Deeb Denied as Mozaffarian Masters Mystery Bounty Bracelet Event

Shaun Deeb was denied a seventh WSOP bracelet late in Rozvadov as Event #9 of the 2024 World Series of Poker Europe ended in disappointment for the poker legend. Instead, it was Amir Mozaffarian who finally won his WSOP bracelet, just days after finishing runner-up in the €5,000 Pot Limit Omaha bracelet event.

Krieger Busts but Cashes Like a King  

With a massive 515 entries, the ninth event of this year’s WSOPE schedule saw $533,550 in the prizepool and just 78 places paid. Some big names made a profit without edging into the business end of the event, with bracelet winner and Czech anti-hero Martin Kabrhel (70th for $1,500) as well as pioneering Indian poker player Ankit Ahuja (51st for $1,580) falling short of those big money places.

Winning bounties was also the order of the day and it was Philipp Krieger who bagged biggest in that regard. Although he was eventually busted by Shaun Deeb, the German player won bounties worth €900, €45,000 and €3,000 to add to his tournament cash of €1,435, totalling an almost $50,000 payday!

Closer to the final table, American player and Day 1 chip leader Ramana Epparla busted for $1,840 in 33rd place, while bracelet winners Gabi Livshitz (23rd) and Fabio Peluso (22nd) both won $2,410 as they busted with three tables remaining. Fellow WSOP title winner Tobias Peters cashed for $2,875 in 15th place as play got closer to the final eight and when Ondrej Goetz busted in ninth for $4,435, the last table of the tournament could begin.

ZZ Doesn’t End Up Tops

The chip leader when the final table began was the Romanian player Viorel Gavrila. Ukrainian player Yehor Shumeiko was second lowest in chips and eventually busted for $5,700. All-in with Qc6c, he lost out to the AcKs of Amir Mozaffarian after the German fell behind to a queen on the flop but then regained the lead in the hand with a king dropping on the turn. No help on the river meant no survival for Shumeiko and the field was cut to seven.

Out in seventh was the American pro John Armbrust for $7,550. Armbrust called off his stack with 8s7s on a flop of 9s8d7c but two pair was well behind Gavrila’s hand of 6d5d which had flopped the low straight. No seven or eight on turn or river sent Armbrust from the action as six remained in the hunt for gold.

Czech player Zdenek Zizka busted next, cashing for $10,200 in sixth place when one pocket pair fell to another. All-in for his last eight big blinds with 8s8c, Zizka was called by the Italian player Lorenzo Arduini with TsTd and was unable to make up the ground. No snowman came across the AcAhKhQh2s board and Zizka was on the outside looking in as five remained in the hunt for bracelet glory.

Deeb Denied as River Bluff Scuppers Hopes

“I had a huge chip lead but the job is never done because Shaun Deeb is a really, really good player.”

Five became four when Arduini’s plummet from in-form player changed to fall guy. All-in with AdKd, he couldn’t win against the JhJs of German player Paco Kaplan. A flop of KsJc5h had looked promising in the window only to slam the door shut with Kaplan making a set. A Qc on the turn was followed by an insignificant Ac on the river, sending Arduini home with a result worth $14,150.

Shaun Deeb started the final four in command of the action but a big fold in a hand that saw Mozaffarian take the lead damaged Deeb in more ways than one. On a board of Ks7s4c5d4s, Mozaffarian’s big river bet saw Deeb lay down his hand. The German put the needle in, showing Th8h for a huge bluff. Soon, Deeb was on the rail for $20,050 when his run of losses to Mozaffarian left him on nine big blinds which went into the middle with Ks4c as Mozaffarian’s Kc9c dominated Deeb to defeat.

Three-handed, Gavrila lost out for $40,500 when his Jh4h was run out of town by Mozaffarian’s Ad6h and that sent play heads-up. The all-German final duel saw Paco Kaplan facing a 4:1 deficit and the eventual runner-up was soon just that. Calling all-in for his last 12 big blinds with Qd5d, Kaplan was behind Mozaffarian’s Kd6s and stayed there through the Ts8c4hJdJh board to end the event.

Mozaffarian, who had come so close just a few days earlier, finally had his WSOP bracelet and told PokerNews it felt ‘wonderful’ and ‘amazing’ to finally claim gold.

“Having a bracelet is one of the most desired things you can get as a poker player,” he said. “I was really riding the rollercoaster today. My stack was up and down so much and then I was winning a lot of flips, so I thought oh, maybe there is something possible today. I had a huge chip lead but the job is never done, never because Shaun Deeb is a really, really good player and is very dangerous. Nothing is safe when you have a chip lead.”

While Mozaffarian eventually got there, Deeb himself will have to wait again for a chance to claim his seventh WSOP bracelet.

WSOP Europe €1,100 Event #9 Mystery Bounty Final Table Results:
Place Player Country Prize
1st Amir Mozaffarian Germany $76,100
2nd Paco Kaplan Germany $54,600
3rd Viorel Gavrila Romania $40,500
4th Shaun Deeb United States $20,050
5th Lorenzo Arduini Italy $14,150
6th Zdenek Zizka Czech Republic $10,200
7th John Armbrust United States $7,550
8th Yehor Shumeiko Ukraine $5,700

 

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