2025 World Series of Poker

Event #59: $1,000 Battle of the Ages
Day: 3
Event Info
2025 World Series of Poker
Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
j9
Prize
$335,390
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,000
Prize Pool
$2,705,120
Entries
3,074
Level Info
Level
41
Blinds
1,000,000 / 2,000,000
Ante
2,000,000
Players Info - Day 3
Entries
8
Players Left
1
Players Left 1 / 3074

Sebastiaan de Jonge Conquers All in $1,000 Battle of the Ages ($335,390)

Level 41 : Blinds 1,000,000/2,000,000, 2,000,000 ante
Sebastiaan de Jonge
Sebastiaan de Jonge

A new event to the schedule, Event #59: $1,000 Battle of the Ages at the World Series of Poker (WSOP) saw a staggering 3,074 entrants, generating a huge prize pool of $2,815,784. In the end, it was Sebastiaan de Jonge left standing to claim the first-place prize of $335,390.

Alongside the enormous sum of money amassed to compete for, there was something else at play: generational bragging rights. This unique structure saw those aged over 50 years old play in a separate Day 1 flight from those aged under 50. Once the cream of the respective age groups had risen to the top, the two fields were combined to see which would triumph - experience or youth.

It took just over 20 hours of play, including spilling over into an unscheduled Day 3, to whittle the field down to one player. Coming into the final day with 2,650,000 in chips, just five big blinds, De Jonge battled back to emerge victorious, flying the flag high for the under-50s contingent.

De Jonge will take home $335,390, a WSOP bracelet, bragging rights, and the knowledge that he will forever be the first Battle of the Ages champion.

Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Sebastiaan de JongeNetherlands$335,390
2Ignacio SagraArgentina$223,394
3Hakeem MashalUnited States$165,944
4Srivinay IrrinkiUnited States$124,269
5Joseph RohUnited States$93,820
6Jack MaskillUnited Kingdom$71,416
7Allan LeUnited States$54,814
8Xia WangMacau$42,424
9Kelley SlayUnited States$33,112

Sebastiaan de Jonge
Sebastiaan de Jonge

Winners Reaction

"Incredible run, actually really lucky, ridiculously lucky. It's funny how many rivers, how many good rivers, you need to win the tournament. If you think back on all the rivers you had, it's really insane," De Jonge told PokerNews following his big win.

This was De Jonge's first WSOP final table, first WSOP win and, of course, first bracelet. The first-place prize is also De Jonge's largest ever tournament score, and as a result, moves him into the top 50 for his nation's all-time money list, the Netherlands. Last but by no means least, De Jonge's name will forever be etched in history as the first ever champion of the WSOP Battle of the Ages.

When questioned as to which of the above meant the most, he said, "The bracelet by far. The final table was already really cool to make it, out of 3,074 players, like I said, you have to [go on an] incredibly good run. [But] just really happy, really, really happy, really good feeling to win."

When asked if this settles the score on which generation plays better poker, De Jonge gave a humble answer, "It's not as simple as that. The older guys were playing well; they were often a little less technical, less GTO than the younger guys, but the tournament, the blinds were going so fast, and everybody was playing really slow. It was not a lot of poker, it was a lot of all in and survive, survive, survive; so I am the biggest survivor, I guess."

Start of Day 3 Chip Leader - Joseph Roh
Start of Day 3 Chip Leader - Joseph Roh

Final Table Action:

With stacks short and blind levels ever-increasing, chips were sure to fly from the get-go.

Xia Wang was the first to fall, coming into Day 3 with just five big blinds, she wasn't able to spin up a stack, departing in eighth place.

Just 15 minutes later, Allan Le suffered the same fate. The 25K Fantasy Draft player found his remaining chips in the middle versus a dominating hand, and couldn't catch up to stay alive.

Eventual champion, De Jonge, then made quick work of Jack Maskill and start-of-day chip leader Joseph Roh, sending them both to the exit in quick succession.

Srivinay Irrinki then departed in fourth place, all in with the best hand. He couldn't hold on versus Ignacio Sagra.

Hakeem Mashal was next to fall, losing a flip versus De Jonge and departing in third place.

Ignacio Sagra
Ignacio Sagra

De Jonge then faced Sagra for the title, going into heads-up with a slight chip disadvantage.

The duo exchanged pots back and forth before a huge hero call, and crucial hold, swung things in De Jonge's favour.

With stacks short, three rapid fire all-ins went in favor of De Jonge, seeing Sagra eliminated in second place and De Jonge triumphing.

Finally, How will De Jonge Celebrate?

"Actually, we are going to play the tag team [event] right now, then I am going to have some dinner, then I am going to find a party to drink a little bit."

That concludes the PokerNews coverage for this event, but stay tuned for our continuing coverage of the 2025 WSOP.

Tags: Allan LeHakeem MashalIgnacio SagraJack MaskillJoseph RohKelley SlaySebastiaan de JongeSrivinay IrrinkiXia Wang