Jamey Hendrickson bet 500,000 from the button. Chino Rheem in the small blind raised to 1,700,000, Hendrickson bet pot which was enough to put Rheem all in for his remaining 3,100,000 chips.
Chino Rheem:
Jamey Hendrickson:
The flop of did not help Rheem and the turn left him drawing dead as Hendrickson made a flush. The completed the board and Rheem's search for an inaugural WSOP gold bracelet continues as he exits in fifth place
This summer, Golden Nugget Las Vegas will play host to the 14th Annual Grand Poker Series, which features 81 events and offers over $3 million in guaranteed prize money from May 31-July 3. One of those events is the $1,100 buy-in, $1,000,000 Guaranteed PokerNews Cup that will run from June 24-28.
The tournament will feature three starting flights beginning with Day 1a at 11 a.m. PT on Friday, June 24. Days 1b and 1c will take place at the same time on Saturday, June 25, and Sunday, June 26 respectively. The surviving players from each flight will return at Noon on Monday, June 27 to play down to the final table, which will play out at 2 p.m. on Tuesday, June 28.
PokerNews will be on-site throughout the duration to offer live updates, videos, social media content, and more.
Daniel Weinman bet 500,000 from the button and was called by Germandio Andoni on the big blind.
The flop came which was checked by both players. The yurn encouraged Andoni to bet 625,000 which was called by Weinman.
The paired the board on the river. Andoni checked to Weinman who bet 1,200,000. Andoni did not look comfortable whilst making his decision. He eventually called and Weinman revealed for a flush. Andoni revealed to show he was pipped by one card and tapped the felt for Weinman's better hand.
Jamey Hendrickson limped from the button and was met by a pot bet from Eduardo Bernal Sanchez in the small blind for 1,000,000. Daniel Weinman called from the big blind and Hendrickson made it a family pot.
The flop of prompted Sanchez to move all-in for 2,700,000. Weinman raised over the top to isolate which forced Hendrickson to fold.
Eduardo Bernal Sanchez:
Daniel Weinman:
Weinman flopped the nut straight whilst Sanchez picked up a flush draw to go along with his pocket kings. However, there was no help for the Colombian as the board ran out . Sanchez heads for the exit but receives his first-ever six-figure score.
In the third hand of heads-up play, Jamey Hendrickson limped in the small blind and Daniel Weinman checked.
The flop came an innocuous-looking which started a raising war where all the chips came into the middle with Hendrickson the player at risk for 13,000,000.
Jamey Hendrickson:
Daniel Weinman:
Weinman flopped two pair, while Hendrickson had a wrap. The runout of was no help to Hendrickson who finished in 2nd place for the biggest cash of his career. Daniel Weinman won his first WSOP gold bracelet.
Longtime poker pro Daniel Weinman defeated Jamey Hendrickson after three hands of heads-up poker to become the 2022 World Series of Poker (WSOP) Event #30: $1,000 Pot-Limit Omaha 8-handed champion, good for his first-ever WSOP gold bracelet and $255,359 in prize money. He made it through 1,891 entries to win the biggest share of the $1,682,990 prize pool.
Originally from Atlanta, Georgia, Weinman celebrated by having a video call with his fiancée and pet dog before hugging his star-studded rail that included Shaun Deeb, who picked Weinman in his fantasy draft for a very reasonable $1.
Event #30: $1,000 Pot-Limit Omaha 8-Handed Final Table Results
Place
Player
Country
Prize (in USD)
1
Daniel Weinman
USA
$255,359
2
Jamey Hendrickson
USA
$157,819
3
Eduardo Bernal Sanchez
Colombia
$116,751
4
Germandio Andoni
USA
$87,167
5
Chino Rheem
USA
$65,685
6
Ferenc Deak
Hungary
$49,962
7
Stephen Song
USA
$38,363
8
Ruslan Dykshteyn
USA
$29,739
Action from the Final Day Action
Ten players returned to the action on Day 3 with Weinman as chip leader closely followed by Colombian Eduardo Bernal Sanchez. The two short-stacks in Lautaro Guerra and Oliver Weis busted out within minutes of each other on different tables which allowed the final table to commence in earnest.
Ruslan Dykshteyn was the first player to be eliminated on the final table after Germandio Andoni cracked his aces by flopping a set of kings. Stephen Song hit the rail not long after Dykshteyn after losing to Weinman's pair of deuces.
Chino Rheem was the aggressor for most of the day and was the first player to break the 10,000,000 barrier. However, constant clashes with Andoni weakened Rheem's stack before eventually succumbing to Hendrikson in fifth place.
After the second break of the day, four players returned to the table and in the space of five hands Weinman knocked out Andoni, Sanchez, and runner-up Jamey Hendrickson, putting a quick end to the tournament.
Weinman outlasted 1,891 runners to win his first bracelet which he described as 15 years in the making. After discovering the victory has put him on top of the Player of the Year table, he is planning to play a lot more tournaments this summer, though not before celebrating with a round of golf.