2018 WSOP Event 51: Ryan Leng Ships First WSOP Gold in $1,500 BOUNTY ($272,504)
Before winner photos even began, Ryan Leng looked to his rail and shouted to Chance Kornuth, ��Hey Chance, what are the blinds in the $5K?��
He wasn��t joking.
Leng is one of the hardest workers in the game and being a coach for Chip Leader Coaching has only sharpened his poker prowess.
"It��s awesome, probably the best thing for my poker game �C becoming a coach.��
��It��s forced me to analyze my own game as well as other players�� games all the time. I��m constantly questioning my own play. I still get coaching from Chance [Kornuth], I get coaching Nick Petrangelo, I get coaching from Joe McKeehen, I mean, it��s invaluable talking poker with these brilliant players.��
He learns not only from his coaches but also from his own poker students from the questions that they sometimes ask that challenge his thinking, or creative ways they play some hands that he can incorporate into his own game.
��As much as I��m coaching them, I��m still learning from them a lot too. It��s awesome, probably the best thing for my poker game �C becoming a coach.��
Road to Bracelet No. 1
His path to victory wasn��t without resistance, as Leng��s stack spiked and dipped drastically during the final couple tables of play, basically as soon as he sat with Sootla on Day 3.
��This is so much fun. Yesterday and today, it��s been such a whirlwind, I was chip leader, then I was short stack, then I was chip leader again. I played against some very tough opponents.��
Leng embraces a challenge and enjoyed the high-level competition he faced in the tournament. The toughness of his heads-up opponent, the lone Estonian Ranno Sootla, made the victory all the more validating for Leng.
��Sootla is one of the toughest players I��ve ever played against."
��Sootla is one of the toughest players I��ve ever played against; he��s so good. So, it was just a lot of fun to have to go through someone that good to get my first bracelet.��
Leng was very appreciative to have some of his best friends, his girlfriend and his family there on his rail to witness his first bracelet win, his mom even finding a way to book a last-minute flight after play ended with four the previous night.
��I��m really happy that [my mom] got to see it. It��s pretty awesome. She gets all my poker trophies, all my rings, Circuit rings or whatever, any trophy �C they��re hanging up at her house. So I��m going to give her this.��
Both his parents have always not only just supported his career in poker, but have encouraged him to work hard at it, treat it like a business and be the best he can be. He seems to have taken the encouragement to heart.
Event #51 Official Final Table Result
Player | Country | Payout |
---|---|---|
Ryan Leng | United States | $272,504 |
Ranno Sootla | Estonia | $168,329 |
Jay Farber | United States | $121,329 |
Christian Nolte | Austria | $89,079 |
Javier Gomez | Spain | $65,799 |
Russell Rosenblum | United States | $49,107 |
John Gulino | United States | $37,034 |
Mark Mazza | United States | $28,225 |
Mikhail Semin | Russia | $21,741 |
Event Highlights
Event #51: $1,500 No-Limit Hold��em BOUNTY drew a field of 1,982 to generate a total prize pool of $2,675,700. Each player had the added incentive to send opponents to the rail with a $500 bounty on every head.
The field played down to the final 298 players on the first day, with all returners guaranteed at least $1,415 plus any bounties collected along the way. Sootla bagged one of the biggest stacks of the day and continued that momentum on Day 2, where he finished with the chip lead of the final 29 heading into the scheduled final day of play, Leng right on his heels.
By the time they got down to the unofficial final table of ten, Sootla was in the top three stacks along with Russell Rosenblum and Mark Mazza, Leng in the middle of the pack with 24 big blinds.
With Quyen Hoang��s tenth-place elimination, ace-five falling to Leng��s ace-eight all-in pre-flop, the official final table was set. Leng promptly took over the chip lead with well-timed aggression, and Sootla took a big hit doubling up Jay Farber when Farber��s ace-queen made top two pair after getting all the chips in pre-flop against Sootla��s ace-king.
Sootla got most of that back when he eliminated Mikhail Semin in ninth place, finding pocket jacks after Semin shoved with sevens. Sootla flopped jacks full and Semin rivered sevens full, too little too late.
Leng was responsible for the next elimination, that of Mazza in eighth place. Leng smooth-called Mazza��s raise with pocket aces and the two got all the chips in on the queen-high flop, Mazza way behind and unable to catch up with ace-queen. That put Leng well out in front with seven remaining.
John Gulino was the next victim of these two, falling at the hands of Sootla who bet and called Gulino��s shove with A?3? on A?7?Q?9?, needing help against Gulino��s A?6?. Another spade on the river secured the bounty for Sootla, who chipped up toward the top of the counts once again.
