Joao Simao raced to his second World Series of Poker gold bracelet victory, beating out a field of 788 entries in the fast-paced 2022 WSOP $5,000 buy-in pot-limit Omaha and no-limit hold’em mixed event. The 33-year-old Brazilian poker pro secured the largest score of his tournament career for the win: $686,242. As a result, he now has more than $5 million in cashes to his name.
This marked the 16th time a Brazilian player has won a bracelet event. Simao and Yuri Dzivielevski are the only two players from the country with multiple bracelets.
“Every time a Brazilian wins a bracelet, it makes our community grow, more and more, which is good for us and good for the poker world in general,” said Simao after this latest win.
In addition to the title and the money, Simao also earned 1,824 Card Player Player of the Year points after coming out on top. This was his third POY-qualified score of the year, having finished as the runner-up in a $3,500 buy-in event at the Wynn Millions festival in March and fourth in the $1,500 ‘Monster Stack’ event earlier this series. With $1,361,632 in year-to-date POY earnings and 3,624 total points, Simao now sits in seventh place in the 2022 POY race standings, which are presented by Global Poker.
This event only took two days to find its champion. The top 119 finishers earned a share of the $3,634,650 prize pool, with big names like four-time bracelet winner and 2009 world champion Joe Cada (107th – $8,010), three-time bracelet winner Dan Zack (91st – $8,761), three-time bracelet winner David Pham (29th – $19,650), five-time bracelet winner Brian Rast (22nd – $23,327), two-time bracelet winner Brandon Cantu (21st – $23,327), bracelet winner and 2004 main event runner-up David Williams (18th – $23,327), and bracelet winner Andriy Lyubovetskiy (11th – $42,953) all making deep runs.
A number of notables were still in contention by the time the official final table of eight was set following Joni Jouhkimainen’s elimination in ninth place ($54,313), including bracelet winner Fred Goldberg, high-stakes tournament rising star Marius Gierse and 2013 WSOP main event champion Ryan Riess. Simao held the lead when the final table got underway and extended his advantage by knocking out Cody Rich in eighth place ($69,727).
Goldberg was the next to fall, with his pocket kings and a suit running into the double-suited pocket aces of Gierse in a round of PLO. Gierse made trip tens on the river to win the pot and narrow the field of six, while Goldberg settled for $90,864 as the seventh-place finisher.
Gierse scored another bustout when his pocket sevens won a race against the K-Q suited of Joshua McSwiney. The flop saw Gierse hit a set, while McSwiney picked up a flush draw. The turn and river were blanks, though, and McSwiney was sent home in sixth place ($120,165).
Simao’s stack took a small hit when he doubled up a short stack, but he soon made up for that lost ground by eliminating Aden Salazar in fifth place ($161,239). Salazar’s 10-9 suited outflopped Simao’s J-10 suited, but a jack on the river sent the pot towards Simao. The Brazilian then won a preflop race with pocket sevens besting the A-10 of Dante Goya to take a sizable lead into three-handed play.
Riess’s run at his second bracelet ended in third place. Riess got all-in preflop with AQ86 and was at risk facing the A872 of Gierse. The board ran out J92109 and Gierse ade an ace-high flush to secure the pot. Riess earned $302,980 as the third-place finisher, increasing his lifetime earnings to more than $15.7 million.
Heads-up play began with Simao holding more than a 3.5:1 chip lead over Gierse. He was able to add to that in the early going, and was still well ahead despite the German earning one double up with two pair.
Gierse was soon all-in and at risk again. This time around the chips went in after the flop of 855. Gierse held AJ109, while Simao had AQQ2. The 3 on the turn gave Simao a gutshot wheel draw, but it was the A on the end that saw him improve to the winning hand. His aces and fives with a queen kicker just edged out Gierse, locking up the pot and the title in the process. Gierse earned $424,122 as the runner-up finisher. This was his sixth final-table finish of the year, with two titles won and more than $2.5 million in POY earnings accrued along the way. With 3,468 total points, Gierse now sits in ninth place in the 2022 POY race standings.
Here is a look at the payouts and rankings points awarded at the final table:
Place | Player | Earnings | POY Points |
1 | Joao Simao | $686,242 | 1824 |
2 | Marius Gierse | $424,122 | 1520 |
3 | Ryan Riess | $302,980 | 1216 |
4 | Dante Goya | $219,472 | 912 |
5 | Aden Salazar | $161,239 | 760 |
6 | Joshua Mcswiney | $120,165 | 608 |
7 | Fred Goldberg | $90,864 | 456 |
8 | Cody Rich | $69,727 | 304 |
Winner photo credit: WSOP / Hayley Hochstetler.
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