close
close

Record-breaking field wins $300 Colossus Crowns at WSOPC Montreal

Kevin Degan

Last day after almost 14 hours of play 2024 World Series Of Poker $300 Colossus It came to a conclusion on the playground. After the dust settles, Kevin Degan was the last player to lose Alexander Clouzeau A top prize of $89,735 is up for grabs.

Final table results

Place Player Born Award (CAD)
1 Kevin Degan Laval $89,725*
2 Alexander Clouzeau Maskush $67,125*
3 Remy Tetart Longueuil $54,310*
4 Jeffrey Cormier Moncton 32,000 dollars
5 Wali Nezam Ajax 24,000 dollars
6 Andrew Fahey Sudbury 20,000 dollars
7 Jikai Zhang Nepean $15,000
8 Nicholas Haddad Burlington $12,000
9 Joseph Movsesian Scarborough $10,000
10 Joseph Jarvis Montreal 8,000 dollars

*Represents a three-way agreement

Summary of the last day

The first of 15 WSOP-C ring events in this series was a huge success for Colossus Playground. He drew everything 3964 applicants create an array $931,540 the prize pool is almost double the $500,000 guarantee. This field was the largest tournament field in Playground history at the start of the last WSOP-C Colossus held at the Playground in August 2019, with 3,538 participants.

Wali Nezam started the day with just 52,000 chips for the shortest stack in the room, just under nine big blinds to start the day. Despite facing an uphill battle, Nezam made an impressive comeback scoring multiple double points throughout the day. Nezam carried that momentum to the final table, where his tournament ended in fifth place, after which he received a standing ovation from his tablemates.

Wali Nezam
Vali Nezam (left) and Keven Degan

Degane started the day in the middle of the pack, with a mid-day super hero call to raise the bills. Clusiau had a similar trajectory, starting the day with a slightly above-average stack, and after an unlikely knockout, found himself at the top of the count by mid-day.

Alexander Clouzeau
Alexander Clouzeau

Jeffrey Cormier started the final table with the chip lead and used an aggressive style of play that earned him many fights. His stack was later destroyed after running into Clusiau's pocket aces with pocket kings, and he would eventually settle for fourth place, though he raised several times from there.

Jeffrey Cormier
Jeffrey Cormier

After Cormier was eliminated, the remaining three players agreed to an ICM-chop, leaving an additional $24,720 for the eventual winner. Remy Tetart Soon he will leave the third place and take the first place between Desganes and Clusiau.

Both players started the game almost in chips. Clusio extended his slight lead over Desgann early, but Desgann won a big preflop to take the lead soon after. Degane would win a few hands after rolling a full house to eliminate Clusiau for the night's final prize, the $89,725 top prize and his first world poker ring.

warning
warning

That concludes our coverage of this story, but stay tuned PokerNews team continues to bring you all the action from 2024 World Series of Poker Circuit Playground.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *