Jerry Wong: XxXx / 9x4xAx4xfolded on sixth street
Carlos Chadha: XxXx / 3x6x8x7x
Carlos Chadha completed with a trey and Jerry Wong defended with a nine. Chadha proceeded to bet until sixth street on which Wong folded when pairing his four.
Jerry Wong: XxXx / 7x8x4xAx / Xx
Carlos Chadha: XxXx / 9x7x4x5x / Xx
Wong completed for Chadha to call and bet his lead on fourth and fifth street. Both checked sixth street and Wong checked seventh, after which Chadha bet. Wong went into the tank for the second street in a row and shuffled his cards, then randomly exposed one card with the Qx before folding.
Carlos Chadha: 8x2x / Ax6x9x4x / Kx
Jerry Wong: 10x4x / 2x7x6x9x / 3x
Carlos Chadha completed with an ace showing and Jerry Wong called. Both caught more low runouts on fourth street and Chadha bet, Wong called. The lead changed on fifth street when Wong bet his seven-six, and Chadha called.
After sixth street, Chadha bet and had just 180,000 behind. "Let's go," Wong murmured as he put in the raise and Chadha called all-in with both players vaulting out of their chairs.
Once the first six cards were exposed, Wong told his rail "I am drawing to a seven, guys,". Chadha failed to improve with a king as his final card and Wong simply flipped over his final card, which was a trey as he got there.
Chadha has been eliminated in second place and takes home $184,599 while Wong finally wins his first WSOP gold bracelet, taking home the top prize of $298,682.
A recap of today's action and the winner's reaction are to follow.
The 2023 World Series of Poker (WSOP) Event #33: $10,000 Razz Championship attracted 123 players – which produced a $1,143,900 prize pool – and after four days of play it was Jerry Wong emerging victorious to capture a $298,682 top prize and his first gold bracelet.
Wong, who finished eighth in the 2016 WSOP Main Event, had been a perennial name on the “Best Without a Bracelet” list having made 11 prior WSOP final tables. That included two runner-up finishes over the past two years, a third-place finish in 2019, and a pair of fourth-place finishes the two years before that.
“I'm kind of speechless,” Wong said when asked how it felt to get his long-awaited bracelet. “What I want to say is hello, Frisco, and give a shout-out to all my guys in Florida.”
He added: “I've played a lot of cash games, and I don't think either of these two guys had a lot of experience. I played the Russians heads-up on PokerStars for probably 10 years. Heads-up is very, very natural to me. There’re spots you have to figure out on the fly like I already knew like the back of my hand.”
2023 WSOP Event #33 Final Table Results
Place
Winner
Country
Prize (in USD)
1
Jerry Wong
United States
$298,682
2
Carlos Chadha
United States
$184,599
3
Michael Moncek
United States
$133,177
4
Elior Sion
United Kingdom
$97,960
5
Talal Shakerchi
United Kingdom
$73,495
6
John Hennigan
United States
$56,265
7
Bryce Yockey
United States
$43,970
8
Yuval Bronshtein
United States
$35,092
Among those to cash the tournament were Day 1 chip leader Roy Thung (10th - $23,850), Nick Schulman (11th - $23,850), Adam Owen (13th - $20,331), David “Bakes” Baker (15th - $17,789), and James Obst (17th - $$17,789).
Final Table Action
The first elimination of the final table was Yuval Bronshtein, whose all-in bet was called by three players before Talal Shakerchi finished him off with a six-five.
Bryce Yockey finished in seventh when he paired a three on seventh street. Yockey was the final player eliminated before the PokerGo Livestream.
The live stream began with six players. Hall of Famer John Hennigan, who started the day in tenth, finished in sixth place when he was unable to improve on a queen-eight against a queen-seven.
Fifth place went to Shakerchi, who was the Day 2 chip leader. Shakerchi found himself playing the most hands of anyone at the table, and a few bad runouts put him in danger. His last chips were taken by Carlos Chadha, who hit an ace on seventh street to eliminate Shakerchi.
Elior Sion finished in fourth place. He moved all in with a seven-three-two after three cards but received two more threes and was unable to overcome Wong's nine-eight.
Three-handed play lasted late into the night, and that required the remaining trio to come back on Friday for an extended Day 4. At that time, Wong sat with 15 big bets, Michael Moncek with 14, while Chadha was the “short stack” with eight big bets.
Chadha began heads-up play with a more than 4:1 chip lead, but Wong let him know he wasn’t going down easy.
"Not gonna lie, it's gonna be tough for you," Wong said after winning a pot. "I've played a lot of heads-up razz."
True to form, Wong began to chop away and before long wrested away the chip lead, ultimately closing out a WSOP tournament for the first time.
“I felt kind of bad. I wasn't trying to insult him or anything,” Wong said of his remark to his heads-up opponent. “I was just trying to gain an edge like this get this monkey off my back.”
When asked what’s next, Wong responded, “I'm just gonna play the same schedule I was playing before. I'll probably have a little bit more of myself now but I can just play a bunch of other stuff … I'm just trying to make money for my family.”
That concludes PokerNews’ coverage from the 2023 WSOP Event #33: $10,000 Razz Championship, but there is still plenty of tournament action to follow all summer long.