In the afterglow of the 2025 World Series of Poker Main Event, there remained one last event on the schedule for players to take a chance to capture glory at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas. Mitchell Hynam was one of the lucky players still recovering from a deep run at the Main Event, as he was fresh off a 49th-place finish. For most, that would be the highlight of their summer, but for Hynam, it was a sign of things to come.
He opted to take one last shot as he was one of the 1,935 players that entered Event #100 $1,000 Super Turbo No-Limit Hold’em to help build a prize pool of $1,702,800. It was a sprint to the finish for the hopefuls, but in the closing hours of the WSOP series, it was Hynam who stood alone and won the $237,924 top prize and the gold hardware.
"It's not really set in, but it feels great, got the bracelet and another 250,000. Life's good," said Hynam, still fresh from his victory, where he defeated Nadav Bitton heads up, where he flopped a set to take it down.
"It's hard to make a pair," Hynam said with a wry smile on his motivation to make the tournament-winning call.
Hynam came into the final stretch with few chips to work with. With 11 to go, Hynam had a short stack of 1,575,000 in chips. He began to gain traction when he doubled up against Bitton to cross the four million in chips mark with nine players left.
Just minutes later, Hynam would again be involved in a big pot that vaulted him into the chip lead. This began a series of knockouts that put Hynam in firm control of the final table. After taking almost 40 minutes to lose the first player, it only took another 20 minutes to get from that point to heads-up.
Hynam became a wrecking ball as he knocked out the last eight players left at the final table, which began with the elimination of Alexander Duvall.
Hynam then had a nasty beat over Paulina Loeliger before going on to knockout Brett Shaffer, Lukas Hafner, Jacob Parent, Nevan Chang, and Kei Tanaka, to set up a heads-up duel against Bitton.
Hynam shared that at first, he just attempted to take one last shot to end the summer and was in a relaxed mood. Once he began to build a stack, his mood shifted.
"I didn't really care at the start, but once I got chips, I had to take it seriously," Hynam said.
Hynam's journey to WSOP glory began when he started playing the game six or seven years ago. Like many young players, he began playing at local casinos.
"And then the buy-ins just get bigger and bigger," Hynam said. "You keep going, and it always comes out right in the end, you hope."
Hope or not, Hynam can now call himself a World Series of Poker champion for the rest of his life.
Place | Player | Country | Prize |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Mitchell Hynam | United Kingdom | $237,924 |
2 | Nadav Bitton | Canada | $158,578 |
3 | Kei Tanaka | Japan | $115,295 |
4 | Nevan Chang | Taiwan | $84,733 |
5 | Jacob Parent | Canada | $62,954 |
6 | Lukas Hafner | United States | $47,290 |
7 | Brett Shaffer | United States | $35,921 |
8 | Paulina Loeliger | Austria | $27,594 |
9 | Alexander Duvall | United States | $21,440 |
10 | Amit Agarwal | United States | $16,851 |
The final tournament of the 2025 series saw all the big names come out for one last chance to earn bracelet glory this year. Poker Hall of Famers Erik Seidel, Daniel Negreanu, and Phil Hellmuth, who played the event alongside his son, were all unable to find any traction, heading home early into the day. Huck Seed took his seat the moment cards were in the air, and following an unsuccessful first bullet, his second saw him bust moments before locking up a min-cash.
Shaun Deeb, chasing a second Player of the Year title, couldn’t get anything going with either of his two bullets, however he locked it up following the exit of his closest competition Benny Glaser and Martin Kabrhel, both of whom were unable to make the money.
Eliminations, of course, did not stop there, with the “turbo” aspect really starting to take precedent. Main event champions Hossein Ensan and Ryan Riess heading home within minutes of each other, and Jonathan Tamayo, who was the current champion at the time of his elimination, exiting also.
As play got closer to the money bubble, play began to slow down considerably, even though the number of average big blinds never broke the 20 mark. A few players who were looking to add to bracelets already won this series, such as Zdenek Zizka, Blaz Zerjav, Xixiang Luo, and Shiina Okamoto were unable to repeat that feat.
Busting out shortly before cashing, John Racener, Matt Vengrin, and Khoi Le Nguyen left with nothing, rather than a second piece of silverware for the summer.
Once it was official that the final 291 players made the money, they began to drop like flies for a second time. Joao Simao, Anson Tsang, Aram Zobian and Mike Matusow all had to settle with a min-cash. The same was true for Adam Hendrix, who was fresh off the back of a sixth-place score in the main event.
Play finally got to a redraw shortly before 10:00 p.m. with Aliaksandr Shylko and Sean Troha just missing out, and three became two at around half past. The final table was officially confirmed when Vladislav Donchev headed home in 11th.
This concludes the coverage of the $1,000 Super Turbo No-Limit Hold'em Event. Stay tuned with PokerNewsfor all your updates on poker stories and tournaments.
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