Adrian Mateos Wins WSOP Event #15: $10,000 Heads-Up Championship
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Event #15, the $10,000 Heads-Up No-Limit Hold'em Championship, began with 129 players. After 128 matches, only one emerged with an undefeated record. 22-year-old Adrian Mateos outlasted the field, capturing his third World Series of Poker gold bracelet and a $324,470 pay day. Now the youngest player ever to have won three bracelets, Mateos has earned himself a place in WSOP history.
"It��s insane that I have three bracelets," Mateos said. "It��s really difficult to win three bracelets and I��m 22. I run good and I think I play good so that��s all that matters."
Mateos added that this bracelet was a different experience because it was a special event. His previous two bracelets came in full ring no-limit hold'em tournaments.
"There aren't many heads-up events in the year, so I really want to play," he said. "I was really focused for every round to win and I really like to play heads-up so it��s really fun."
Let's recap his road to victory, shall we?
Mateos received a bye in the initial "play-in" round, and then defeated six-time bracelet winner Daniel Negreanu in the Round of 128. With a five-high straight showing on the board, Mateos held the absolute nuts with seven-six and bested Negreanu, who had initially flopped the wheel. His next opponent was Ian O'Hara, and Mateos scored a swift victory to advance to the Round of 32 the following day.
His opponent to begin Day 2 was Eric Wasserson, and the winner would be guaranteed a min-cash. Mateos took an early lead in the match, and eventually sealed the deal when his pocket threes won a race against Wasserson's ace-queen. A Round of 16 duel with Taylor Paur followed. Holding the lead, Mateos got his chips in and trailed slightly with queen-jack against Paur's ace-four. However, two queens found the board and Mateos locked up a seat in the Round of 8. Fellow two-time bracelet winner Ryan Hughes was his next opponent, and Hughes had Mateos on the ropes early into the match. Down nearly 10:1 in chips, Mateos battled back in a big way. He doubled up four times, before his king-three bested Hughes' ace-ten. With that, Mateos punched his ticket to the Final Four.
He faced off against Charlie Carrel, in what turned out to be a relatively fast 37-hand match. Mateos was trailing early, but found some momentum after picking off a bluff with king high. Three hands later, Carrel bluffed again and Mateos called for his tournament life with third pair. Now with a commanding chip lead, Mateos closed it out three hands later when his ace-king held up against ace-ten to earn a seat in the championship match.
Awaiting Mateos was 70-year-old John Smith. The U.S. Army veteran and Purple Heart recipient finished runner-up in this event last summer and had become a fan favorite among the masses in the Brasilia Room. Mateos held the lead for a good portion of the match before Smith mounted a comeback in the mid-to-late stages. However, Mateos retook the lead and didn't relinquish it again. On the final hand with an ace-high flop showing, Smith got his remaining chips into the middle with queen high against Mateos who held straight and flush draws. A spade landed on the turn, locking up the victory for Mateos.
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Mateos said after the match that he was really impressed with the way Smith played.
"He plays really different from a lot of players but that worked for him. It��s really tough to play against him; he makes different plays every hand. He changed his game every hand. He��s really hard to read."
For Smith, the plan is to keep playing the event he has had so much success in over the past two years.
"I��ll be back next year. Unfinished business. Maybe I can get three seconds," he joked afterward.
WSOP Heads-Up Championship Results
Place | Player | Prize |
---|---|---|
1 | Adrian Mateos | $324,470 |
2 | John Smith | $200,538 |
3 | Charlie Carrel | $125,454 |
3 | Ryan Riess | $125,454 |
5 | Ryan Hughes | $55,909 |
5 | Olivier Busquet | $55,909 |
5 | Jack Duong | $55,909 |
5 | Ryan Fee | $55,909 |