Austria��s Christian Nolte claimed the next bounty, sending Rosenblum home when his ace-king held up against Rosenblum��s king-jack, after both players found a pair on the ace-jack-three flop.
Nolte continued to climb while Leng��s stack once again took a dip, but grinded back up and sent home Javier Gomez in fifth place to claw his way back up top. In that hand, Leng flatted an open with ace-queen and then snapped off Gomez��s three-bet jam, then proceeded to hold up against the ace-jack suited of Gomez, neither player finding a pair besides the pair of eights on the board.
Play was halted after that, Leng and Sootla back in the top two spots where they started the day, only this time Leng with out front.
Final Day��s Action
In the 13th hand of the unscheduled fourth day, Nolte got his remaining 25 big blinds in, flipping against Sootla after limp-calling a shove from the small blind. Nolte held ace-queen, up against the sixes of Sootla. An ace in the window had Nolte��s rail celebrating, but it would be premature, as the ace was followed by a six to give Sootla a set.
With Nolte out in fourth place, the lone Estonian held half the chips in play with Farber being the shortest stack with 24 big blinds. Leng promptly got to work, building chips by getting some folds, and winning a big pot against Sootla with pocket kings on a queen-high paired board.
Leng extended his lead in another confrontation with Sootla that saw Leng bet big on the river and get a tank-fold. Then, Leng raised the button and quickly called Farber��s small-blind shove when it was back to him.
Leng was in good shape with ace-ten suited against Farber��s ace-nine and no help for Farber meant a third-place finish for the 2013 WSOP Main Event runner-up. His first WSOP final table since that big one five years ago was worth a payday of $121,329.
Lengthy Heads-Up
Leng went into heads-up with nearly a 2-1 chip lead over Sootla, but they were deep with over 120 big blinds in play. Leng kept the pressure on with plenty of aggression and they clashed for stacks when Leng limped then three-bet the button, only to have Sootla move in. Leng snap-called with ace-king and was flipping against the pocket threes of Sootla.
The 9?5?4? flop was safe for Sootla, who had migrated to his rail and linked with his friends to watch the cards roll out on the monitor. The 4? turn meant more outs for Leng, who needed an ace, king, nine or five to lock up the bracelet, but the 8? river was safe and Sootla doubled into the lead.
From there, it was back and forth some more, Leng closing the gap and then getting Sootla down more than 2-1 in chips, Sootla gaining ground once again, and it looked like the match could go on for some time.
The final hand was a dramatic set-up though, and all the chips went in on a flop of 9?8?6?, Leng holding 10?7? for the nut-straight and Sootla with 9?9? for top set. Sootla linked with his rail once again, hoping for the board to pair, but the 10? turn and the 4? river secured the victory for Leng.
Sootla's bid to become Estonia's first WSOP bracelet winner fell just short, but his very first recorded cash on U.S. soil was worth $168,329, more than twice as much as his previous largest tournament cash, and from his performance in this one, it's likely this is not the last the WSOP has seen of him.
After 81 Day 4 hands and 16 total bounties, Leng lifted his first WSOP bracelet after second-place and fourth-place finishes the last two years. The win put his career earnings over the $1 million-mark. After photos and interviews, Leng��s rail had the drinks ready and they all lifted their glasses to the toast, ��All the chips!��
As far as future poker plans, Leng hopes to just keep at it.
��I hope this isn��t my first and only bracelet."
��I hope this isn��t my first and only bracelet," Leng said. "I��m just going to keep working hard, keep studying; as long as I��m in poker, I��m going to have to just keep working so hard because everyone is getting so good.��
One change we can expect in the not-too-distant future for Leng is his branching out from no-limit hold��em a bit.
��I do want to start studying mixed games more so I can become competitive in a lot of the small-field bracelet events so I can give myself a chance at Player of the Year: that��s always been a long-term goal of mine.��
The day is still early for the new bracelet winner as he has a friend at the PLO/8 final table to sweat before hopping into Event #58: $5,000 No-Limit Hold��em 6-Handed. For a player like Leng, the grind never ends.
��There��s more poker to be played�� The summer��s not over yet.��
For continued live coverage through the conclusion of the 2018 World Series of Poker, keep it right here at PokerNews.
