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Nicholas Seiken Wins $10,000 Deuce-To-Seven Triple Draw Event at 2018 World Series of Poker

Texas Real Estate Investor Wins First Bracelet And $287,987 First-Place Prize

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Despite never having played in a triple draw tournament before, Nicholas Seiken somehow managed to navigate his way through a field of 109 in the $10,000 deuce-to-seven lowball triple draw event at the 2018 World Series of Poker to earn his first bracelet and the $287,987 first-place prize.

“This is my first standalone triple draw tournament,” Seiken said to WSOP reporters. “I played the eight-game four or five times, but I haven’t even played a $1,500 triple draw tournament, just cause of the timing. I loved it in the eight-game and I cashed the $10,000 stud, so I had a little money to shoot at it.”

Randy Ohel on day 3Seiken, a 29-year-old real estate investor from Ft. Worth, Texas, had to overcome a tough final table that included top pros Matt Glantz (5th) and Kristijonas Andrulis (3rd), as well as bracelet winners Farzad Bonyadi (4th), and Randy Ohel (2nd). Hanh Tran, who bubbled the official final table to finish in seventh place, was just one week removed from having won the $1,500 triple draw event.

Ohel, whose bracelet came in the 2012 $2,500 triple draw event, earned $177,992 for his second-place finish. He now has ten final-table appearances on his WSOP resume, including three runner-up showings.

Other notables who finished in the money included Michael Noori (9th), Calvin Anderson (12th), Mike Matusow (14th), and Todd Brunson (16th).

Here is a look at the final table results.

Place Player Payout POY Points
1 Nicholas Seiken $287,987 600
2 Randy Ohel $177,992 500
3 Kristijonas Andrulis $125,190 400
4 Farzad Bonyadi $89,078 300
5 Matthew Glantz $64,131 250
6 Jason Gray $46,722 200

For more coverage from the summer series, visit the 2018 WSOP landing page complete with a full schedule, news, player interviews and event recaps.