Jonathan Tamayo Wins 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event
Regulation · 2024-07-18

Jonathan Tamayo Wins 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event

Jonathan Tamayo defeated Jordan Griff heads-up to claim the 2024 WSOP Main Event championship. [Image: PokerGO.com]

“What in the world just happened?”

On Day 8 of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, there were two big hands everybody was talking about: Kristen Foxen’s elimination with K-Q and Jonathan Tamayo’s quick pre-flop fold with Queens. The latter was on the final table bubble with a $200,000 pay jump from 10th to 9th place and $10m waiting for the eventual winner. Tamayo took a lot of flack for what seemed like an easy re-raise, but that move guaranteed he would see the next hand and three days later, he hoisted the 2024 WSOP Main Event bracelet and claimed that $10m windfall as the world champion of No-Limit Hold’em.

On Wednesday night, Tamayo outlasted Niklas Astedt and Jordan Griff to take home his first-ever bracelet in what was the largest Main Event in WSOP history. The 10,112-player field just beat the 2023 record of 10,043.

In victory, he was presented the bracelet by his WSOP housemate, 2015 Main Event champion Joe McKeehen.

I realized you’re never going to play perfect poker, and weird things happen.”

“Leading up to it [the final table], Joe was just like, play your game. I realized you’re never going to play perfect poker, and weird things happen,” Tamayo said in his post-game interview. “And it’s just unreal.”

“Not real life. My roommate’s picture is right there from 2015. We both have banners now. What in the world just happened?”

Wild, back-and-forth finish

Going into Wednesday’s three-handed showdown, the chip stacks were close – Swedish online poker star Niklas Astedt was the leader with 223 million, Tamayo was second with 197 million, and Griff was third with 187 million.

Griff grew his stack to take the tiniest of leads and then suddenly, Astedt was gone. Griff had moved all-in on the turn with a flopped set and Astedt called him with top pair and a gutshot straight draw. The river missed Astedt and he was out in third while Griff took a huge 432.5 million to 174.5 million chip lead into heads-up play against Tamayo.

Tamayo quickly grabbed the lead, picking off a bluff on the second heads-up hand. He extended his lead over the course of the next 20 hands, but then the tables turned.

On a Q-6-5-J board, Griff shoved and after a couple minutes, Tamayo made the call. Griff had J-6 for two pair, while Tamayo had A-J. The river was of no help to Tamayo and not only did Griff double-up, but he regained the chip lead, as well.

Just as Tamayo had grown his lead, so did Griff, and just as Griff doubled-up to grab the lead, so, too, did Tamayo. All-in preflop on the 201st hand of the final table, Tamayo flopped a straight with K-T on a Q-J-9 board versus Griff’s 7-7. Griff was drawing dead after the turn and Tamayo had a slight lead.

After the next break, Griff once again doubled-up, Sixes versus Tamayo’s A-8, to take a huge 471 million to 136 million chip lead. Tamayo soon doubled-up once again, though this time it just gave him some breathing room. Within a few more hands, though, he snatched the lead back and this time, it was for good.

On the final hand, Tamayo raised to 12.5 million pre-flop and Griff called. On the flop of 9-8-3, Tamayo bet 10 million, Griff raised to 40 million, and then Tamayo moved all-in over the top. Griff made the call for 230 million with 9-6, good for top pair. Tamayo, though, had 8-3 for bottom two pair. The turn and river bricked and Jonathan Tamayo was in the poker history books.

One hand can mean everything

Afterward, Tamayo, known by the handle “driverseati” online, reflected on how fortunes can turn or not turn on a single hand.

“I shouldn’t have been here after Day 4,” he said. “There was a crazy series of events on Day 4 where I was all-in, and if one certain individual didn’t fold their hand pre, I’m not here.”

If that chain of events doesn’t happen, I don’t have that bracelet and I’m not here.”

Referring to a hand in which he doubled-up with A-T versus J-J, Tamayo explained: “[Someone] folded Ace-King in the cutoff, and the other two jacks were dead because the big blind on seven or eight big blinds folded Jacks. And the turn is an Ace. If that chain of events doesn’t happen, I don’t have that bracelet and I’m not here.”

As for folding those Queens to just single pre-flop raise on Sunday: “That’s going to be a fun one. I’m happy to never live that one down now.”

熱門文章
灰度在iGB L!VE 2026展位T70和你相約7月,一起點燃倫敦的熱情!
灰度頭條
超級PAC籌資4800萬美元:體育博彩勢力加碼
合規與政策
越南博彩管控逐步放寬,惟本土需求仍顯乏力
東南亞資訊
菲律賓博彩技術賽道迎來新變局,B2B 供應模式加速滲透
東南亞資訊
西班牙監管機構警告在線賭博平臺存在身份盜竊行為
合規與政策
越南在線博彩業政策收緊 催生市場新機遇
東南亞資訊
英國確認各垂直行業的賭博稅稅率
合規與政策
菲律賓網絡賭博和加密貨幣仍構成持續的洗錢風險
東南亞資訊
印第安納州在線賭場法案在眾議院委員會停滯不前
合規與政策
哈薩克計劃對線上賭場促銷活動進行處罰
合規與政策
斯里蘭卡博弈產業大轉型,官方:劍指南亞拉斯維加斯
合規與政策
橫跨全球6個城市,灰度8場派對邀你共看世界盃,重塑高質量社交新場景
灰度頭條
新澤西州7月博彩收入創6.06億美元新高,頒布禁令
合規與政策
GGC Awards 2026 璀璨科倫坡:致敬 iGaming 行業的領航者與創新力量
灰度頭條
印度最高法院受理公益訴訟,要求全國禁封「偽裝」成社交遊戲的賭博平台
合規與政策
首頁
遊戲
合作
發現
我的