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2012 World Series of Poker

Event 13: $1,500 Limit Hold'em
Day: 3
Event Info

2012 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
q10
Prize
$211,921
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,500
Prize Pool
$985,500
Entries
730
Level Info
Level
27
Blinds
20,000 / 40,000
Ante
0

Congratulations to David Arsht, Winner of Event 13: $1,500 Limit Hold'em ($211,921)

Level 27 : 20,000/40,000, 0 ante
Champion David Arsht!
Champion David Arsht!

Two days ago, Event 13: $1,500 Limit Hold'em of the 2012 World Series of Poker began with 730, which created a $985,500 prize pool. On Thursday, the final 25 players in the tournament returned to competed for the gold bracelet and $211,921 first-place prize. It took nearly 11 hours of play, and in the end it was 66-year-old David Arsht who outlasted them all to win his first gold bracelet.

The day started off with a bang as the eliminations came quick. Five players hit the rail in the first level alone, and before long it was down to just two tables. It was at that point that the fan favorite of the tournament, Jennifer Harman, was eliminated. She had grown short stacked and got her chips in preflop with {Q-Spades}{Q-Clubs} and was up against the {A-Spades}{K-Spades} of Leonid Bilokur. It was an old-fashioned flip, but it didn't come down in Harman's favor as the flop fell {J-Clubs}{2-Spades}{K-Diamonds}. Bilokur paired his king to take a commanding lead, and Harman was left looking for a queen. The {4-Spades} turn wasn't what she needed and neither was the {6-Spades} river. Harman was eliminated in 18th place and secured her first cash of the 2012 WSOP.

From there, a steady stream of players made their way to the payout desk until the final table was determined. Here’s a look at the players that failed to make the Event #13 final table:

Pre-Final Table Eliminations

PlacePlayerPrize
10Roland Israel$12,535
11Charles Tucker$12,535
12Jared Woodin$12,535
13Bruce Rosen$10,111
14Chris Swan$10,111
15Leonid Bilokur$10,111
16Ian Johns$8,130
17Kevin McGuinness$8,130
18Jennifer Harman$8,130
19Jed Dickerson$6,652
20Isaac Haxton$6,652
21Eric Menser$6,652
22Eric Blair$6,652
23Josh Biedak$6,652
24Michael Noori$6,652
25Chris Winchester$6,652

Ben Landowski began the final table as the chip leader with 574,000, though several players were nipping at his heels; in fact, everyone seemed to be a legitimate contender for the title. It took about an hour for the first final-table elimination to occur and it happened when Al "Sugar Bear" Barbieri raised to 40,000 and a short-stacked Lori Kirgan tossed in her last 38,000. Everyone else folded, and the cards were tabled.

Showdown

Kirgan{a-Hearts}{j-Hearts}
Barbieri{4-Hearts}{4-Diamonds}

Kirgan managed to pair her king on the {k-Hearts}{3-Clubs}{2-Diamonds} flop, but the running {5-Clubs} turn and {6-Diamonds} river gave Barbieri a straight and the run. Kirgan finished in ninth place and took home $15,886 for her efforts.

Not long after, Barbieri was at it again when he raised from the cutoff. Alex Queen three-bet on the button, Barbieri called and the flop came down {8-Clubs}{6-Spades}{5-Diamonds}. Barbieri check-called a bet from Queen, the {9-Diamonds} turned, and Barbieri led out for 40,000. Queen had just a few thousand more and he committed them to the pot. Barbieri called, and the cards were tabled.

Showdown

Barbieri{a-Clubs}{7-Spades}
Queen{9-Hearts}{9-Clubs}

The turn was a cooler card as it gave Barbieri the straight and Queen a set. Queen would need the board to pair to survive, but the river was the {j-Hearts}. Queen took home a $20,370 consolation prize.

The next elimination occurred when Arsht put in a raise from middle position and was called by Jeff Weiss and Barbieri, who were in the small and big blinds respectively. Action checked to Arsht on the {2-Spades}{Q-Hearts}{9-Clubs} flop and he put out a bet. Weiss called off his last 7,000 while Barbieri got out of the way.

Showdown

Weiss{A-Clubs}{10-Clubs}
Arsht{A-Hearts}{9-Spades}

Arsht was in the lead with a pair of nines, but the {J-Spades} turn did give Weiss an open-ended straight draw headed to the river. "Here comes the king," Barbieri said. The dealer burned and put out paint, but it was the {J-Hearts}. Weiss collected his things and made his way to the payout desk to collect $26,401 for his seventh-place finish.

After the dinner break, the cards seemed to turn on Landowski, who if you recall entered the final table as the chip leader, and he went on a downward spiral that lasted 30 minutes that ultimately resulted in his elimination in sixth place for $34,620.

The next to go was Glenn Engelbert, a man that seemed to have nine lives in this tournament. Just when it seemed like his fate was sealed, Engelbert caught a rush of cards and put himself in contention, but it was cut short by a cooler flop that you can read about here. Eventually Engelbert became the fifth-place finisher and earned $45,953 for his performance.

Four-handed play seemed to last forever, but the blinds soon forced the action and did so in a big way. Arsht raised it up and Donald Auger raised all in. Barbieri made the call with just 20,000 behind and Arsht put in one more raise to get Barbieri all in. He made the call, and the three players showed their hands.

Showdown

Auger{6-Spades}{6-Diamonds}
Barbieri{j-Clubs}{10-Clubs}
Arsht{7-Spades}{7-Diamonds}

Barbieri had more chips then Auger and confirmed with the floor that he would get third place if both players lost the hand. Once he got that confirmation, he celebrated and started shadow boxing. "I love my hand,” he said. “I'm ready to triple up baby!"

The {6-Hearts}{4-Hearts}{2-Clubs} flop silenced Barbieri, though he noted he could catch runner-runner clubs to crack Auger’s set. The {5-Clubs} made things especially interesting as it gave Barbieri his flush draw, but it also delivered Arsht a straight draw. Wouldn’t you know it, the {8-Diamonds} slammed down on the river to give Arsht the straight and the whole rail erupted. Auger stood in disbelief while Barbieri started celebrating, even though he knew he lost the hand. "That's a $23,000 eight of diamonds right there," he said in reference to Arsht eliminating Auger in fourth place and bumping him up to third.

Heads-up play was short and sweet as Arsht held a 5-1 chip lead over Stephen Hung. It took just six hands for Arsht to dispatch his opponent after both players turned trip queens. Lucky for Arsht, his {10-Clubs} kicker was best.

Congratulations to David Arsht on capturing the Event 13: $1,500 Limit Hold'em title, his first WSOP gold bracelet and the $211,921 first-place prize. It was made all the more impressive considering he was down to just 4bbs at the start of Day 2!

Final Table Results

PlacePlayerPrize
1stDavid Arsht$211,921
2ndStephen Hung$130,903
3rdAl “Sugar Bear” Barbieri$84,388
4thDonald Auger$61,820
5thGlenn Engelbert$45,953
6thBen Landowski$34,620
7thJeff Weiss$26,401
8thAlex Queen$20,370
9thLori Kirgan$15,886

That does it for our coverage from Event 13: $1,500 Limit Hold'em. Be sure to visit our Live Reporting Section to learn which events you can follow as we continue to live blog the 2012 WSOP from the Rio in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Tags: David Arsht