
Patrick Moulder won World Series of Poker event #56: $2,500 Mixed Triple Draw Lowball (Limit) for $177,045. Moulder made two final tables earlier in this WSOP. He finished ninth in $10,000 Limit Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better Championship and eighth in $10,000 limit H.O.R.S.E. Championship. Third time was the charm, and Moulder got his hands on his first WSOP bracelet.
“It means so much to me,” Moulder said after the victory. “My goal coming into the summer was to make one final table. I got to one early in the summer and got knocked out right away. It was nice to have a long Day 3 and get across the finish line”.
The event attracted 316 entries who created a prize pool of $825,475 with 56 players in the money. Min-cash was $5,054.
Event #56: $2,500 Mixed Triple Draw Lowball (Limit) Final Table Results
Place | Player | Country | Prize |
---|---|---|---|
1 | United States | $177,045 | |
2 | Canada | $115,073 | |
3 | United States | $76,547 | |
4 | United States | $52,140 | |
5 | United States | $36,387 | |
6 | United States | $26,033 | |
7 | United States | $19,106 |
Final Table Action
After final table chip count, Patrick Moulder was on the top of the pack with 22 big bets, and Shaun Deeb was in last position with nine big bets.
[Badugi] First one to hit the rails was Anthony Hu who shoved from BU and got called by Chan, who had him covered. Hu had [invalid notations]. 10♠ didn’t improve Chan meaning Hu needed to hit any diamond to stay alive in the tournament. Final draw was 9♥, and Hu was eliminated in seventh place for $19,106.




The Heads-Up
Going into the heads-up battle Moulder had the chip lead, but nothing was done since Chan had enough chips to go to war.
[A-5 Triple Draw] After back and forth, Moulder inflicted the final blow when he was raised from BTN, putting Chan all in; Chan called. Each player took three cards on the first draw, Chan took two on the second draw, and Moulder drew one. On the final draw, Chan tool two, and Moulder stood pat. Chan had 42A against Moulder’s 6542A. Chan still had some equity, but he turned 6 as the first card, and that was the end as he was drawing dead. Chan was eliminated in second place for $115,073.
* Images and hands courtesy of WSOP and PokerNews