Ryutaro Suzuki Ends Summer Grind With Victory in $3,000 T.O.R.S.E.
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It hasn't been an easy summer for 25-year-old Ryutaro Suzuki, who openly admitted that his results at the 2025 World Series of Poker had been underwhelming. With a handful of cashes but many more bricked attempts, it looked as though the young poker warrior from Japan would end his series on a low note.
Suzuki headed into Event #93: $3,000 T.O.R.S.E. knowing it would be his last of the series, but little did he know that just three short days later, he'd be holding his second gold bracelet and the title of "T.O.R.S.E. Champion."
The path to victory was arduous, requiring Suzuki to overcome a 522-entry field, a final day that lasted over 13 hours, and a roller-coaster final table. In the end, Suzuki outlasted them all, defeating Toby Lewis in heads-up to capture his second bracelet and the $273,386 first-place prize.
$3,000 T.O.R.S.E. Final Table Results
| Place | Player | Country | Prize |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ryutaro Suzuki | Japan | $273,386 |
| 2 | Toby Lewis | United Kingdom | $178,427 |
| 3 | Koji Fujimoto | Japan | $119,108 |
| 4 | Matthew Rosen | United States | $81,357 |
| 5 | Dave Stann | United States | $56,892 |
| 6 | Sterling Lopez | United States | $40,753 |
| 7 | Lucas Johnson | United States | $29,921 |
"I'm really happy to have gotten this great result," Suzuki said through the use of a translator. "I've been playing a very full schedule and I was really tired, but in the end I was able to achieve my goal."
Suzuki joins Shiina Okamoto as the only other Japanese player to win two bracelets. However, with an influx of Japanese players participating in the WSOP, Suzuki expects that number will likely increase in the future.
"There are a lot of Japanese Poker YouTubers," Suzuki explained. "It's really influencing the amount of players who come from Japan to play. [Especially because of] Masato Yokosawa."
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When asked about his long-term goals, Suzuki said he ultimately wants to become a household name in the poker world.
"I said the same thing when I won my first bracelet two years ago," Suzuki said. "But I've always wanted to become a world-known player, just like Daniel Negreanu and Phil Hellmuth."
As far as plans for the rest of the summer, Suzuki is calling it quits for now.
"If I lose another event, I will be sad," Suzuki said in English with a laugh. "Finish!"
Day 3 Action
Sixteen players returned to the Horseshoe Convention Center in hopes of becoming the inaugural T.O.R.S.E. champion, but by the time the first break arrived, David Gee, Bradley Jansen, James Obst, Stephen Dauphinais, and Eddie Blumenthal all saw their tournament lives come to an end after coming in short and failing to run up their stacks.
Following the fast-paced start, only one elimination occurred over the following two levels. During the lull, Suzuki took over the chip lead, while Scott Lake slipped onto the short stack. Lake eventually hit the rail after losing the majority of his chips to Dave Stann in 2-7 Triple Draw, followed by a hand of Razz that saw him lose the rest of his chips against Ryan Miller's six-low.
Despite the knockout, Miller was still nursing a short stack and was eliminated shortly thereafter. Following him out the door was Nikolay Fal, who busted after a couple of Triple Draw hands didn't go his way.
David Prociak entered as the chip leader, but was unable to gain any real momentum and instead seemed to trend downward for much of the day. He lost a major pot in Razz against Suzuki, who made a wheel, and was eventually eliminated by Suzuki in the same game after getting caught bluffing his entire stack — sending the three-time bracelet out just shy of the final table.
Suzuki entered the final table with nearly twice as many chips as his next closest competitor, but Lewis made his presence known by eliminating Lucas Johnson after catching an unlikely full house in Stud Hi-Lo. Stann also rose the leaderboard by taking out Sterling Lopez in a one-two punch of hands — first in Stud Hi-Lo after Lopez folded on seventh in a massive pot, then in 2-7 Triple Draw after drawing to an eight against Lopez's king.
Unfortunately for Stann, his good fortune ended there, as shortly after he lost a big pot doubling up Koji Fujimoto. Stann got the rest of his chips in good against Matthew Rosen in Stud Hi-Lo, but Rosen caught a flush to send Stann out in fifth.
