Shannon Shorr Wins US Poker Open Event #1 Following Epic Heads-Up Battle

shannon shorr us poker open

Shannon Shorr and Ren Lin gave PokerGO viewers their money's worth in an intense, action-packed heads-up battle to finish off the 2022 US Poker Open Event #1: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em, a tournament that attracted 93 entries. The latter ended up coming out victorious Thursday afternoon for a $213,900 payday.

Joseph Cheong (sixth place for $55,800), Erik Seidel (fifth place for $74,400), and Daniel Negreanu (fourth place for $93,000) also reached the star-studded final table.

“It was a blast,” Shorr said. “All of these events inside the PokerGO Studio are so much fun, and the names at the final table – Joseph Cheong, Erik Seidel, Daniel Negreanu – they speak for themselves. It was a blast to be here and I’m glad I could come out on top.”

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Shorr and Lin Go Back and Forth

After Masashi Oya, who entered the final table with the chip lead, busted in third place ($111,600), Shorr held nearly a 4:1 chip advantage over Lin. But the match would turn out to be quite the seesaw battle.

Early in the contest, Shorr ran into some rough luck. His opponent was hitting hand after hand, and was starting to climb back into the game. And then the two poker pros played a memorable pot.

With the board showing Q548Q and 700,000 in the pot, Shorr was coolered with Q3 against Q5. Shorr over-bet to 850,000 after it was checked back to him. Lin then check-raised all-in for 4.28 million.

Folding trips heads-up is never an easy task, so Shorr opted to flip a chip to determine if he should call based on which side it landed on. It turned out to land on the side that called for a fold, and had it not, Shorr would have been down to just over 2.5 million chips. Instead, the match was dead-even.

Ren Lin
Ren Lin

The eventual champ would then start to pull back ahead by a comfortable margin. But then the match turned around when Lin began to mix in some check-raise bluffs to perfection. He also hit some fortunate river cards, such as in a hand with K6, he cracked 65 to win a small pot on a board of 28856.

That hand put him out in front 2:1 and pretty much every break seemed to be going against Shorr. Lin would extend the lead even further thanks a wise river call on a board of 95KJ8. The hand was checked to Shorr on the button, who bet out 325,000 (just under half pot) with A9, also a no-diamond hand. Lin, with 63, made the call to chop the pot.

Shorr then began to fight his way back into the match. Lin, with a 2.5:1 chip advantage, bluffed off a chunk of that stack with eight-high on a paired board.

US Poker Open Event #1 Final Table Results

PlacePlayerPrize
1Shannon Shorr$213,900
2Ren Lin$148,800
3Masashi Oya$111,600
4Daniel Negreanu$93,000
5Erik Seidel$74,400
6Joseph Cheong$55,800

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Hand of the Day

With Shorr still trailing by just under 2:1, he finally ran into some good luck. He raised the 75,000/150,000 blinds to 400,000 from the button with K2 and received a call from J5. The flop came out 6J2, another big flop for Lin.

Action checked back to the button, who fired out 250,000 with bottom pair. Lin, as he did so often, check-raised to 650,000. Shorr made the call and saw a lucky 2 on the turn. Lin bet out 825,000 and his opponent called.

With 3.9 million in the pot, the river was the 7 and Lin instantly announced "all in." Shor snap-called and took down a pot worth 8.2 million chips, putting him back into a 2.5:1 lead.

Three hands later, Lin opened to 425,000 with KJ only for Shorr to wake up with AK in the big blind, and he shoved all in. Lin decided that he couldn't fold for his remaining 2.2 million chips. The board ran out A876Q and that was all she wrote. Event #1 went to Shannon Shorr, who now has $9.7 million in lifetime live tournament cashes according to Hendon Mob.

Event #2: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha also got underway Thursday at the PokerGO Studio in Las Vegas. When registration closed, the field had 77 entrants. The final table will take place at 1 p.m. PT Friday and will air in its entirety on PokerGO. Remember, all dozen events on the 2022 US Poker Open schedule count toward the PokerGO Tour (PGT) leaderboard.

*Images courtesy of PokerGO.

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