2024 World Series of Poker

Event #63: $1,500 No-Limit 2-7 Lowball Draw (7-Handed)
Day: 2
Event Info

2024 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
9x8x7x6x4x
Prize
$123,314
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,500
Prize Pool
$604,755
Entries
453
Level Info
Level
30
Blinds
80,000 / 160,000
Ante
240,000
Players Info - Day 2
Entries
68
Players Left
6

Michel Leibgorin on Hunt for Career-Defining Bracelet, Bags Chiplead as Six Remain after Day 2 of $1,500 No-Limit 2-7 Single Draw

Level 25 : Blinds 25,000/50,000, 75,000 ante
Michel Leibgorin
Michel Leibgorin

The 68 players who returned to the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas for Day 2 of Event #63: $1,500 No-Limit 2-7 Lowball Draw were all in the money, but at the end of the day only six were still in contention for the top prize of $123,314 and the 2024 World Series of Poker bracelet.

Leading the survivors of the 453-strong field is France’s Michel Leibgorin, who bagged up 3,995,000, good for 67 big blinds at the start of Day 3. Leibgorin is a true veteran of the game, with his first recorded tournament cash coming in 1995 and having racked up nearly $2,000,000 in live earnings since then, although a bracelet yet eludes him.

Although most of his earnings have come on his home continent of Europe, Leibgorin frequently travels to the WSOP, resulting in two final tables during his career. Much of Leibgorin’s lead came from a huge pot where he doubled up with a pat eight against a pat ten, awarding him nearly 100 big blinds at the final two tables.

Final Table Seating and Chip Counts

SeatPlayerCountryChip CountDay 3 Big Blinds
1Owais AhmedUnited States410,0007
2Tzu Peng WangTaiwan1,515,00025
3David FunkhouserUnited States1,645,00027
4Michel LeibgorinFrance3,995,00067
5Ali EslamiUnited States1,485,00025
6    
7Charles TuckerUnited States2,325,00039

Leibgorin is followed in the rankings by Charles Tucker, who ended Day 2 with a stack of 2,325,000. Completing the top three is David Funkhouser with 1,645,000 chips, while Tzu Peng Wang (1,515,000) and Ali Eslami (1,485,000) are not far behind. Also making it through to Day 3 is start-of-day chip leader Owais Ahmed, albeit with a short stack of 410,000 chips.

Owais Ahmed
Owais Ahmed

Day 2 Action

After a prolonged Day 1 left several players short-stacked after it played down to the money, the pace of bust-outs was nearly unmatched in the opening stages of Day 2. Within a couple of hours, more than half the field was gone, and among the early players heading to the payout desk were the likes of $25K Fantasy picks Ryan Leng, Justin Saliba, Calvin Anderson, and Brian Yoon.

Brad Ruben Ryan Depaulo, Dario Alioto, Jen Harman, and Bin Weng all made a pay jump or two, but their journeys ended short of the final three tables. Andy Hwang and Australia’s Robert Campbell were eliminated simultaneously and the 20 remaining players were divided across three tables.

That is where, among others, recent Mixed Triple Draw bracelet winner Patrick Moulder, WSOP mixed-game regular Robert Wells, and no-limit hold ‘em high roller Chance Kornuth exited the field. Bracelet winners Alex Epstein and Patrick Leonard then said their goodbyes at the final two tables before Michael Dreese was the final person to depart before the final eight converged onto one table.

Michael Dreese
Michael Dreese

Once the players had moved to one of the feature tables, former chipleader Antonio Seremet booked a quick exit to form the official final table of seven players. David "ODB" Baker’s hunt for a fourth bracelet ended in seventh place when his eight-draw did not hit against Wang’s ten-low, and not much later the remaining six players bagged up for the night.

They will return Thursday, June 27, at 1 p.m. local time to decide who will take home the biggest part of the $604,755 prize pool and the bracelet, although they are all guaranteed at least $19,087 for their efforts.

Final Table Payouts/Results

PlacePlayerPrize
1 $123,314
2 $81,412
3 $54,868
4 $37,764
5 $26,555
6 $19,087
7David "ODB" Baker$14,033

When the players return, they restart in Level 26 with blinds of 30,000/60,000 and a 90,000 big blind ante. The levels will remain 60 minutes throughout the tournament, with 15-minute breaks after every two. The day will finish when a winner is crowned.

Will Lebgorin crown his decades-long career with a WSOP bracelet? Tune back to PokerNews tomorrow to find out as the $1,500 No-Limit 2-7 Lowball Draw reaches its thrilling conclusion.

Tags: Alex EpsteinAli EslamiAndy HwangAntonio SeremetBin WengBrad RubenBrian YoonCalvin AndersonChance KornuthCharles TuckerDario AliotoDavid FunkhouserJen HarmanJustin SalibaMichael DreeseMichel LeibgorinOwais AhmedTzu Peng Wang