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2021 World Series of Poker

Event #68: $1,111 Little One for One Drop
Dias: 4
Event Info

2021 World Series of Poker

Resultados Finais
Campe?o
M?o Vencedora
qq
Premia??o
$396,445
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,111
Entries
3,797
Informa??es do N��vel
N��vel
39
Blinds
600,000 / 1,200,000
Ante
1,200,000
Informa??es do Jogador - Dia 4
Entries
26
Jogadores Restantes
1

Event #68: $1,111 Little One for One Drop

Dia 4 Terminado

Scott Ball Wins Second WSOP Bracelet in Event #68 $1,111 Little One for One Drop.

N��vel 39 : 600,000/1,200,000, 1,200,000 ante
Scott Ball
Scott Ball

Only 26 players returned today for their shot at World Series of Poker glory and the $396,445 grand prize that awaited the winner in Event #68 $1,111 Little One for One Drop. In the end, it was Scott Ball taking home his second career bracelet as he won his first just a few weeks in Event #25: $5,000 6-Handed No-Limit Hold 'em .

For Ball, winning two bracelets in rapid succession was almost unreal.

"I told my friends that are here that before the start, I feel like this isn't the real-life," said Ball. "It's like a simulation to be heads-up again for a bracelet in like two weeks. I've just worked so hard to get better at No-Limit this past year, so when it peeled off and I won another one, it just didn't feel like reality. It feels like I'm dreaming, and I'm going to wake up tomorrow and be like, dang, I can't wait to live that one day."

Despite the rapid pace of play throughout this multi-day tournament, Ball said he was calm and focused because he had done it before.

Scott Ball and Michael Shanahan heads-up
Scott Ball and Michael Shanahan heads-up

"Honestly, they were pretty chill," said Ball. "This tournament is just so much different from the $5,000 six-max. Having won the six-max, it just kind of took my energy levels from being kind of anxious, excited, and eager, to like, we've already done that, so we can do it again. Just do your best and give it time, and it'll happen again. Last night I went home and slept like a baby. So they weren't really a blur; it was actually pretty calm and peaceful, to be honest."

Ball acknowledged that he likely wouldn't win the overall WSOP Player of the Year, but he thinks he has a real shot of winning for the No-Limit category.

"I've really had my sights set on the No-Limit Player of The Year," said Ball. "I think it's really hard for any No-Limit player to just play No-Limit events and no mixed events like I do, to try and get as many points as someone in the other events. Not that they are easier, the people who cash those consistently are just so much more consistent because I think the average player isn't as good as the average No-Limit player. So I'm really glad the WSOP has separated those two things, and I'm pretty sure this will put me into the lead for No-Limit player of the year, and I would really like to hold on to that. That would be really special to me. That never goes away; that's a legacy thing."

Scott Ball
Ladies love Scott Ball

Ball has come a long way on his first days of playing poker, from being an athlete growing up to playing small cash games in casinos.

"I actually started playing poker way after Black Friday," he said. "The first time I went to a casino, I went and played in an unbeatable raked game at a small casino in southern California. I bought in for $40, which was the cap, and got stacked literally by deuce-seven with aces and went back to my car with my head down because I lost like 40 of the 90 dollars to my name because I thought I was a crusher. Then I just got really into the game; I love the game. Phil Laak, Phil Hellmuth, and Patrick Antonius are my favorite players to watch."

It took just three and half hours to reach the unofficial final table of 10. A few of the players to fall before that were Lewis Murray (19th - $14,979), Ori Hasson (18th - $18,178), and GGPoker qualifiers Oscar Alache (17th - $18,178) and Gyuhoon Kang ($22,221). Jose Latorre (10th - $33,939) fell just short of the official final table when his ace-king could not hold against the king-six of Sorel Mizzi.

The last time Ball won, he was up on the PokerGo main stage, but this time his victory was off to the side because of the Main Event.

"This was a very different lineup for a final table," said Ball. "Jonathan Jaffe, Galen, and all the players in the $5,000 six-max were all quite good and aggressive and applied a lot of pressure and did a lot of really cool things. This final table was a bit different. It was a lot less experienced. I would have actually preferred to be up there on the featured area because I've done a lot of things in life that kind of put you in the spotlight. So I feel like I thrive under pressure, and I actually didn't like this because I wanted them to feel pressure because I do better at it than most other people I feel like."

2021 WSOP Event #68 Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Scott BallUnited States$396,445
2Michael ShanahanUnited States$245,068
3Sorel MizziCanada$186,824
4Sebastian MedinaColombia$143,399
5David JacksonUnited States$110,827
6Ronnie BallantyneUnited Kingdom$86,249
7Petro ZakusilovUkranie$67,592
8Seth FischerUnited States$53,343
9Frank MarascoUnited States$42,389

Final Table Action

Michael Shanahan entered with nearly a quarter of the chips in play, but there was a lot of competition to beat with three bracelet winners in Ball, David Jackson, and Seth Fischer. Mizzi also had many eyes on him, as the Canadian pro sought his first WSOP bracelet to add to his illustrious career.

