2014 World Series of Poker

Event #60: $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em
Day: 4
Event Info

2014 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Salman Jaddi
Winning Hand
q10
Prize
$614,248
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,500
Entries
2,563

Salman Jaddi Wins Event #60: $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em ($614,248)

Winner: Salman Jaddi
Winner: Salman Jaddi

It was the last $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em tournament of the year at the 2014 World Series of Poker and that fact alone was enough to create an impressive turnout of 2,563 players. This was by far the biggest $1,500 NLHE tournament of the WSOP and it created a prize pool of $3,460,050. It concluded with an epic heads-up match that went nearly five hours in length, with Salman Jaddi emerging with the $614,248 first-place money and his first WSOP bracelet.

The final hand would see Jaddi hit a runner-runner miracle when his {Q-Hearts}{10-Hearts} bested Brandon Hall's {A-Hearts}{2-Diamonds}. Hall had a huge lead after a flop of {A-Clubs}{K-Hearts}{9-Spades} but Jaddi would hit a {2-Hearts} on the turn to give him a flush draw that would be completed on the {6-Hearts} river.

"I didn't want to say 'one time' out loud, but that's what I was thinking," Jaddi said, sitting at the table, unable to believe what had just happened. "I feel like I played awesome heads-up. Get lucky along the way sometimes. That's how it goes."

Jaddi explained some of his thought processes at the final table afterwards: "Four handed, I sensed that it would be Brandon and I going heads-up. I tried to play off of my image and steal some chips. Once we were heads-up, Brandon kept value betting thin and I was able to pick up some pots. Once I got the lead, I came back and played small ball with him." Jaddi went on to add "that if Brandon would have taken the chip lead today, I thought I'd be in trouble so I kept trying to apply pressure to make sure I kept the lead."

On his way to victory, Jaddi would knock out the first five players at the final table eliminating Kurt Jewell (9th - $45,603), Steve Sung (8th - $59,547), Thomas Dietl (7th - $78,681), David Bravin (6th - $105,185), and Cherish Andrews (5th - $142,346).

His heads-up counterpart, Hall, would take out the remaining two players, Guillauma Marechal (4th - $194,939) and Zach Gruneberg (3rd - $270,299) to get us to the beginning of what would be a marathon battle between the pair. Jaddi would start to pull away early in the match, getting to a more than 5-to-1 chip advantage at one point, but Hall would chip away and get things nearly back to even when the two decided to call it a night.

The new day then saw Jaddi pull ahead, but Hall would double-up once to regain some momentum. Jaddi again took control, however, leading up to the final hand that would see him declared the winner.

FINAL TABLE RESULTS

PlaceNamePayout
1Salman Jaddi$614,248
2Brandon Hall$381,885
3Zach Gruneberg$270,299
4Guillauma Marechal$194,939
5Cherish Andrews$142,346
6David Bravin$105,185
7Thomas Dietl$78,681
8Steve Sung$59,547
9Kurt Jewell$45,603

Among the 270 players that made the money were notables like Jared Hamby, Keven Stammen, Will Failla, Matt Stout, Byron Kaverman, John Racener, Ravi Raghavan, Lauren Kling, Shannon Shorr, Tony Dunst, Kyle Cartwright, Alex Bolotin, David Peters, Layne Flack, Joe Tehan, Scott Baumstein, and Dutch Boyd. Meanwhile notables who fell short of the cash included Phil Hellmuth, Ole Schemion, Ryan Hall, Mark Hoke, Amanda Baker, Nick Abou Risk, Sofia Lovgren, Victor Ramdin, Max Steinberg, Dominik Nitsche, Samuel Chartier, Yann Dion, and Marc-Andre Ladouceur.

Jaddi's last words were ones that all amateurs could relate to: "I'm a business owner, not a pro. I play for fun. Anyone has a shot to win this thing. I didn't play many hands, but somehow I ended up here. If I can do it, anyone can."

That concludes PokerNews coverage of Event #60: $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em. Thank you for following along and make sure to stay tuned as coverage of the Main Event will get underway on Saturday!

Tags: Alex BolotinBrandon HallByron KavermanCherish AndrewsDavid PetersDutch BoydJoe TehanJohn RacenerKeven StammenKurt JewellKyle CartwrightLauren KlingOle SchemionPhil HellmuthRavi RaghavanSalman JaddiTony DunstWill Failla

Brandon Hall Eliminated in 2nd Place ($381,885); Salman Jaddi Wins!

Brandon Hall - 2nd Place
Brandon Hall - 2nd Place

Hand #371: Brandon Hall open-shoved all in and it took only a moment for Salman jaddi to make the call, putting Hall at risk and the gold bracelet within his grasp.

Jaddi: {q-Hearts}{10-Hearts}
Hall: {a-Hearts}{2-Diamonds}

Both men stood as the dealer rapped the table and fanned out a flop of {k-Hearts}{a-Clubs}{9-Spades}. Hall kept the lead, but Jaddi did have some outs. The {2-Hearts} fell on the turn giving Hall two pair, but Jaddi now had a flush draw as well.

The dealer then double-tapped the felt one more time and delivered the {6-Hearts} on the river, giving Jaddi a flush and the victory.

Player Chips Progress
Salman Jaddi us
Salman Jaddi
WSOP 1X Winner
11,533,500 2,158,500
Brandon Hall us
Brandon Hall
Busted

Tags: Brandon HallSalman Jaddi

Live to Fight Another Day

Heads Up - Brandon Hall & Salman Jaddi
Heads Up - Brandon Hall & Salman Jaddi

A fourth day of play is required to determine the winner of Event #60: $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em. On Day 3 it took only six levels to go from the final 24 players to heads up between Brandon Hall and Salman Jaddi.

The two would then battle for over three levels with no resolution. With the World Series of Poker gold bracelet sitting between them, and a top prize of $614,248 on their minds, the two finalists exchanged jab after jab and pot after pot.

With hopes, the additional day of play should declare the latest WSOP Champion. Jaddi will begin the day with a slight chip lead.

Jaddi has just under $100,000 in career live tournament earnings so no matter which place he finishes his total winnings will be at worst, more than doubled. Jaddi has two previous WSOP cashes.

Brandon Hall has almost $1,000,000 in career earnings. Hall has 7 previous WSOP cashes totalling $30,570.

Play will begin at 1 p.m. in the Amazon room. Keep it locked on PokerNews for hand-for-hand coverage until a champion is crowned.

Tags: Brandon HallSalman Jaddi