58°F
weather icon Clear

Lucky lady delivers Lyons 1st WSOP bracelet

Updated July 18, 2020 - 12:57 pm

A lucky lady gave Pat Lyons his first World Series of Poker bracelet early Saturday.

Lyons (screen name IchiiKawawa) hit a queen on the river to win Event 17 of the WSOP Online, a $777 buy-in No-limit Hold’em tournament. He prevailed in a field of 1,382 entries (917 players and 465 rebuys), earning $173,551.56.

Christopher Ginley (NJ_GLive) finished second for $107,478.14.

Lyons began heads-up play with a massive lead, but Ginley doubled up twice to close the gap. In the final hand, Lyons went all-in with queen-nine, and Ginley called with ace-king. Ginley stayed ahead on the ace-queen-deuce flop, but Lyons hit a queen on the river to make three of a kind to win the tournament.

Lyons has more than $1.5 million in career tournament earnings, according to the Hendon Mob Poker Database, but he had only $64,942 in WSOP events before Saturday’s win.

Jonathan Dokler (Art.Vandelay), who won a bracelet earlier in the series, finished fourth for $54,948.32.

The flagship WSOP that is normally held every summer at the Rio Convention Center has been postponed because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The U.S. leg of the WSOP Online includes one event every day through July 31. Players must be physically located in Nevada or New Jersey to play.

Event 18, a $1,000 No-limit Hold’em eight-handed turbo tournament, starts at 3 p.m. Saturday. Event 19 is a $400 No-limit Hold’em tournament that starts at 3 p.m. Sunday.

A series for players who live outside the U.S. — or Americans who can travel out of the country — starts Sunday and runs through Sept. 6 on GGPoker.

Contact Jim Barnes at jbarnes@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0277. Follow @JimBarnesLV on Twitter.

THE LATEST
Welcome to the poker table, kid

On her first visit to the poker table at a Las Vegas casino, a 21-year-old finds herself holding all the cards.

6 must-watch movies about poker

Poker has been depicted in films for more than a century, whether it’s cowboys in the saloons or James Bond. Here are six must-watch poker films.