Jan 17, 2017 - 44 min - Uploaded by Poker Channel2017 PokerStars Championship Bahamas - $5000 Main Event Final Table Live Part 1 Seat 1. Jan 11, 2017 - 72 min - Uploaded by Poker Channel2017 PokerStars Championship Bahamas - $5000 Main Event Day 2 Part 1 Final Table (Cards. The 2017 World Series of Poker was the 48th annual (WSOP). It took place from May 30-July 17 at the in. There was a record 74 events including the third edition of the $565 Colossus tournament and the $10,000 No Limit Hold'em Main Event, which began on July 8. The Main Event was streamed live on ESPN2 and Poker Central beginning on July 8 and ran throughout the tournament. For the first time since 2007, the Main Event concluded in July; for the previous nine years, once the final table was set the Main Event was stopped with the nine remaining players returning to the Rio in to battle it out for the bracelet. Contents • • • • • • • • • New events [ ] • Event 19: $365 The Giant No Limit Hold'em - The event will feature five starting flights spread out over five weeks, with remaining players returning for Day 2 on July 8. A player who survived one flight can choose to abandon their stack and re-enter into another flight. The money will be reached during each flight, giving a player the opportunity to cash multiple times in the event. • Event 23: $2,620 The Marathon No Limit Hold'em - Players will begin with 26,200 chips and play 100-minute levels. • Three WSOP.com Online Events - There will be three events offered exclusively on WSOP.com with buy-ins of $333, $1,000, and $3,333. You have reached a degraded version of ESPN.com because you're using an unsupported version of Internet Explorer. For a complete ESPN.com experience, please upgrade or use a Tim Fiorvanti, ESPN.com 136d Scott Blumstein caps dominant run to 2017 WSOP main event title LAS VEGAS -- Scott Blumstein closed out a dominant three-day performance by winning the 2017 World Series of Poker main event early Sunday, taking home $8.15 million and the WSOP bracelet in the process. Other than a brief spell on the first day of final-table action Thursday, the 25-year-old from Brigantine, New Jersey, held onto the chip lead from beginning to end. 'I'm really happy with how I played tonight,' Blumstein said. 'Really happy with the result, really happy with the deuce, because I was playing good, but I'm pretty tired of poker at this point, honestly. To have to go back and battle pretty deep-[stacked] again, I wasn't looking forward to it.' The dynamic of Blumstein's considerable lead and a pair of short stacks in Dan Ott and Benjamin Pollak led to one of the most action-packed final days in WSOP main event history, including a three-way all-in that could have led to a historic double-knockout to end the tournament. Blumstein's hand, which was best at the start, didn't hold up in that three-way spot -- Ott eliminated Pollak in third place -- but after a 66-hand heads-up match with Ott, Blumstein sealed the victory by grinding Ott down to nothing. It looked as though Ott might make a comeback, as he doubled up with king-nine against pocket sixes. ![]() ![]()
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