2021 World Series of Poker

Event #58: $1,000 Super Seniors No-Limit Hold'em
Day: 3
Event Info

2021 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
j7
Prize
$255,623
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,000
Prize Pool
$1,685,660
Entries
1,893
Level Info
Level
31
Blinds
100,000 / 200,000
Ante
200,000
Players Info - Day 3
Entries
65
Players Left
1

Jean-Luc Adam Wins First Bracelet and $255,623 in Event #58: $1,000 Super Seniors No-Limit Hold'em

Level 31 : 100,000/200,000, 200,000 ante
Jean-Luc Adam
Jean-Luc Adam

On the third and final day of the 2021 World Series of Poker Event #58: $1,000 Super Seniors No-Limit Hold'em, a champion was crowned as Jean-Luc Adam defeated Eugene Salomon in heads-up play for $255,623. The event attracted 1,893 super seniors to create a prize pool of $1,685,660, with the majority of that money awarded to the remaining players today. There were 283 players who cashed and 65 of them returned today looking for gold, but only Adam was able to bring the bracelet home.

Event #58: $1,000 Super Seniors No-Limit Hold'em Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Jean-Luc AdamFrance$255,623
2Eugene SalomonUnited States$157,986
3Scott SukstorfUnited States$117,181
4Bill StablerUnited States$87,722
5Alex KatsmanUnited States$66,284
6Joseph RichardsUnited States$50,559
7Girish ApteUnited States$38,932
8Reginald PowellUnited States$30,269
9Gary PagelUnited States$23,762

Winner's Reaction

The 69-year-old Adam is from France and currently lives and works in Saint Martin, an island in the Caribbean. In 2019, he won his first WSOP Circuit ring from an event in Saint Martin where he took home the first-place prize of $10,500, although that pales in comparison to what he will be taking home today.

“I’m dreaming. It’s very strange, a strange sensation,” said Adam. “I felt good for all of the tournament and I felt very relaxed… I never think about first place, but only play every hand. It’s a very nice moment… I like to play for pleasure. I like to have emotion. It’s a very strange sensation for me because I don’t realize that it’s a world championship. It’s very unbelievable, I don’t understand now. It’s too soon, I just finished the tournament. I can’t realize exactly everything now.”

“I am thinking first to my family. The most important thing to me is my family. My wife, my daughter, and my son… My son plays poker well. Very well. He taught me.”

His son, Cedric Adam, won his own WSOP circuit ring in Saint Martin less than one week after his father did back in March 2019.

“My family is the most important in my life. I have a very nice family and of course, I am thinking first of them. It’s very, very nice. A very nice sensation… I am so happy!”

Action of the Day

There were 65 players who returned to the felt today and that number started to drop at a brisk pace. About five hours into the day, only 27 players remained on three tables and from there, it was only an hour or so until 18 players remained on two tables.

Fourteen players made it to dinner break, although they still returned hungry for the bracelet. About an hour after dinner, ten players converged on a single final table, all looking to satiate their appetite for gold.

Final Table
Final Table

Final Table

At the unofficial final table of ten, Day 2 chip leader David Slaughter was the first to go after getting pocket fives in against the pocket deuces of Adam. A deuce appeared on the flop to send him home. It was Gary Pagel who followed that exit when he lost a flip to Solomon.

After a short break, Scott Sukstorf made “the hardest call he made in the whole tournament", and doubled through Reginald Powell. That left Powell short and he was the next one to go in eighth. Girish Apte hit the rail next when running ace-jack into ace-king, and that left six players with a stack.

Joseph Richards found his way to the payout desk next after getting sevens in against Adam’s ladies, and Alex Katsman, who started the day with a short stack and spun it up, saw his run come to an end when flipping against Solomon and getting beat on the river.

Bill Stabler was the next player to wave goodbye in fourth, and Scott Sukstorf got his chips in against Adam’s cowboys and couldn’t find the ace he was looking for. That set up a heads-up showdown between Adam and Solomon, with Adam holding a chip lead of about two times that of Solomon.

Both players had a decent amount of blinds, but it didn’t take long for all the chips to get in. Adam called Solomon’s shove on the turn after Adam flopped two pair, and Solomon was only live to a gutshot straight draw. The river was a blank, and Adam was officially a World Series of Poker bracelet winner.

Congratulations to Jean-Luc Adam for winning Event #58: $1,000 Super Seniors No-Limit Hold'em!

Jean-Luc Adam
Jean-Luc Adam

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Tags: Alex KatsmanBill StablerDavid SlaughterEugene SalomonGirish ApteJean-Luc AdamJoseph RichardsReginald PowellScott Sukstorf