Norway’s
18-Year-Old Annette Obrestad stuns
poker world winning £1 Million at WSOP Europe
Annette
Obrestad became the youngest bracelet winner in World Series of
Poker history early today by conquering the Main Event at the first
annual WSOP Europe Presented by Betfair.com.
The 18-year-old Norwegian played masterfully over
the course of the five-day £10,000 buy-in No-Limit Texas
Hold'em Championship, outlasting a field that included the strongest
showing of professionals in European poker history.
"I never expected to win" said the composed
and articulate Oberstad, who turns 19 in just one day. "I’m
speechless. I really don’t know what to say."
"In the end, the Europeans dominated here," said
WSOP Commissioner Jeffrey Pollack. "But this is the start
of a new tradition for the World Series of Poker and the European
and global poker communities. WSOP Europe will provide more exciting
action in the years to come and we’re confident poker greats
from all over the world – and across the generations – will
shine here, just as they have in Las Vegas."
Obrestad's win capped a series that saw European
players –
make that young European poker players – shut out veteran
American professionals by winning all three WSOP
bracelets up for grabs. Her victory over 22-year-old John Tabatabai
of London came when her three sevens beat his two pair.
Obrestad won the £1 million, or $2,013,102,
first-place prize and the most coveted prize in all of gaming,
a World Series of Poker 18-karat gold and jewel-encrusted bracelet
created by luxury Swiss watchmaker CORUM, the official timepiece
of the WSOP. Tabatabai earned £570,150, or $1,147,770, for
second place.
With her performance, Oberstad’s payday snapped
two records held by poker pro Annie
Duke. The first was Duke’s one-day-old record as the
first woman to exceed $1 million in official WSOP winnings, thanks
to her 21st place finish in the WSOP Europe Main Event. Duke’s £30,770,
or $61,943, payday saw her edge just over the $1 million earnings
mark. Duke also held the single-event record win for a woman with
her $2 million winner-take-all victory in the 2004 Tournament of
Champions staged by Harrah’s Entertainment.
The world’s top-ranked professionals journeyed to London
this month for a chance to make poker history by winning the first
three WSOP bracelets ever awarded outside the United States. But
the likes of Phil Hellmuth, Doyle Brunson, Johnny Chan and scores
of others were stymied in their quests, as Europe’s cadre
of young poker players – most of whose playing experience
was gained online
– performed exceptionally well.
Matthew McCullough, the last remaining American in the Main Event,
finished third after going all in with top pair on the flop. The
hopes of the 26-year-old New Jersey resident for a WSOP bracelet
were dashed when John Tabatabai, who called with middle pair, matched
his ace kicker for two pair that eliminated the full-time anesthetist.
McCullough collected £381,910 for third place.
Norwegian Oyvind Riisen, 22, won £257,020 for
finishing fourth, and Johannes Korsar, 20, of Uppsala, Sweden,
got £191,860 for fifth place.
Dominic Kay, 30, a professional sports trader from
London, finished sixth to earn £152,040, while 24-year-old
Magnus Persson of Gothenburg, Sweden, received £114,030 for
seventh place. Copenhagen’s Theo Jorgensen, at age 35 the
oldest player at the final table, won £85,070 for his eighth-place
finish.
Final-table play got under way at 2:30 p.m. GMT at
The Casino at The Empire on Leicester Square. A few moments later,
21-year-old Londoner James Keys, who began the day with the lowest
number of tournament chips, was eliminated. He collected £61,540
for his efforts.
The 10th through 36th place finishers received from £41,630
to £27,150, depending on their final position. The total
prize pool for the Main Event was £3,676,990.
Additional information about the WSOP Europe can
be found at www.worldseriesofpoker.com.
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