Bin Weng Wins Wynn High Roller Event #4: $10,000 No-Limit Hold’em for $189,800
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Bin Weng came into the final table with the chip lead and eliminated four of the final nine players en route to the trophy and the $189,800 first-place prize in Event #4: $10,000 No-Limit Hold’em.
Weng sent the players into the money when his nine-eight out flopped the pocket sevens of Event #2 Champion Daniel Negreanu to deny Kid Poker his second cash of the series and take the chip lead.
Daniel Rezaei and Sean Perry were the next to fall in 10th, and 11th place, respectively, and they took home $21,900 after maneuvering their short stacks on the bubble to secure the mid-cash and 22 PGT points.
2021 WPT Seminole Hard Rock Poker Showdown Champion Brekstyn Schutten would see his tournament come to an end courtesy of fellow WPT Champion Ilyas Muradi when his ace-queen could not run down Muradi’s pocket fives. Schutten took home $21,900 for his efforts.
Benjamin Diebold had the shortest stack in the room for the majority of the bubble play but was able to find himself a pay jump and finished in eighth place for $29,200 when Weng’s king-ten ran down his ace-deuce.
Darren Elias was the next to fall after has his ace-eight run down by the queen-jack of Ren Lin. Lin flopped a pair of queens, and Elias hit the rail in seventh place for $36,500.
A few hands later, Ivan Zufic found himself all-in holding ace-five against the ace-queen of Weng in over a two million chip pot. Both players flopped a pair, but Weng’s queen was in the lead to eliminate Zufic in sixth place for $43,800.
Fresh off his 2022 PokerGO Cup victory Jeremy Ausmus scored his first cash of the 2022 Wynn Millions after navigating the feild to a fifth-place finish for $58,400, eventually falling when his ace-six was out flopped by the ace-king of Weng.
Over an hour later, Muradi would find himself all-in holding ace-three against the pocket sevens of Lin. The board ran out nine-high, and Muradi ended his run in fourth place for $73,000.
Moments later, Tony Tran would find himself all-in from the small blind for his last 600,000, holding nine-three against the five-four of Lin. A nine on the flop looked to give Tran new life, but Lin turned a straight to eliminate Tran in third place for $94,900 and take the chip lead into heads-up play.
However, Lin’s chip lead would be short-lived, as Weng would river a straight shortly after heads-up play began to take the chip lead for good. Weng would move into a commanding with nearly 80% of the chips in play ten minutes later when he picked off Lin on the river holding a pair of aces against Lin’s pair of eights.
The tournament was over five minutes later after Lin got his last 1.2 million into the middle holding queen-jack against Weng’s ace-king. Weng flopped a pair of aces and rivered trips to send Lin to the rail in second place for $138,700.
Wynn High Roller Event #4 Results
Place | Player | Country | Prize |
1st | Bin Weng | United States | $189,800 |
2nd | Ren Lin | United States | $138,700 |
3rd | Tony Tran | United States | $94,900 |
4th | Ilyas Muradi | United States | $73,000 |
5th | Jeremy Ausmus | United States | $58,400 |
6th | Ivan Zufic | Croatia | $43,800 |
7th | Darren Elias | United States | $36,500 |
8th | Benjamin Diebold | United States | $29,200 |
9th | Brekstyn Schutten | United States | $21,900 |
10th | Daniel Rezaei | Austria | $21,900 |
11th | Sean Perry | United States | $21,900 |
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