Steve Sung Takes Down the Wynn Poker Fall Classic Championship
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Steve Sung won his first major live poker tournament in five years when he triumphed over 593 opponents in the Wynn Poker Fall Classic Championship Main Event, netting himself $170,550.
Wynn Poker Fall Classic Championship Final Table Results
Position | Player | Country | Prize |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Steve Sung | United States | $170,550 |
2 | Joseph Cheong | United States | $111,404 |
3 | Karen Sarkisyan | Russia | $75,624 |
4 | Ryan Yu | Canada | $53,082 |
5 | Deijanosch Mahmoudian | United States | $39,324 |
6 | Tuan Mai | United States | $30,509 |
7 | Katie Lindsay | United States | $24,286 |
8 | Ryan Laplante | United States | $20,137 |
9 | Alfredo Torres | United States | $17,026 |
Some 594 entries of $1,600 each were processed in the Wynn Poker Fall Classic Championship Main Event and a prize pool of $864,270 was created, which smashed the $500,000 guarantee. The top 62 players received prize money. A min-cash weighed in at $3,665, a final table appearance boosted that sum to $17,026, and $170,550 was reserved for the eventual champion.
A host of top poker players navigated their way into the money. Ireland��s Rory Brown (60th for $3,665), Justin Young (54th for $3,665), Bryan Piccioli (53rd for $4,167), British pro Simon Deadman (47th for $4,167), Jeremy Ausmus (45th for $4,167), Jordon Cristos (34th for $5,453), and Samantha Cohen (22nd for $7,149) being just a handful of stellar names to show a return on their investment.
Star-Studded Wynn Fall Classic Final Table
The nine-handed final table was a star-studded affair although three of the big names were eliminated quite early on.
After Alfredo Torres busted in ninth-place, Ryan Laplante followed suit and was then joined on the rail by Katie Lindsay, wife of British legend Chris Moorman. Tuan Mai followed right after. Deihanosch Mahmoudian fell in fifth-place for a $39,324 score, which left a talented quartet of players to battle it out for the $170,550 top prize.
Canada��s Ryan Yu saw his tournament end in fourth-place, a finish worth $53,082, the fifth-largest live cash of his career. Yu was followed to the cashier��s desk by Russia��s Karen Sarkisyan who drew ever closer to $2 million in live cashes with this $75,624 haul.
Sarkisyan��s exit left Steve Sung and Joseph Cheong to play heads-up for the title. Cheong tweeted to his 30,400 Twitter followers that he was heads-up with Sung, but only had two million chips compared to Sung��s monster stack of 13 million.
Hu vs og steve sung. My 2mil to his 13mil lol. Gl me @WynnPoker https://t.co/yFJKy4e6xS
— Joseph Cheong (@subiime)
Cheong sent another tweet 45-minutes later that simply said ��Got 2nd. Congrats to steve.��
Steve Sung: $5.5 Million in Winnings
Sung, known as ��muggylicious�� when he played online poker regularly, now has more than $5.5 million in live poker tournament winnings, helped by securing two World Series of Poker bracelets.
In 2009, Sung won the $1,000 No-Limit Hold��em event at the WSOP in Las Vegas for $771,338 and locked up bracelet number two in 2013 when he topped the 175-strong field of the $25,000 No-Limit Hold��em Six-Handed event for a career-best $1,205,324, defeating Phil Galfond heads-up for the victory.
A rather barren spell was endured by Sung in 2015 and 2016 when he cashed for a total of $72,429, but a couple of six-figures score in 2017 got Sung back on track; he won $350,803 that year. Sung now has $333,919 in winnings during 2018.
It's interesting how it's hard for me to smile after winning. I felt a mixture of emotions. I felt joy, relief, and�� https://t.co/L9QWcEjqdz
— Steve Sung (@ssung41585)