Event #11: €1,100 NLH Turbo Bounty Hunter
Day 1 Completed
Event #11: €1,100 NLH Turbo Bounty Hunter
Day 1 Completed
The latest bracelet from the 2024 World Series of Poker Europe has found a new home—on the wrist of Darius Neagoe. Neagoe emerged victorious over a field of 458 entrants in Event #11: €1,100 No-Limit Hold’em Turbo Bounty Hunter to take home his first WSOP bracelet.
Romania's Neagoe snagged the €63,650 top prize from the €430,520 prize pool after somewhat cruising through a short-stacked final table. He wrapped things up fast heads-up, defeating Nikolay Traskevich on the very first hand. This win ties his career-best score and sees him jump into the top 100 on Romania's all-time money list.
Traskevich walked away with €45,750 for his runner-up finish, while Switzerland’s Michael Wingeyer rounded out the podium spots with €34,450 for his efforts. With three spots to the €10,350 WSOP Europe Main Event up for grabs, Neagoe, Traskevich, and Wingeyer will all be taking their seats tomorrow, chasing the poker dream of becoming a world champion on Europe’s biggest stage.
Place | Player | Country | Prize |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Darius Neagoe | Romania | €63,650 |
2 | Nikolay Traskevich | Belarus | €45,750 |
3 | Michael Wingeyer | Switzerland | €34,450 |
4 | Paulo Costa | Portugal | €16,700 |
5 | Aaron Duczak | Canada | €11,900 |
6 | Holger Klock | Germany | €8,600 |
7 | Mikkel Plum | Denmark | €6,400 |
8 | Traian Stanciu | Romania | €4,850 |
9 | De Han Kim | South Korea | €3,775 |
10 | Giuseppe Rosa | Italy | €3,020 |
*the top three prizes include a €10,350 WSOPE Main Event ticket
Neagoe said he was feeling amazing about winning his first bracelet and hoped it wouldn't be the last.
"Right now, I am pretty stoked, I am really happy. Overall, I feel amazing. This is the first bracelet for me and hopefully not the last!"
The Romanian poker player said having the support of his friends on the rail for the final table really helped him.
"I'm feeling really lucky because I see a lot of guys here who are alone, so having an amazing group of friends I love supporting me all the way really helps."
Neagoe said there wasn't really any hand that stuck out to him as being important and he just takes it one hand at a time.
"There were no real hands that stuck out to me. You take it one hand at a time, and you do your best with the cards you have."
Once late registration closed, and the payouts were posted, it was confirmed that 69 players would walk away with at least a min-cash of €1,375. Just two hours later, the bubble burst without even needing hand-for-hand play. Arturo Paduano and Paul Runcan busted on the same hand, sending the rest of the field straight into the money.
Now that everyone had locked up a trip to the payout desk, eliminations started coming fast, as players with short stacks were eager to gamble in hopes of making a push for the final table. Four more levels passed before the three-table redraw took place, with several notables such as Or Nezer (26th - €1,790), Shaun Deeb (36th - €1,445), Dongwoo Ko (44th - €1,445), and Martin Zamani (61st - €1,375) busting in the money.
For the last 27, the final table was now in sight, with the gold bracelet shimmering on the horizon. Only ten players could make it to the tournament's last table, and unfortunately, bracelet winners Vivian Saliba (19th - €1,790) and Simone Andrian (16th - €2,075) didn’t make the cut. After Ilija Savevski brutal exit in eleventh place, where Wingeyer rivered a two-outer, the final table was finally set.
Neagoe entered the final table with the chip lead and pulled away from the rest of the table in the early orbits by putting relentless pressure on the middle stacks. With the average stack of around ten big blinds, it was only a matter of time before a clash was bound to happen. Giuseppe Rosa was the first to bust, as Neagoe hit trips to send him home.
De Han Kim would be the player next to vacate his seat when he came in last place during a three-way all-in that saw Mikkel Plum triple up with sailboats against ace-jack and ace-king of Kim and Traskevich. After the stacks were counted, Kim had fewer chips than Traskevich, forcing him to settle for a ninth-place finish.
Romania’s Traian Stanciu claimed the eighth-place prize money after failing to improve against Aaron Duczak’s pocket jacks. Not long after, Plum followed him out, calling off his four-big-blind stack with king-queen but not connecting with any Broadway cards to beat Paulo Costa’s ace-high.
Next to feel the wrath of Neagoe’s final table dominance was Holger Klock, who got it in good but an unfortunate runout gave Neagoe the winner with a turned straight. After Klock exited in sixth, Canada’s Duczak’s chip stack would be sent to Neagoe. Duczak jammed with ace-nine and was called off by Neagoe holding king-queen. A couple of queens on the flop spelled the end of Duczak in fifth.
