2018 World Series of Poker Europe

Event #7: �2,200 Pot-Limit Omaha 8-Handed
Day: 3
Event Info

2018 World Series of Poker Europe

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
k633
Prize
€91,730
Event Info
Buy-in
€2,200
Prize Pool
€358,853
Entries
187
Level Info
Level
27
Blinds
40,000 / 80,000
Ante
0

Anson Tsang Wins Maiden Bracelet in Event #7: �2,200 Pot-Limit Omaha 8-Handed (�91,730)

Level 27 : 40,000/80,000, 0 ante
Anson Tsang Wins Event #7: €2,200 Pot-Limit Omaha 8-Handed
Anson Tsang Wins Event #7: �2,200 Pot-Limit Omaha 8-Handed

Seven out of 10 events of the 2018 World Series of Poker Europe have now awarded the coveted gold bracelet in Europe's biggest poker arena at the King's Casino in Rozvadov. After a brief and very intense final day, it was Hong Kong's Yan Shing ��Anson�� Tsang that defeated Ilya Bulychev to claim his maiden bracelet in Event #7: �2,200 Pot-Limit Omaha 8-Handed. For his win, Tsang took home �91,730, Bulychev had to settle for a payday of �56,684.

It was certainly no surprise to see Tsang and Bulychev in heads-up as they were first and second in chips after Day 1 and Day 2 respectively. Down to the last four players, Tsang regained the lead once more and never put his foot from the pedal to dominated the late stages with sheer aggression. This past summer, he already had a shot at a Pot-Limit Omaha bracelet and finished 10th in $ 10,000 Pot Limit Omaha - Championship (Event #49) for $67,210.

"Actually, I play Hold'em, PLO and all the mixed games, but the mixed games was the first time that I played in Las Vegas. PLO and Hold'em tournaments I play quite a lot," Tsang said in the interview after his victory.

While many others may have considered ICM on the final table of this buy-in, for Tsang it was all about the victory and the gold bracelet that he had previously missed out on.

"Yes, I always play for the win. I think there is an edge for me, because some players may be very concerned about ICM."

As his most dangerous opponents on the final table, Tsang mentioned "My countryman, Hokyiu Lee, and both the Swedish guys were very good."

While Tsang was always near the top of the counts, it wasn't an easy ride and he regularly went up and down the leaderboard in the early and middle stages of the final table. One key hand changed that, as Tsang was suddenly in control with four players remaining.

"Yes, it was a key hand with Quan Zhou when he three-bet ace-king suited and I four-bet all in. But actually, my equity was quite good in this hand," Tsang elaborated.

Quan Zhou
Quan Zhou

The day is not over yet for the first WSOP bracelet winner from Hong Kong, as he plans to jump into the �25,500 Super High Roller for another shot at glory.

"Yeah I am going to play the 25k later. I was planning to play the event actually, so no matter if I got the bracelet or not I was still going to play."

Many Asian players made the trip to Rozvadov to take part in the 2018 WSOPE and have been thriving in the last two yxears. A few of them are poised to win their own maiden bracelet according to Tsang:

"To be honest, you can see that the results of the Asian players are really good in the past two years. Asia has a lot of good poker players, and they start to travel around for poker tournaments. I am happy to be with them together. A lot of them are really good. Danny Tang, Michael Soyza and Pete Chen are very good and I think more bracelets are coming for the Asian players.

Tsang currently sits in fourth place in the Hong Kong all-time money list with more than $2.4 million in cashes, but he is the first to win a WSOP bracelet. For official purpose, Hong Kong s is a part of China, but, for all intents and purposes, it is allowed to operate as an independent country.

The event drew a total of 187 entries, consisting of 106 unique players and 81 re-entries. The top 29 spots took home a portion of the �358,853 prize pool and Tomasz Gluszko ended up as the bubble boy. Notables that cashed include Roland Israelashvili, Chris Ferguson, 2018 WSOP Player of the Year contender Shaun Deeb, Jan-Peter Jachtmann, Allen Kessler, Anthony Zinno, 2013 WSOP Main Event champion Ryan Riess and Aaron Duczak.

Anson Tsang Wins Event #7: €2,200 Pot-Limit Omaha 8-Handed
Anson Tsang Wins Event #7: �2,200 Pot-Limit Omaha 8-Handed

Final Result Event #7: �2,200 Pot-Limit Omaha 8-Handed

PlaceWinnerCountryPrize (in EUR)Prize (in USD)
1Anson TsangHong Kong�91,730$105,167
2Ilya BulychevRussia�56,684$64,987
3Jason GrayUnited Kingdom�39,508$45,295
4Quan ZhouChina�28,100$23,394
5Ludvig SternerSweden�20,405$23,256
6Hokyiu LeeHong Kong�15,134$17,351
7Gisle OlsenDenmark�11,469$13,149
8Alexander NordenSweden�8,886$10,188

Action of the Final Day

It only took eight hands to reduce the final table from eight to the last six hopefuls. Pot-Limit Omaha online high stakes cash game player Alexander Norden was the first to depart. The Swede three-bet preflop with pocket aces and got his stack in after a king-queen-queen flop only to see Ilya Bulychev snap-call with the flopped full house. Gisle Olsen fell victim to the other big stack Anson Tsang when his kings were outfloppped by eventual champion Tsang with trips fours.

Quan Zhou doubled through Bulychev to claim the lead, but the Russian jumped back into the top spot after doubling through Hokyiu Lee soon after. Just one hand later, Lee was forced all in from the big blind and Zhou dealt the final blow.

One hour later it was the second Swede on the final table that ran out of chips in Ludvig Sterner. The PLO cash game regular never got much going and eventually ended up all in and at risk when defending his big blind and flopping the nut straight. Jason Gray held the nutflushdraw and immediately got there on the turn to leave Sterner drawing dead.

That reduced the field to the final four and Tsang ramped up the aggression, assuming control with a very aggressive playing style. Tsang four-bet shoved with king-jack-ten-ten double suit into Ilya Bulychev's cold-call and the three-bet of Quan Zhou, who had a suited ace-king and forfeited almost half of his remaining stack.

Zhou never recovered from that final blow and eventually ended up all in with fewer than two big blinds. It was Tsang that finished off the job he previously started and the top set on the flop was more than enough to reduce the field to the last three.

Jason Gray
Jason Gray

Jason Gray, since 2012 a member of the Aussie Poker Hall of Fame and now based in London, United Kingdom, patiently nursed a shorter stack for most of the final table and even took over the lead for a short time. However, Gray was grinded back down by the aggression of Tsang and ran with an ace-king-ten-deuce double suit into the aces of Bulychev. Gray turned two pair, but Bulychev rivered the flush.

In heads-up, Tsang had a comfortable lead over Bulychev and needed a mere 20 minutes to emerge victoriously. After turning the nut straight and jamming into his opponent, Tsang held a commanding lead and the duo clashed again the very next hand. This time, Bulychev had the best of it on the flop with the nut straight, while Tsang held bottom set. Instead of the full house, running hearts gave Tsang the winning flush and that sealed his victory.

Another three gold bracelets are up for grabs during the 2018 WSOPE and the PokerNews live reporting team will be on the floor until the conclusion of the WSOPE Main Event on November 2nd, 2018.

Tags: Aaron DuczakAlexander NordenAllen KesslerAnson TsangAnthony ZinnoChris FergusonDanny TangGisle OlsenHokyiu LeeIlya BulychevJason GrayLudvig SternerMichael SoyzaPete ChenQuan ZhouRoland IsraelashviliRyan RiessShaun DeebTomasz Gluszko