Early in the morning of November 18, 2021, the name of another player who managed to win the unofficial World Championship of Poker, a.k.a WSOP Main Event, was revealed. It was a citizen of Germany - Koray Aldemir, who pocketed a massive $8,000,000 prize.
This morning in Vegas, the 9-day Main Event marathon of the World Series came to an end. For the first time in its history, this event experienced more than a two-year break and was held under severe restrictions.
For the second time in a row, the winner of the tournament was a German:
Live poker reg Koray Aldemir won his first bracelet and $8,000,000 in the WSOP 2021 Main Event.
During 6 flights, the tournament gathered 6,650 players and thus became the tenth in the history of the series. Over the past 10 years, three tournaments have had fewer participants, and three more have been very close. So, despite the situation with the COVID-19, the event has become quite popular, and not only among US citizens. Many poker players from Europe and other continents were also able to pay $10,000 buy-in.
The international status of the event was confirmed by the line-up of the final table. As in 2019, there were only four US representatives. Players were eliminated in the following order:
Koray Aldemir and George Holmes entered the final table with the largest stacks, and both ended up in a decisive showdown.
Reference. The American turned out to be the oldest participant in the TOP-9. The 49 years old works in the online payments industry. Commentators called him a "home game regular." He plays only the Main Events at the WSOP. In 2019, he took 213th place ($50K). This year, George built a big stack from just 1BB in the middle of Day 7.
His confrontation with Aldemir lasted about 4 hours (52 hands). For a very long time, the US player had fewer chips in his stack. But it changed after A8s vs. AK hand with an ace on the flop and 8 on the river. Holmes became a chip leader, winning the biggest pot of the tournament at the time.
For the next two hours, the game was relatively equal with a lot of postflop action, and due to deep stacks (over 80BB), it could go on for a very long time. As it often happens, the fate of the first place was decided by a hand in which both players could not afford themselves to fold. You can see the historic call on the river in this video:
The future world poker champion grew up in Berlin and now lives in Vienna. He was engaged in business administration.
He started to play poker on the eve of 2006, played with friends, and also online at PokerStars under the nickname "Körrinho." In 2013, he met Fedor Holz and decided to start a professional career in live tournaments, having dropped out of his studies as a psychologist.
He won the first €200 buy-in live tournament back in 2012. Four years later, great success came to him when he took third place in the $111,111 One Drop event and earned $2,154,265. His other big wins include the 2017 Triton Series Main Event ($1,292,509) and the 2019 US Poker Open ($738,000).
After the WSOP 2021 ME triumph, his live tournament winnings totaled $20,334,110, which allowed him to enter the TOP-8 of the best German players.
On his Twitter account, the player wrote:
The World Series will run until November 23. Some exciting events are left on its schedule: $10,000 Razz Championship Event #78 and three High Roller events ($100K and $250K - Hold 'em; $50K - Omaha).
We hope that the online poker industry will start delighting us with Christmas and New Year-related offers from the end of November.
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