdal called and then both players checked on fourth street.
Hasdal bet on fifth street and Schulman raised. Hasdal went all in for his remaining stack and Schulman called to put Hasdal at risk.
Hasdal held a draw to a straight and flush, but was behind the two pair of Schulman.
Schulman hit the 10♣ on seventh street — securing his victory with a full house and eliminating Hasdal in second place.
Event #9: $1,500 Seven Card Stud has come an end with Nick Schulman emerging victorious after besting a star-studded final table and defeating Andrew Hasdal heads up for his fourth World Series of Poker bracelet and $110,800 first-place prize.
Schulman is no stranger to poker success, having amassed over $15 million in career-tournament earnings dating back to 2005 when he burst into the poker scene after winning the World Poker Tour World Poker Finals at the age of 21 for over $2 million in prize money.
Schulman’s victory highlights his versatility in poker, having won two Deuce-to-Seven Lowball bracelets and a Pot-Limit Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better back in 2019 before adding his fourth tonight.
Event #9: $1,500 Seven Card Stud Final Table Results
Place
Player
Country
Prize
1
Nick Schulman
United States
$110,800
2
Andrew Hasdal
United States
$68,479
3
Hojeong Lee
United States
$46,912
4
John Monnette
United States
$32,828
5
Shaun Deeb
United States
$23,476
6
DJ Buckley
United States
$17,166
7
Tim Frazin
United States
$12,839
8
Tab Thiptinnakon
United States
$9,829
9
Bruce Levitt
United States
$7,706
Winner's Reaction
Following his victory, Schulman admitted that his cash game days are mostly over for now as he would prefer to focus on his four-year-old daughter, but he still plans on playing tournaments.
"Four [bracelets] means a lot. It's not lost on me that I've accomplished some things, and I'm still here. It means a lot," Schulman said.
"I love Stud," Schulman said when asked how he feels about the game. "It's probably my favorite game, and I've always kind of thought it was my best game. I grew up playing it."
Schulman, who navigated the final table with a cigar in hand, said it was an homage to the old school.
"I just decided to throw it back for the Stud," Schulman said. "An homage...you know — let's play fast and have some fun."
Looking forward, Schulman said he plans to put in more volume this WSOP.
"I'd love to win two [bracelets]," Schulman said. "Who doesn't wanna, you know, just rattle off bracelets and win Player of The Year and all that? I just wanna stay focused."
Final Day Action
The day began as an unofficial final table of nine and saw Bruce Levitt, who came in as one of the short stacks, get eliminated within the first level of the day to reach the official final table of eight.
Tab Thiptinnakon and Tim Frazin were both knocked out early on, despite Frazin finding two double-ups on the final table before his elimination.
Schulman began building some momentum after eliminating DJ Buckley and then doubling up through the then chip-leader John Monnette six-handed.
Shaun Deeb fell short of earning his sixth WSOP bracelet after getting all in with two pair and losing to Monnette's wheel on seventh street.
From that point on, Schulman continued to add to his stack and ended up eliminating both Monnette and Hojeong Lee in fourth and third place, respectively.
Schulman began his heads-up battle against Hasdal with a nearly two-to-one chip advantage but would end up in a grueling battle that saw Hasdal double up through Schulman several times. At one point, Hasdal battled his way into a more than two-to-one chip lead over Schulman, but Schulman pulled back to nearly even after winning a large pot that saw Hasdal fold on seventh street.
Hasdal's stack continued to trend downward, and he got all in again versus Schulman as a big underdog. However, Hasdal made a runner-runner full house against Schulman on sixth and seventh street respectively to stay alive once more.
Not to be denied, Schulman battled back and managed to whittle Hasdal down with ever-escalating antes and limits forcing the action. Despite his valiant effort, Hasdal met his end after getting all in with a flush and straight draw against Schulman's two pair that ended up becoming a full house on seventh street to secure Schulman's victory.
That concludes PokerNews' coverage of Event #9: $1,500 Seven Card Stud. But be sure to stick with PokerNews for continued coverage of the 2023 World Series of Poker.