In this Series
- 1 2018 WSOP Event 1: Jordan Hufty Wins First WSOP Gold in $565 Casino Employees
- 2 2018 WSOP Event 2: Elio Fox Wins First Ever WSOP $10,000 Super Turbo Bounty for $393,693
- 3 2018 WSOP Event 3: Joe Cada Wins 2018 WSOP $3,000 No-Limit Hold��em SHOOTOUT for $226,218
- 4 2018 WSOP Event 4: Julien Martini Wins $1,500 Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better ($239,771)
- 5 2018 WSOP Event 5: Nick Petrangelo Wins WSOP $100,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller ($2,910,227)
- 6 2018 WSOP Event 6: Jeremy Perrin Wins The GIANT Turning $365 Into $250,966
- 7 2018 WSOP Event 7: Roberly Felicio Wins the 2018 WSOP COLOSSUS for $1,000,000
- 8 2018 WSOP Event 8: Johannes Becker Wins $2,500 Mixed Triple Draw Lowball ($180,455)
- 9 2018 WSOP Event 9: Paul Volpe Wins Third WSOP Bracelet in Omaha Hi-Lo Championship
- 10 2018 WSOP Event 10: William ��Twooopair�� Reymond Wins $365 WSOP.com ONLINE Event ($154,996)
- 11 2018 WSOP Event 11: Tim Andrew Triumphs in the $365 PLO GIANT for $116,015, Mizrachi Fifth
- 12 2018 WSOP Event 12: Jeremy Harkin Wins $1,500 Dealer's Choice for $129,882
- 13 2018 WSOP Event 13: Benjamin Moon Wins $1,500 Big Blind Antes for $315,346
- 14 2018 WSOP Event 14: Daniel Ospina Wins First Bracelet for Colombia in 2-7 Lowball Draw
- 15 2018 WSOP Event 15: Andrey Zhigalov Wins $1,500 H.O.R.S.E. for $202,787
- 16 2018 WSOP Event 16: Justin Bonomo Wins Second WSOP Bracelet in $10K Heads-Up Championship
- 17 2018 WSOP Event 17: Ognyan Dimov Wins Third Bracelet for Bulgaria in Event #17 ($378,743)
- 18 2018 WSOP Event 18: Adam Friedman Wins Second Bracelet in $10K Dealer's Choice
- 19 2018 WSOP Event 19: Craig Varnell Wins $565 Pot-Limit Omaha ($181,790)
- 20 2018 WSOP Event 20: Jeremy Wien Conquers $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em for $537,710
- 21 2018 WSOP Event 21: Arne Kern Wins $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em MILLIONAIRE MAKER ($1,173,223)
- 22 2018 WSOP Event 22: Philip Long Wins $1,500 Eight Game Mix ($147,348)
- 23 2018 WSOP Event 23: Brian Rast Wins Fourth Bracelet in 2-7 Lowball Championship, Brunson 6th
- 24 2018 WSOP Event 24: Michael Addamo Wins Event #24: $2,620 MARATHON No-Limit Hold'em
- 25 2018 WSOP Event 25: Benjamin Dobson Wins First WSOP Gold in $1,500 Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo
- 26 2018 WSOP Event 26: Filippos Stavrakis Dedicates WSOP PLO Bracelet ($169,842) to His Brother
- 27 2018 WSOP Event 27: John Hennigan Wins 2018 WSOP $10K HORSE for Fifth Bracelet and $415K
- 28 2018 WSOP Event 28: Fortunate River Gives Gal Yifrach First WSOP Bracelet & $461K Prize
- 29 2018 WSOP Event 29: Hanh Tran Wins First WSOP Bracelet in $1,500 2-7 Triple Draw ($117,282)
- 30 2018 WSOP Event 30: Ryan Bambrick Wins First Gold Bracelet in Dominating Fashion
- 31 2018 WSOP Event 31: Steven Albini Wins $1,500 Stud to Deny Jeff Lisandro 7th Bracelet
- 32 2018 WSOP Event 32: Matthew Davis Tops Biggest Seniors Event Ever to Win $662,983
- 33 2018 WSOP Event 33: Michael Mizrachi Wins His Third Poker Players Championship Title
- 34 2018 WSOP Event 34: Robert Peacock Wins First WSOP Gold in $1,000 DOUBLE STACK
- 35 2018 WSOP Event 35: Yueqi Zhu Claims First WSOP Gold in $1,500 Mixed Omaha
- 36 2018 WSOP Event 36: Farhintaj Bonyadi Wins Event $1,000 Super Seniors ($311,451)
- 37 2018 WSOP Event 37: Eric Baldwin Wins Second Bracelet, Dedicates it to His Father