An extended period without any eliminations saw Lewis pull into the lead while Suzuki dwindled into the short stack. In fact, Suzuki fell to his last million in chips and looked poised to be the next player out. However, Suzuki caught a crucial double up through Fujimoto to get some breathing room. Shortly after, Suzuki got another boost to his stack by eliminating a short-stacked Rosen in a round of Triple Draw.
Lewis pressured his Japanese opponents in three-handed play with an active style and extended his chip lead substantially. At one point, Lewis held two-thirds of the chips in play with three left, but Suzuki managed to oust his fellow countryman in another round of Triple Draw to close the gap between him and Lewis entering heads-up play.
Suzuki got off to a hot start after making a better eight in Triple Draw to pull to nearly even, much to Lewis' dismay. The setback was only temporary for Lewis, however, as he answered right back after making a straight in Stud in a massive pot to pull into a three-to-one chip lead.
Down but not out, Suzuki made another eight in Triple Draw and got paid off by Lewis to claw back into contention. Like clockwork, though, Lewis retook a substantial lead after a couple of Stud hands went his way.
With escalating blinds forcing the action, Suzuki committed his stack in Triple Draw and made yet another eight to double through Lewis. Suzuki then claimed the lead after winning a series of medium-sized pots, leaving Lewis looking deflated.
Lewis made his last stand in Razz and ended up getting all in and drawing to a nine. Suzuki peeled off an eight-low on seventh street, ending the grueling heads-up battle and putting an end to the tournament.
This concludes PokerNews coverage of the event. Be sure to check out our live-reporting hub for ongoing coverage of the 2025 World Series of Poker and other events around the globe.
In this Series
- 1 Who Won $64K and the First 2025 WSOP Bracelet?
- 2 David Shmuel Wins First WSOP Bracelet in Omaha Hi-Lo for $205,333!
- 3 Furth Wins Second WSOP Bracelet; Denies Kabrhel in $5,000 Pot-Limit Omaha
- 4 GTO Study Sees Antonio Galiana Win Second WSOP Bracelet in $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em
- 5 Persistence Pays Off: Dan Heimiller Wins $1,500 Seven Card Stud for Third WSOP Bracelet
- 6 Artur Martirosian Wins WSOP $25,000 Heads Up Championship ($500,000)
- 7 Benny Glaser Adds to His Legacy With Bracelet No. 6 in Event #8: $1,500 Dealers Choice
- 8 Michael Wilklow: Once a Mystery, Now a Millionaire (and WSOP Bracelet Winner)
- 9 Kenneth Kim Storms Back to Win His First WSOP Bracelet
- 10 Father-Son WSOP Bracelet Duo Made as Yosef Fox Wins $10,000 Mystery Bounty
- 11 Five Bracelets in Five Years: Brad Ruben Wins the $1,500 No-Limit 2-7 Lowball Draw ($138,080)
- 12 Ryan Bambrick Denies Daniel Negreanu to Claim Second WSOP Bracelet
- 13 Christopher Staats Denies David Jackson in WSOP $1,500 6-Handed NLH for $414,950
- 14 Corey Thompson Nearly Wins Two WSOP Online Bracelets Right Off the Bat
- 15 Cristian Gutierrez Wins $600 PLO Deepstack For His First Bracelet and $193,780
- 16 Lou Garza Mounts Memorable Heads-Up Comeback to Clinch Second WSOP Bracelet
- 17 Benny Glaser Goes Back-to-Back (Again) for 7th Bracelet in $1,500 Mixed