Frank Marasco was the first to fall when he shoved the small blind with jack-ten right into the king-ten of Sebastian Medina. The king kicker played, and Marasco exited in ninth.

Next to go was bracelet winner Seth Fischer, he was out in front with king-queen against the king-five of David Jackson, but Jackson paired his five on the flop, and Fischer was eliminated in eighth.

Shortly after the dinner break Petro Zakusilov busted his short stack in seventh and Ronnie Ballantyne followed him out a few minutes later in sixth. Jackson was next to go in fifth when his pocket sixes could not hold against the ace-ten of Mizzi.

The chips were evenly spread out for four-handed, and each player took their turn atop the leaderboard. Sebastian Medina eventually found himself getting low on chips and shoved the small blind with king-jack right into the ace-six of Shanahan to finish fourth.

Sorel Mizzi
Sorel Mizzi had to make do with a third-place finish

Mizzi bowed out in third after his pocket threes ran into the pocket jacks of Ball. Mizzi had lost the majority of his chips a few minutes earlier when Ball rivered a flush in a bloated pot. That left Ball and Michael Shanahan to battle it out for the bracelet.

Heads up play didn't last very long. Ball and Shanahan traded a couple of blows, but Ball ultimately took a 3-1 chip lead. The tournament ended when Shanahan four-bet shoved ace-eight in the pocket queens of Ball, and Shanahan would have to settle for second.

Ball said he was very happy with how his hard work has paid off this series.

"I'm just really proud to be able to come out here and show people in a live environment that I am who I am, and I'm capable of playing this game at the level I'm playing now. And I'm not going to stop, I'm going to keep doing this. I've been through a lot the past couple of years and had a lot of frustrations, and something one of my mentors taught me was success is the best revenge, and use this to motivate the heck out of you, and it really has. So anyone who wants to say stuff and be like that like, keep it coming because it's just going to inspire me to win even more."

Congratulations to Ball for winning his second bracelet in Event #68 $1,111 Little One for One Drop.

Tags: David JacksonFrank MarascoGyuhoon KangJose LatorreLewis MurrayMichael ShanahanOri HassonOscar AlachePetro ZakusilovPhil HellmuthPhil LaakRonnie BallantyneScott BallSebastian MedinaSeth FischerSorel Mizzi

Michael Shanahan Eliminated in 2nd Place ($245,068)

N��vel 39 : 600,000/1,200,000, 1,200,000 ante
Michael Shanahan
Michael Shanahan

From the button Michael Shanahan raised to 2,600,000. Scott Ball quickly three-bet and he was quickly four-bet all in which he snap-called.

Michael Shanahan: {a-Clubs}{8-Hearts}
Scott Ball: {q-Clubs}{q-Spades}

The flop came {8-Diamonds}{k-Hearts}{3-Diamonds}. The turn was the {k-Diamonds} and the river the {2-Clubs} to hold for the queens and Ball was the champion as Shanahan finished runner-up.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Profile photo of Scott Ball us
Scott Ball
151,880,000
50,580,000
50,580,000
WSOP 2X Winner
Profile photo of Michael Shanahan us
Michael Shanahan
Eliminado
Day 3 Chip Leader

Tags: Michael ShanahanScott Ball

Ball Wins Two More

N��vel 39 : 600,000/1,200,000, 1,200,000 ante

Hand #1: Michael Shanahan limped from the button, Scott Ball raised from the big and Shanahan called.

The flop came {10-Clubs}{k-Diamonds}{10-Diamonds}. Ball bet 3,000,000 and was called. The turn was the {a-Diamonds}. Ball bet 10,000,000 which was enough to fold out Shanahan.

Hand #2: Ball raised from the button, Shanahan called.

The flop came down {5-Spades}{3-Hearts}{6-Hearts}. Both players checked. The turn was the {4-Spades} to put four to a straight on board. Ball bet 5,200,000, Shanahan called.

The river was the {q-Hearts}. Shanahan led for 10,000,000 and Ball called instantly.

Shanahan had the {j-Spades}{4-} while Ball tabled the winner with the {k-Clubs}{7-Hearts}

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Profile photo of Scott Ball us
Scott Ball
101,300,000
15,920,000
15,920,000
WSOP 2X Winner
Profile photo of Michael Shanahan us
Michael Shanahan
51,500,000
-15,000,000
-15,000,000
Day 3 Chip Leader

Tags: Michael ShanahanScott Ball

Ball Regains the Chip Lead

N��vel 39 : 600,000/1,200,000, 1,200,000 ante

Michael Shanahan limped in, Scott Ball made it 2,000,000 more to go, and Shanahan called.

The flop was {3-Spades}{2-Clubs}{7-Diamonds}, and Shanahan called a bet of 3,000,000 from Ball.

Shanahan check-called again on the {7-Spades} turn, this time 8,500,000 from Ball.

