Diego Vaz Sorgatto raised from the button to 600,000 and Zlatin Penev three-bet all in with the superior stack in the small blind. Justin Kindred was in the big blind and made the call and Vaz Sorgatto reluctantly folded.
Justin Kindred: A♥J♠
Zlatin Penev: A♠Q♥
The board ran out with 5♥8♠9♠K♦6♥ and the queen kicker played for Penev and eliminated Kindred.
On a heads-up flop of 10♦4♦7♥, Zlatin Penev had bet 600,000 but then James Anderson check-raised to 1,700,000. After some thought, Penev made the call and the two went to the turn Q♦.
Anderson continued his aggression and led out for 3,600,000 but Penev still made the call to see the river fall the 8♠.
After tanking for about 20 seconds, Anderson assembled some chips and slid out a bet of 7,700,000 and now it was Penev's turn to think.
After a good while, he slowly slid in his cards and the huge pot was awarded to Anderson, resuming the chip lead over Penev with almost 28,000,000.
After Zlatin Penev opened, Samuel Bernabeu moved all in for exactly 10,000,000 and Penev snap called to put him at risk of elimination.
Samuel Bernabeu: Q♣Q♥
Zlatin Penev: A♦K♦
Bernabeu was ahead going into this classic flip, and the runout of 4♦3♣3♠5♣9♣ was pure for him and he scored a huge double-up to reclaim the chips he lost in the previous hand.
Zlatin Penev raised to 2,000,000 from the small blind and Samuel Bernabeu called from the big blind. The flop came J♣9♠5♥ and Penev placed a bet of 2,200,000 and Bernabeu called.
The turn brought the 3♥ and Penev continued down the aggressive route and bet 2,800,000 and Bernebeu called again.
On the river Q♠ Penev went for it and announced, "All in" and Bernabeu took a moment and recounted his chips a few times and then the Spanish player called.
Penev tabled 6♥7♦ and Bernabeu turned over Q♦10♥ and won with his pair of queens. Suddenly Bernabeu was back in the game as the new chip leader.
Zlatin Penev raised all in for 15,000,000 from the small blind and Samuel Bernabeu made the quick call from the big blind, The tenacious player shows a Bulgarian flag, although his friends say he is Italian through and through. His friends say he is a really good guy and super humble but he has won a lot of tournaments including the Italian Open a few months ago.
Zlatin Penev: 5♠5♣
Samuel Bernabeu: A♠Q♠
The board ran out A♦Q♥K♠7♦7♥ and Penev finished in third place as Bernabeu found two pair for the win.
After three long days of play in an event stacked with notables, Samuel Bernabeu has joined the ranks of WSOP bracelet winners. Bernabeu bested a field of 2,068 entries in Event #79: $2,500 No-Limit Hold’em to take home a first-place prize of $682,436 and his very first WSOP gold bracelet.
Bernabeu came into Day 3 sixth in chips with 43 big blinds, and although it got a little rocky for a while in the earlier levels of the day, he managed to survive to the final table by hitting quads against Derek Normand right before. Heading into the final table, he was sixth in chips but really got going whenever he drew first blood by busting Daniel Schill in ninth place. He then went on to bust six of the nine players at the final table for a dramatic finish to the tournament.
This was the Spaniard’s first WSOP bracelet and his first big cash since he returned to poker after a long hiatus.
Event #79:$2,500 No-Limit Holdem Final Table Results
Place
Player
Country
Prize
1
Samuel Bernabeu
Spain
$682,432
2
James Anderson
United States
$421,761
3
Zlatin Penev
Italy
$310,528
4
Seth Davies
United States
$310,528
5
Diego Vaz Sorgatto
Brazil
$230,772
6
Justin Kindred
United States
$137,121
7
Ramon Fernandez
Spain
$100,252
8
Derek Normand
United States
$77,401
9
Daniel Schill
United States
$60,346
“I used to play a lot in Spain, but when I moved to Mexico, I took a lot of time of, but I felt like something was missing in my life being away for so long. It just feels amazing to actually win one after everything that has happened,” an emotional Bernabeu said with tears in his eyes.
Bernabeu has fired in many of the WSOP events this summer without much success, including a heartbreaking bust out in the Main Event on Day 2, where he explained that he had fallen sick and could not play to his full ability.
His rail was also there for the entire final table, cheering him on throughout the ups and downs and finally, the sweet moment when the last card fell to secure his victory, and he threw his hands up and yelled “VAMOS!!” and ran to embrace them.
PokerNews caught up with 888 Ambassador Ana Marquez, who was a member on his rail who described him as:
“[He’s]... a really great guy and poker player. He loves the game and is very creative. He even created his own revolutionary poker deck with five suits instead of four and wants to introduce it to the world at some point.”
Final Day Action
After the cards were in the air, it didn't take long before the bust-outs began rolling in. Several players were eliminated within the first few hands, with Galen Hall the first to exit followed by George Janssen. After that, it seemed a player busted every 15-20 minutes on average until Junhao Wu busted in 19th and the players were then redrawn to the final two tables. Even at this point, the bustouts were still fast and furious and the final table was reached within two levels when Kartik Ved and Matias Gabrenja were eliminated at almost the same time in 10th and 11th, respectively.
Next to go was the previously mentioned Schill, who fell in ninth as the first final table casualty, as well as Bernabeu’s first victim.
Coming in eighth place was Houston native Normand, known for his stellar table talk throughout the tournament, who busted when he got it in with king-nine of spades but could not improve against Penev’s superior ace-jack of spades.
After that, it became the Penev and Anderson show as they both won several giant pots and took turns being the chip leader on several occasions, including the hand when Penev busted Justin Kindred in sixth when his ace-jack could not improve against Penev’s ace-queen.
Their back-and-forth chip race went on for quite a while with no bust outs until Bernabeu got it all in against Sorgatto, who then became his third victim on the final table as he exited in fifth.
Triton high-roller regular Davies was the chip leader heading into both Day 2 and Day 3, and he maintained his dominance through much of the day until he took a big hit against James Anderson right before the dinner break and was reduced to only a few blinds. After returning from break, he only lasted a few hands before getting it in with king-ten offsuit versus the pocket jacks of none other than Bernabeu. He failed to improve on the runout and exited the tournament in fourth place as Bernabeus's fourth kill.
Although he was chip-leading for most of the final table, Penev took a big hit when he doubled up Bernabeu in a giant 20,000,000 pot when he called his all-in with ace-king suited versus Bernabeu’s pocket queens and failed to improve. It wasn't long after that when he finally fell to the final table MVP when his pocket fives got crushed by Bernabeu’s ace-queen on an ace-queen-king flop with no five in sight.
Heads-up play between Bernabeu and Anderson lasted for about 25 minutes until they got it in with pocket kings against ace-queen, with Anderson holding the latter. Although he flopped the nut flush draw, Anderson could not find a club and the king of spades on the river was just the icing on the cake to send him out as the runner-up while Bernabeu was crowned the champion and adorned with the WSOP gold bracelet.
This concludes the coverage of Event #79: $2,500 No-Limit Hold’em but stay tuned to PokerNews as we bring you all the action from the last handful of 2023 WSOP bracelet-awarding events.