2008 WSOP Main Event Day 9: Peter Eastgate Becomes Youngest-ever ME Winner
After nearly four months of waiting, the final table of the 2008 World Series of Poker Main Event concluded last night in a battle of rising poker superstars. 27-year-old Ivan Demidov had already locked up the title of biggest Russian money winner in WSOP history, and was looking to become the first Russian Main Event champ after his third-place finish in the WSOP Europe Main Event in September. Peter Eastgate was looking to be the first Danish Main Event champ, and also had his sights set on the title of youngest Main Event champion ever, a title held by Phil Hellmuth for nearly twenty years. After a grueling back-and-forth, heads-up battle on the stage at the Penn & Teller Theater at the Rio, Eastgate took the title in one last confrontation of big hands to lay claim to the bracelet and the $9,152,416 top prize.
After sending Dennis Phillips to the rail to end Day 1 of the final table, Eastgate started heads-up play with a significant chip lead:
Peter Eastgate 80,300,000
Ivan Demidov 56,600,000
With blinds at 300,000/600,000 and a 75,000 ante, both players were very deep-stacked as heads-up play kicked off. Ivan Demidov started an early surge by calling a preflop raise from Eastgate on the very first hand to see a flop of 10?K?10?. Eastgate fired out 1.75 million at the flop and Demidov called again. Demidov checked to Eastgate on the K? turn, and Eastgate checked behind. Demidov fired eight million when the K? landed on the river, and Eastgate thought for a long moment before folding. Action continued back-and-forth for several more hands before Demidov took over the chip lead in another big hand.
Blinds had jumped to 400,000/800,000 and a 100,000 ante in a hand where Demidov raised to two million from the button and Eastgate called. The flop came down K?J?6?, and the players checked around. Eastgate led out with a 2.5-million bet on the 5? turn, and Demidov called. Eastgate checked the river when the 3? landed, and Demidov took a moment before pushing out a six-million bet. Eastgate called and mucked as Demidov tabled K?3? for a rivered two pair. That hand gave Demidov the chip lead for the first time in the heads-up match.
Eastgate moved within striking distance of the chip lead slowly over the next few hands, then reclaimed the lead with a big one-pair pot. The two players limped to the flop of 8?3?2?, and Eastgate led out with a one-million bet. Demidov thought for a moment before calling, and both players checked the 5? turn. Demidov checked the 9? on the river, and Eastgate led out with a bet of 2.675 million. Demidov thought for a moment before calling, then mucked as Eastgate showed J?9? for a rivered pair of nines.
Eastgate firmed up his chip lead with a big pot right before the first break, when he called a 2.8 million raise from Demidov preflop, then checked the flop of A?J?3?. Demidov checked again on the J? turn, and Eastgate fired out 3.25 million. Demidov called, and the Q? came on the river. Demidov checked again, and Eastgate fired 6.95 million. Demidov called instantly, only to muck his hand when Eastgate tabled A?Q? for top two pair. That hand put the players back to close to their starting stacks, with Eastgate holding the chip lead:
Ivan Demidov �� 50,575,000
Peter Eastgate �� 86,325,000
Back from break, Eastgate never let up on the throttle, moving over the hundred-million-chip mark soon after. Eastgate limped in from the button, and Demidov raised an additional 1.95 million. Eastgate called, and the flop came down 9?7?6?. Demidov opened with a 3.625 million bet, and Eastgate thought for a moment before calling. Both players checked the turn when the J? landed, and Demidov led out for seven million when the Q? hit the river. Almost before Demidov finished the bet, Eastgate called with J?8? for second pair. Demidov showed A?10? for ace-high, and Eastgate dragged a big pot to cement his lead.
Play slowed down for a bit as Demidov picked his spots carefully to try and grab chips where he could in the face of Eastgate's lead. Finally, the dam burst and the two players collided in another massive confrontation. Demidov opened with a raise to two million from the button, and Eastgate called. Eastgate checked the K?10?7? flop, and Demidov checked behind. Eastgate fired out 2.5 million when the J? hit the turn, and Demidov raised to eight million. Eastgate called, and then checked the river when the 3? came down. Demidov thought for a moment before betting out 12 million, and Eastgate made the call in the biggest pot yet in the heads-up match. Demidov showed A?9? for ace-high, but Eastgate tabled 4?7? for the diamond flush and dragged a pot worth over 44 million.
The final hand came down to big hand over big hand as Eastgate finally put Demidov away as the runner-up ($5,809,595 for second place) and claimed the bracelet. In the final hand, Eastgate limped in from the button, and Demidov checked the big blind. Eastgate fired out 1.25 million on the 2?K?3? flop, and Demidov called. Demidov checked again when the 4? came on the turn, and Eastgate bet two million. Demidov thought for a moment before check-raising to six million, committing half his stack to the pot. Eastgate thought briefly before making the call, and Demidov announced an all-in as soon as the 7? hit the river. Eastgate snap-called, and Demidov tabled 4?2? for a turned two pair. Eastgate then revealed his hand �C A?5? for the wheel straight and the win.
Peter Eastgate claimed the title of youngest Main Event champion in the WSOP Las Vegas edition, breaking the 19-year-old record held by Phil Hellmuth. He also jumped into the top five on the all-time money list with his $9,152,416 victory.