- 18 Zachary Zaret Overcomes Stacked Final Table to Win First Bracelet
- 19 Michael Lavin Steamrolls the Competition on Way to a Second WSOP Bracelet
- 20 Ryan Hoenig Goes Wire-to-Wire to Win Event #18: $10,000 Dealers Choice Championship
- 21 Bohlman's Breakthrough: Mixed Game Vet Wins 2nd Bracelet in $2,000 NLH ($436,044)
- 22 Blaz Zerjav Wins Maiden WSOP Bracelet in $25,000 6-Handed High Roller
- 23 Aloisio Dourado Claims Redemption with First WSOP Bracelet in Record-Breaking Badugi Event
- 24 Mixed Game Maestro Xixiang Luo Bags $290,400 and Third WSOP Bracelet
- 25 Nick Guagenti Crushes Chino Rheem’s Triple Crown Bid in $10K Stud Victory
- 26 Beginner's Luck? Surely Not. Chang Lee Wins $25,000 High Roller ($1,949,044)
- 27 Penalized Poker Player Wins WSOP Bracelet Despite Color Up Controversy
- 28 LA Poker Player Outlasts 16,300 Opponents to Win 2025 WSOP's Colossus
- 29 Igor Zektser Scoops His First Bracelet in Event #27: $1,500 Big O
- 30 A Few Cocktails on the Road to First WSOP Bracelet for Mark Darner
- 31 Rising New Jersey Poker Star Captures First WSOP Bracelet
- 32 Jason Koon Moves to Third on All-Time Money List w/ WSOP $50,000 High Roller Win
- 33 Toy Charizard, Pink Slipper Carry Canadian Family Man to WSOP Victory
- 34 Nick Schulman Joins Poker's Immortals With Bracelet No. 7 in the $10K 2-7 Championship
- 35 Ukraine's Renat Bohdanov Spikes Gutshot to Win Second WSOP Bracelet
- 36 John Racener Claims Third WSOP Bracelet For His Third Son
- 37 Philip Sternheimer Tears Up After Ending 13 Year Bracelet Chase
- 38 Joao Vieira Avenges WSOP Paradise Loss to Win WSOP $100K High Roller ($2,649,158)
- 39 Andrey Zhigalov Wheels In Second Bracelet in Event #39: $1,500 H.O.R.S.E. ($197,923)
- 40 Ian Johns Slays 'Isildur1' to Win WSOP Limit Hold'em Championship for a Second Time
- 41 Fourth Bracelet & $647K for Seniors High Roller Champ David "ODB" Baker
- 42 Carlos Leiva Defeats Weisman on Way to Winning WSOP $1,000 PLO Bracelet Event
- 43 A Father's Day Special: Allan Le Denies Shaun Deeb in $1,500 Razz
- 44 Seth Davies Wins $250K WSOP Super High Roller for First Bracelet and $4.75M Score
- 45 V for Vongxaiburana as 'Hobby' Player Beats Pros to $10k Big O Bracelet
- 46 Hellmuth Denied as Jason Daly Wins Second Bracelet in $2,500 Omaha/Stud Hi-Lo
- 47 Joey Couden Wins Second Bracelet in $500 SALUTE to Warriors ($187,937)
- 48 Tyler Patterson Grabs Second Bracelet in $3K 6-Handed NLHE for $574K
- 49 Klemens Roiter Finishes the Job for First Bracelet in Event #37: $1,500 MONSTER STACK
- 50 Brian Rast in Seventh Heaven w/ Miraculous Comeback in WSOP $10k Razz Championship
- 51 Texan Punches Ticket to WSOP Main Event with $1.5K Freezeout Bracelet Win
- 52 Dennis Weiss Claims Victory in $25K PLO High Roller for $2,292,155
- 53 After 3 Runner-Ups, Matt Vengrin Finally Gets His WSOP Bracelet in $1.5K PLO
- 54 Mateos Makes History as 5th Youngest to Win 5 WSOP Bracelets
- 55 Emotional Kristopher Tong Uses Inspiration to Capture First WSOP Bracelet
- 56 Brett Lim to Sail Off into the Sunset After Senior's Championship Win
- 57 Benny Glaser Wins Three WSOP Bracelets in Three Weeks w/ Mixed Triple Draw Triumph
- 58 Dylan Linde Takes Down the $50k PLO High Roller for Third Bracelet and Career-Best Score
- 59 Welshman Wells Roars to Victory in $3K 9-Game Mix for Maiden Bracelet
