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Final day play for the tournament is nearly 14 hours long. The 2024 World Series of Poker Circuit 300 Colossus Playground is now at an end. Once the dust was settled Keven Degagne Last player standing Alexandre Clusiau Heads up play is the way to win $89 735.
Results of the Final Table
You can find out more about this at | Players | Hometown | Prize (in Canadian dollars) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Keven Degagne | Laval | $89,725* |
2 | Alexandre Clusiau | Mascouche | $67,125* |
3 | Remy Tetart | Longueuil | $54,310* |
4 | Jeffrey Cormier | Moncton | $32,000 |
5 | Wali Nezam | Ajax | $24,000 |
6 | Andrew Fahey | Sudbury | $20,000 |
7 | Jikai Zhang | Nepean | $15,000 |
8 | Nicholas Haddad | Burlington | $12,000 |
9 | Joseph Movsessian | Scarborough | $10,000 |
10 | Joseph Jarvis | Montreal | $8,000 |
*Three-way agreement is indicated
Last Day Recap
Playground had a great success with the Colossus. It was one of 15 WSOP ring-events during this series. The event attracted insgesamt 3964 participants Create a Massive $931,540 The prize pool is nearly twice as much as the guarantee of $500,000 This field is larger than the previous WSOP C Colossus at Playground in August 2019, which had 3,538 entrants. It was the biggest tournament in Playground history.
Wali Nezam started the day as the player with the lowest stack of chips in the entire room. His 52,000 chip stack was worth less than nine big blinds. Nezam, despite facing an uphill fight would eventually win. Making a comeback is an amazing featThe day was filled with many doubles. Nezam rode that momentum to the final round where he finished in 5th place. His tablemates applauded him.
Desgagne started the day at the back of the pack. Making an outstanding hero call The count was climbed midway during the day. Clusiau followed a similar path, starting the day just below average before reaching the top of the count midway through. Unexpected double knockout At that point, he had a chip advantage over everyone else.
Jeffrey Cormier The chip leader at the final table played an aggressive game that won him several pots, without the need for a showdown. The stack would eventually be decimated. Clusiau pocket aces and pocket kings. He doubled up from that point on, but he ended the race in fourth.
The remaining three players, after Cormier’s exit, agreed to an ICM-chop which left $24,720 more for the eventual winning player. Remy Tetart Clusiau, who had been playing in the heads-up game with Desgagne before him, would have to play Clusiau again if he was going to finish third.
Both players begun heads-up play nearly even in chips. Clusiau had a small lead early in the game, but Desgagne took over after a preflop win. Desgagne won the game a few more hands after eliminating Clusiau with a complete house. He then claimed the pot, the $89 725 top prize and the first World Series of Poker Circuit Ring.
We have concluded our coverage of this event, but we will continue to update you as new events are announced. PokerNews Team continues to bring all the action of the 2024 World Series of Poker Circuit Playground.
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