With three €10,350 WSOPE Main Event tickets up for grabs, you’d expect four-handed play to drag on—but in true turbo style, that wasn’t the case. Costa got his chips in with Big Slick, but Traskevich caught a lucky four-flush to send Costa out in fourth. The remaining three players had secured their seats in the Main Event.
Neagoe didn’t let up with three remaining; he went full throttle by jamming the very next hand with nine-seven of hearts from the button. Wingeyer decided to make a stand with pocket threes, but Neagoe’s sun-run continued as a nine hit the flop, meaning Wingeyer ended up picking up the cheque for third place.
Heads-up play lasted all of one hand as Neagoe called Traskevich's five big blind shove with pocket fives and was up against Traskevich's ten-eight of clubs. A five in the window sealed Traskevich's fate, who was overjoyed with his performance in the event. Meanwhile, Neagoe erupted in celebration with his rail, jumping and singing with joy at becoming a WSOP champion.
That concludes coverage of the €1,100 No-Limit Hold’em Turbo Bounty Hunter. Stay tuned as Friday, October 4 marks the first day of the 2024 WSOP Europe Main Event, where up-to-date coverage can be found right here at PokerNews every day.
On the very first hand of heads-up play, Nikolay Traskevich shoved from the button for 1,700,000 and Darius Neagoe snap-called.
Nikolay Traskevich: 9?7?
Darius Neagoe: 5?5?
If Neagoe could hold with pocket fives he would be the winner of the event. The flop of 5?9?8? put Neagoe firmly in the lead with a set of fives. The Q? turn did offer up a gutshot to Traskevich, but the 6? river meant Neagoe's set would hold up and he had won the tournament.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Darius Neagoe |
13,700,000
1,700,000
|
1,700,000 |
|
||
Nikolay Traskevich | Busted |
There will be a short break before the start of heads-up play
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Darius Neagoe | 12,000,000 | |
|
||
Nikolay Traskevich |
1,700,000
-1,000,000
|
-1,000,000 |
Darius Neagoe shoved from the button with covering stack and Michael Wingeyer called for his last 1,500,000 from the big blind.
Michael Wingeyer: 3?3?
Darius Neagoe: 9?7?
The flop was favorable for Neagoe as it came 9?6?5? to propel him into the lead with top pair. The rest of the board ran out Q?2? and we were down to heads-up.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Darius Neagoe |
12,000,000
2,500,000
|
2,500,000 |
|
||
Michael Wingeyer | Busted |
Paulo Costa shoved for 675,000 from the button and Nikolay Traskevich called from the big blind to put him at risk.
Paulo Costa: A?K?
Nikolay Traskevich: 7?6?
The board ran out 9?J?2?5?K? giving Traskevich a flush to eliminate Costa in fourth place. The three remaining players are now guaranteed a seat to the World Series of Poker Europe Main Event in addition to their cash prize.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Nikolay Traskevich |
2,700,000
1,700,000
|
1,700,000 |
Paulo Costa | Busted |
When it folded to Aaron Duczak in the small blind he shoved for roungly 2,500,000 and Darius Neagoe snap-called from the big blind.
Aaron Duczak: A?9?
Darius Neagoe: K?Q?
Neagoe flopped best on the Q?Q?6? flop, hitting trip queens to leave Duczak needed runner-runner to win. The 10? turn and 5? meant Duczak was out in fifth place
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Darius Neagoe |
9,500,000
2,200,000
|
2,200,000 |
|
||
Aaron Duczak | Busted |
Level: 33
Blinds: 150,000/300,000
Ante: 300,000
Darius Neagoe shoved from the cutoff, covering every remaining player by a significant margin. Holger Klock called off from the small blind with his stack of roughly 1,500,000.
Holger Klock: A?8?
Darius Neagoe: A?7?
Klock had his opponent pipped but the 9?J?10?8?6? runout brought in a straight for Neagoe who claimed another bounty while Klock made his exit from the tournament area.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Darius Neagoe |
7,300,000
1,750,000
|
1,750,000 |
|
||
Holger Klock | Busted |
Aaron Duczak shoved from the button for 3,000,000 and Nikolay Traskevich called for his last 400,000 from the big blind.
Nikolay Traskevich: K?4?
Aaron Duczak: Q?Q?
Traskevich needed a lot of help with some hearts or a king to survive. The flop of 8?J?9? put Traskevich firmly ahead with a flush. The 8? turn offered Duczak a glimmer of hope, but the K? river wasn't what he needed and Traskevich had doubled.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Aaron Duczak |
1,800,000
-1,050,000
|
-1,050,000 |
Nikolay Traskevich |
1,000,000
600,000
|
600,000 |