2017 World Series of Poker

Event #50: $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em BOUNTY
Day: 4
Event Info

2017 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
88
Prize
$266,646
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,500
Prize Pool
$2,601,450
Entries
1,927
Level Info
Level
33
Blinds
100,000 / 200,000
Ante
30,000

Chris Bolek Wins Maiden Bracelet in Event #50: $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em BOUNTY ($266,646)

Level 33 : 100,000/200,000, 30,000 ante
Chris Bolek Wins Event #50 for $266,646
Chris Bolek Wins Event #50 for $266,646

A new champion has been crowned at the 2017 World Series of Poker and it's Chris Bolek, who emerged victorious after defeating Bryan Emory heads-up to claim his first gold bracelet and $266,646 in Event #50: $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em BOUNTY.

The tournament saw a field of 1,927 entries, which created a prize pool of $2,601,450, and each elimination added $500 to the pocket of the winner. The final table included such big names as 2014 November Niner Dan Sindelar, Argentina's Richard Dubini, and Dutch poker stalwart Govert Metaal. An unscheduled fourth day was added after 121 hands of the official final table last night saw five players bag up and return to the Rio All-Suite Hotel and Casino at 1 p.m. local time on June 29th 2017.

Bolek previously won a WSOP Circuit ring at the Palm Beach Kennel Club in 2014, and he had already cashed four times at the 2017 WSOP, with a total of $404,388 in WSOP and Circuit cashes prior to his victory. He came into the final day as one of the three short stacks with just 14 big blinds and ran extremely well to emerge victorious, picking up seven bounties and his own for $500 apiece.

Born in Quito, Ecuador, Bolek now resides in Boca Raton, Florida. The professional poker player learned the game while playing home games in high school. After he was awarded his bracelet, PokerNews had a chance to get an interview with him. Here are some of the things he had to say:

When asked how Bolek felt to win his first bracelet, he responded, "It feels very surreal. I came in pretty short to the final table, and I just wanted to give myself a shot to win. People say how good it is to visualize things, so I spent some time trying to do that this morning to get into the right mindset, and it just kind of all came together perfectly."

Bolek was then asked what the run was like from four-handed onward, where he seemed to just steam roll things.

"That was just a rush of cards, man," he said. "From the double-up with queen-ten versus ace-jack where I rivered a jack; that just felt unbelievable. It felt like, if I win that hand, I was just going to play well and not lose. Then I really just hit a rush of cards. I had a really good hand in every spot that I played a big pot with. The all ins worked every time, which doesn't really happen, but that was really nice for it to happen now."

While Bolek likes to travel, most of his big scores so far have come back home in Florida, and he took previously missed chances as a learning opportunity.

��I just told myself when I do get back there, just try and maker better decisions," he said. "When I was playing in Jacksonville for the WPT, I was pretty nervous for the live stream. That definitely helped a little bit. I was happy we didn't have a stream yesterday, just because it allows you to concentrate on what is going on and use the same cards. I just felt super comfortable this time around, and I think that helped a lot. I had a roommate watching and just hoped that I would last long enough to get the value of watching the live stream at first. Luckily, it worked out.��

When asked what he had planned for the rest of the Series, he replied with the following: ��I had a schedule in my head beforehand, so I probably won't adjust it too much. I think I am just going to enjoy the win and let it set in, and then get ready for the Main Event.��

Runner-up Bryan Emory came into the day as the chip leader and kept his 11 bounty chips next to his stack the entire time. After pulling away early on, Emory seemed poised to claim the title and was still all smiles before entering heads-up with a crushing chip deficit.

Final Result Event #50: $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em BOUNTY

PlaceWinnerCountryPrize (USD)
1Chris BolekUnited States$266,646
2Bryan EmoryUnited States$164,735
3James GilbertUnited States$119,479
4Tobias PetersNetherlands$87,516
5Zhaoxing WangUnited States$64,746
6Govert MetaalNetherlands$48,386
7Thomas LutzUnited States$36,530
8Richard DubiniArgentina$27,865
9Dan SindelarUnited States$21,477

Day 4 Action

Zhaoxing Wang moved all in on the very first hand, and he did so again in the fourth hand of the final day. This time, he was called by initial raiser James Gilbert, and Wang tabled ace-nine suited. Gilbert had the dominating ace-ten suited and filled up to a full house, tens over aces, by the river.

Soon after, Chris Bolek came from behind to double through James Gilbert when his queen-ten met ace-jack suited of Gilbert. An ace-king-king flop left Bolek with a gutshot, and the river brought a jack to complete the straight.

In Hand #147 of the official final table, Chris Bolek moved all in from the small blind, and Tobias Peters called in the big blind for slightly less. Bolek tabled pocket jacks, and Peters had ace-ten. A jack on the flop and a jack on the turn gave Bolek quads, and Peters had to settle for fourth place.

Only five hands later, Bolek scored another vital double through Bryan Emory when the latter defended his big blind with king-eight. Bolek flopped an open-ended straight draw with jack-ten suited, and a king on the river gave Emory top pair while Bolek improved to the nut straight. Bolek's shove was reluctantly called, and that vaulted him into the top spot. Soon after, Emory also paid off the trips tens of Bolek when holding pocket sevens, and that created a commanding lead.

On Hand #162, James Gilbert moved all in for his last 11 big blinds from the button, and Chris Bolek called in the big blind with pocket queens. Gilbert only had queen-jack and was drawing dead on the turn of a king-high board to give Bolek a 6:1 lead for heads-up.

It took ten hands from there to determine a champion. Bryan Emory moved all in for most of the hands to build his stack slightly, but his three-bet shove in Hand #172 was quickly called by Chris Bolek with red eights. Emory's ace-four suited failed to connect with the board, and Emory had to settle for second place and a payday of $164,735.

This marks the end of the PokerNews' live reporting of Event #50, and the halfway mark has already been reached with all eyes set on the upcoming $50,000 Poker Players Championship and the Main Event.

Tags: Bryan EmoryChris BolekDan SindelarGovert MetaalJames GilbertRichard DubiniThomas LutzTobias PetersZhaoxing Wang