Jorg Peisert raised from the small blind and Jason DeWitt called from the big blind. The flop came down and both players checked. The turn was the and Peisert checked. DeWitt fired 225,000 and Peisert called. The river was the and both players checked.
Peisert showed and scooped the pot after DeWitt mucked his hand.
Benjamin Gilbert raised all in for 560,000 and Jorg Peisert went into the tank with over five million chips in his stack. Eventually, after a minute or so passed by, Peisert made the call with . Gilbert slammed over his hand in a joking fashion to reveal a whopping .
The board ran out and another loud uproar of cheers came from Peisert's cheering section. Gilbert was bounced out in third place, earning over $200,000 for his effort. We're now heads up.
Jason DeWitt raised to 260,000 after Jorg Peisert limped. Peisert called. The flop came down and DeWitt fired a bet of 305,000. Peisert called.
The turn brought the and DeWitt checked. Peisert moved all in after taking his time as he usually does. DeWitt snap-folded his hand and Peisert showed .
DeWitt is down to 960,000 while Peisert has a heck of a lot more than that, with about 6,700,000.
Jason DeWitt had been ground all the way down to about 600,000 chips before the final hand of the tournament played out. Jorg Peisert opened with a raise to 180,000. DeWitt looked down at his cards and then moved all of his chips in. Peisert quickly called, a bad sign for DeWitt.
DeWitt:
Peisert:
Peisert's fans on the rail started chanting for "No king!" as the dealer burned and flopped . They're cried grew louder with the turn, and they erupted into thunderous cheers and applause when the river fell to eliminate DeWitt.
For finishing in second place, DeWitt will collect $313,227.
Play began a few days ago with 854 entrants for Event No. 52, $3,000 Triple Chance No-Limit Hold'em. Some of the notables included James Van Alstyne, Kathy Liebert, Michael Mizrachi, Sandra Naujoks, Jeff Lisandro, and John Juanda. All of those players fell before reaching the final day, which only 16 players remained. Among that group was Jorg Peisert from Dusseldorf, Germany.
Peisert began the day with 477,000 chips and sixth in chips. As the day wore on, he never seemed to be in jeopardy of busting out and won most, if not all, of the key hands he was involved in. One by one, players from the final table were busting out, but Peisert kept climbing the ranks. He won one big hand by making his eventual heads-up opponent Jason DeWitt muck to move to over two million chips and then took another big pot off Michael Katz to move to over three million in chips. Once over three million, Peisert never looked back.
When play got down to heads up, Peisert held a massive lead with the majority of chips in play. A few hands later, it was all said and done with DeWitt coming in second place. For the win, Peisert earned himself $506,800 and his first WSOP gold bracelet!
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