Russell Thomas had $126,796 in live tournament earnings prior to this World Series of Poker Main Event run. The bulk of that money came from two large WSOP scores in 2010 and 2011. The first of the two was in the $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em — Six-Handed event where he took fifth place for $84,256. The second was a 248th-place finish in the 2011 Main Event for $40,654.
Leading up to the final table, Thomas reached out to Jason Somerville for coaching. The two worked together on a short documentary series that chronicles Thomas' training leading up to the Octo-Nine. You can find all of those episodes here: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5.
Thomas is 24 years old and from Hartford, Connecticut, although he grew up in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Before Black Friday, Thomas took a job as actuary for Aetna Insurance, so he isn't considered a professional poker player, although that may change with this score. When asked if Thomas would continue his professional life depending on what happens in October, he said the following:
"I am going to take a leave of absence for sure until October. If I got out in ninth place I would definitely go back to my job, because I don’t think $750,000 is enough and because I don’t have a 100 percent of myself anyways. But If I got third or something I would quit for sure and just play poker."
And despite being an actuary and regularly working with numbers, Thomas doesn't think it relates to poker as much as people think:
"Well, to be an actuary you have to pass a bunch of exams. One of them was called probability. So I have studied probability pretty intensively. The math helps, but it doesn’t correlate as much as people think. Playing poker makes you better at poker."
Thomas will enter the final table fourth in chips with an above-average stack of 24.8 million. He has a good chance to make a deep run, but not as good as his former roommate Jesse Sylvia, who starts the final table with a big chip lead. Those two shared a residence before, and we'll see if they can share two of the three final spots on Tuesday.
The players are being introduced to the crowd by the one and only Jack Effel, the World Series of Poker tournament director, and our own Sarah Grant in the video below. The cards will be in the air shortly!
Andras Koroknai had the button to kick off the action at the final table. Steve Gee opened to 700,000, and action folded to Russell Thomas in the big blind. He called to take a flop of . Thomas checked, and Gee bet 850,000. Thomas called.
The was added to the board on the turn, and Thomas checked. Gee fired two million. Thomas made the call, and off to the river they went.
The river paired the board with the , and Thomas checked again. Gee fired 4.55, and Thomas folded.
Russell Thomas began this hand with the button. Action folded to him, and he raised to 600,000. The two blinds folded, and Thomas won the blinds and antes.
Jake Balsiger had the button. The action folded to Jeremy Ausmus, who opened to 750,000 from the small blind. Steve Gee folded from the big blind, and Ausmus took the pot.
Jeremy Ausmus had the button to start this hand. Michael Esposito limped in from middle position after action folded to him, then Russell Thomas raised to 900,000 from the hijack seat. Action folded to Greg Merson in the big blind, and he made the call. Esposito reraised to 3.3 million. Thomas and Merson folded, giving Esposito the pot.