- 60 Sebastiaan de Jonge the Sole Survivor in WSOP Battle of the Ages
- 61 Gavrieli Denies Bohlman Second Bracelet of the Summer in $3K Limit Hold'em
- 62 Craig Savage Bides His Time to Triumph in WSOP $500 No Limit Hold'em Freezeout
- 63 Yaginuma Overturns 9:1 Deficit to Win Millionaire Maker & 4th Bracelet
- 64 It's Déjà Vu as Aaron Cummings Goes Back-to-Back in $1,500 2-7 Triple Draw
- 65 Nedelcu Dominates Final Table to Win First Bracelet in $1,500 Eight Game Mix
- 66 Queen of the Felt: Shiina Okamoto Wins Back-to-Back WSOP Ladies Championships
- 67 Michael Mizrachi Makes History with Fourth $50K PPC Title at 2025 WSOP
- 68 Yilong Wang "Lucky Enough" To Win Bracelet In $3k No Limit Hold'em
- 69 Runs In the Family: Alex Wilkinson Finally Wins The $10k 2-7 TD Event
- 70 Rainer Kempe Speedruns First Bracelet In $10,000 Super Turbo Bounty
- 71 Zerjav Wins Second Bracelet of Summer as Huck Seed Narrowly Misses Out
- 72 Brazil’s Kerber & Patricio Win WSOP Tag Team Bracelet After 14-Year Journey
- 73 Andjelko Andrejevic Wins Maiden Bracelet in $5,000 6-Handed NLH ($855,515)
- 74 Lucky Eight for Lonny Weitzel as He Wins $1,000 Super Seniors Event
- 75 Ian Pelz Wins Gladiator Off One Hungover Bullet ($420,680)
- 76 Negreanu Denied as Aaron Kupin Wins First Bracelet in Mixed Big Bet
- 77 Michael Wang Completes One of WSOP’s Greatest Comebacks in $10K PLO
- 78 Just Like That! Martin Kabrhel Wins Fourth Bracelet in Mini Main Event
- 79 Qinghai 'The Terminator' Pan Comes Back for Extra Day & Wins $10K Stud Hi-Lo Championship
- 80 Shaun Deeb Wins Seventh WSOP Bracelet; Overtakes Player of the Year Lead
- 81 Fireworks in Las Vegas as Nick Ahmadi Wins PokerNews Deepstack Championship For $302,165
- 82 Mike Gorodinsky Wins Fifth WSOP Bracelet in $10K 8-Game Championship
- 83 Backgammon Pro Zdenek Zizka Denies Shaun Deeb Eighth Bracelet
- 84 WSOP Glory at Last: PokerGO Founder Cary Katz Wins $2,500 NLH Freezeout
- 85 Giuseppe Zarbo Wins $504,180 For $800 Summer Celebration Victory
- 86 "A Win with the Help of God" for Netanel Stern in Event #87: $5,000 Super Turbo Bounty ($618,377)
- 87 No Leaks in Fawcett's Game After WSOP Ultra Stack Triumph
- 88 Ferenc Deak Keeps Promise to Son With $1K PLO Mystery Bounty Bracelet Win
- 89 Slow and Steady, Khoi Le Nguyen Wins WSOP $50,000 High Roller
- 90 Kasparas Klezys Claims His First WSOP Bracelet in 6-Handed $1,500 PLO
- 91 Ian O’Hara Turns Up the Heat to Capture First WSOP Bracelet in Event #89: $3,000 Mid-Stakes Championship
- 92 Ryutaro Suzuki Ends Summer Grind With Victory in $3,000 T.O.R.S.E.
- 93 Joshua Boulton Bags Bracelet Before Boarding Flight Home With $311,349
- 94 Legends Never Fold: Nelson Mari Sanchez Strikes Gold in WSOP $777 Lucky 7’s
- 95 Mariano Balfagon Hits The Big Time Winning First WSOP Bracelet in $800 Deepstack for $252,386
- 96 Sam Soverel’s Speedy Sweep Secures Third Bracelet in $10k NLHE 6-Hand
- 97 Chad Eveslage Claims Fourth Bracelet in the $25,000 High Roller H.O.R.S.E.
- 98 Andrew Ostapchenko Wins Event #99: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em for $606,849
- 99 Lukas Zaskodny Wins Second Bracelet in the $1,500 The Closer Event
- 100 Mitchell Hynam Wins First Bracelet in Final Event of 2025 World Series of Poker