Both players checked the river {a-Diamonds}, and Ball tabled {a-Spades}{9-Spades} for aces up to win the pot.

"I was trapping you big time," said Shanahan.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Profile photo of Scott Ball us
Scott Ball
85,380,000
14,480,000
14,480,000
WSOP 2X Winner
Profile photo of Michael Shanahan us
Michael Shanahan
66,500,000
-14,500,000
-14,500,000
Day 3 Chip Leader

Tags: Michael ShanahanScott Ball

N��vel: 39

Blinds: 600,000/1,200,000

Ante: 1,200,000

Shanahan Raises River

N��vel 38 : 500,000/1,000,000, 1,000,000 ante

The pot was a mere 11,000,000 on the river as a bet and call was made on the flop and it was checked on the turn. The river card was dealt to complete the board to read {4-Clubs}{q-Diamonds}{9-Diamonds}{6-Clubs}{6-Hearts}.

Scott Ball bet 15,000,000. Michael Shanahan slid a large stack and half out for a raise to to 40,000,000. Ball folded quickly and Shanahan took over the chip lead as the players then headed on to a 15-minute break.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Profile photo of Michael Shanahan us
Michael Shanahan
81,000,000
23,120,000
23,120,000
Day 3 Chip Leader
Profile photo of Scott Ball us
Scott Ball
70,900,000
-23,100,000
-23,100,000
WSOP 2X Winner

Sorel Mizzi Eliminated in 3rd Place ($186,824)

N��vel 38 : 500,000/1,000,000, 1,000,000 ante
Sorel Mizzi
Sorel Mizzi

Sorel Mizzi raised to 2,000,000 and both Scott Ball and Michael Shanahan called.

Ball led for 3,000,000 on the flop {10-Spades}{q-Hearts}{q-Diamonds} and both Mizzi and Shanahan called.

Ball sized up to 12,000,000 on the turn {j-Hearts} and only Mizzi called. The river was the {5-Hearts} and both players checked. Ball revealed {k-Hearts}{3-Hearts} for a heart flush and Mizzi mucked.

Two hands later Ball raised to 2,000,000, Mizzi shoved for about 18,000,000 and Ball snap-called.

Sorel Mizzi: {3-Spades}{3-Hearts}
Scott Ball: {j-Hearts}{j-Spades}

Mizzi found no help on the {a-Clubs}{7-Hearts}{8-Spades}{2-Hearts}{7-Spades} runout and his quest for his first bracelet would come to an end.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Profile photo of Scott Ball us
Scott Ball
94,000,000
30,000,000
30,000,000
WSOP 2X Winner
Profile photo of Michael Shanahan us
Michael Shanahan
57,880,000
3,580,000
3,580,000
Day 3 Chip Leader
Profile photo of Sorel Mizzi ca
Sorel Mizzi
Eliminado

Tags: Michael ShanahanScott BallSorel Mizzi

Shanahan Misclicks

N��vel 38 : 500,000/1,000,000, 1,000,000 ante

With tepid action until the river the board was completed to read {8-Hearts}{a-Hearts}{a-Spades}{4-Clubs}{6-Diamonds}. Michael Shanahan bet 9,000,000 into a pot of about 10,000,000. Scott Ball called after a second.

Shanahan confidently tabled the {k-Hearts}{j-Hearts}, and Ball showed the {a-Clubs}{2-Hearts}.

"Oh my god. I thought I had ace-jack," said Shanahan. "I honestly thought I had ace-jack, misclick. You could've gotten all my chips".

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Profile photo of Scott Ball us
Scott Ball
64,000,000
14,500,000
14,500,000
WSOP 2X Winner
Profile photo of Michael Shanahan us
Michael Shanahan
54,300,000
-8,100,000
-8,100,000
Day 3 Chip Leader
Profile photo of Sorel Mizzi ca
Sorel Mizzi
32,800,000
-5,000,000
-5,000,000

Tags: Michael ShanahanScott Ball

Sebastian Medina Eliminated in 4th Place ($143,399)

N��vel 38 : 500,000/1,000,000, 1,000,000 ante
Sebastian Medina
Sebastian Medina

Sebastian Medina shoved the small blind for about 13,000,000, and Michael Shanahan called from the big blind.

Sebastian Medina: {k-Clubs}{j-Spades}
Michael Shanahan: {a-Spades}{6-Hearts}

Medina's rail shouted for a king but the flop came {2-Spades}{q-Hearts}{a-Hearts} to pair Shanahan. The turn {q-Spades} and river {q-Diamonds} brought no help to Medina and he was eliminated in fourth. The Colombian takes home more than $140,000 for his efforts.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Profile photo of Michael Shanahan us
Michael Shanahan
62,400,000
18,400,000
18,400,000
Day 3 Chip Leader
Profile photo of Sebastian Medina co
Sebastian Medina
Eliminado

Tags: Michael ShanahanSebastian Medina