- 38 2018 WSOP Event 38: Yaniv Birman Wins First WSOP Gold Bracelet in $10,000 Seven Card Stud Championship ($236,238)
- 39 2018 WSOP Event 39: Preston Lee Captures $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em Shootout Bracelet ($236,498)
- 40 2018 WSOP Event 40: Scott Bohlman Wins WSOP $2,500 Mixed Big Bet ($122,138)
- 41 2018 WSOP Event 41: Robert Nehorayan Wins $1,500 Limit Hold'em for $173,568
- 42 2018 WSOP Event 42: Shaun Deeb Gets Revenge on Ben Yu to Win $25K PLO for $1,402,683
- 43 2018 WSOP Event 43: Timur Margolin Takes Down $2,500 NLHE for $507,274
- 44 2018 WSOP Event 44: Nicholas Seiken Wins $10k 2-7 Triple Draw Championship for $287,987
- 45 2018 WSOP Event 45: Mario Prats Garcia Wins $1,000 Big Blind NLH For $258,255
- 46 2018 WSOP Event 46: David Brookshire Wins WSOP $2,500 Mixed Omaha/Stud Hi-Lo 8 ($214,291)
- 47 2018 WSOP Event 47: Matthew 'mendey' Mendez Wins First WSOP Online PLO Bracelet ($135,077)
- 48 2018 WSOP Event 48: Tommy Nguyen Wins Monster Stack for $1,037,451
- 49 2018 WSOP Event 49: Loren Klein Wins $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship for $1,018,336
- 50 2018 WSOP Event 50: Jay Kwon Wins $1,500 Razz ($125,431)
- 51 2018 WSOP Event 51: Ryan Leng Ships First WSOP Gold in $1,500 BOUNTY ($272,504)
- 52 2018 WSOP Event 52: Scott Seiver Wins $10,000 Limit Hold'em Championship ($296,222)
- 53 2018 WSOP Event 53: Couden Tops Elezra, Matusow, Negreanu, and Fitoussi to win $1,500 PLO8
- 54 2018 WSOP Event 54: Portugal's Diogo Veiga Wins $3K Big Blind Antes ($522,715)
- 55 2018 WSOP Event 55: Giuseppe Pantaleo and Nikita Luther Win the $1K Tag Team for $175,805!
- 56 2018 WSOP Event 56: Calvin Anderson Wins His Second Bracelet in the $10K Razz ($309,220)!
- 57 2018 WSOP Event 57: Jessica Dawley Wins the WSOP Ladies Championship for $130,230!
- 58 2018 WSOP Event 58: Tribe Has Spoken: Jean-Robert Bellande Wins First Bracelet for $616K
- 59 2018 WSOP Event 59: Mike Takayama Makes History as the First Filipino to Win a WSOP Bracelet
- 60 2018 WSOP Event 60: Galfond Wins 3rd Bracelet in $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Hi-Lo Championship
- 61 2018 WSOP Event 61: Ryan 'Toosick' Tosoc Wins WSOP.com $1,000 Championship ($238,778)
- 62 2018 WSOP Event 62: Galen Hall Wins $888 Crazy Eights No-Limit Hold'em for $888,888
- 63 2018 WSOP Event 63: Chance 'BingShui' Kornuth Wins Second Bracelet in WSOP.com Online High Roller for $341,598
- 64 2018 WSOP Event 64: Matsuzuki Wins First WSOP Gold Bracelet in $10,000 Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo
- 65 John Cynn Wins the 2018 WSOP Main Event for $8,800,000!
- 66 2018 WSOP Event 66: Longsheng Tan Wins $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em for $323,472
- 67 2018 WSOP Event 67: Anderson Ireland Wins $1,500 PLO Bounty for First Bracelet and $141K
- 68 2018 WSOP Event 68: Guoliang Wei Wins Fourth Chinese Bracelet in The Little One for One Drop ($559,332)
- 69 2018 WSOP Event 69: Ronald Keijzer Wins $3,000 Pot-Limit Omaha 6-Handed for $475,033
- 70 2018 WSOP Event 70: Yaser Al-Keliddar Wins Event #70: $3K Limit Hold'em 6-Handed for $154K
- 71 2018 WSOP Event 71: Phil Hellmuth Wins 15th Career Bracelet in $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em!
- 72 2018 WSOP Event 72: Jordan Polk Wins $1,500 Mixed NLH/PLO for $197,461
- 73 2018 WSOP Event 73: Denis Timofeev Bests Leo Margets to Win the $1,000 Double Stack Turbo
- 74 2018 WSOP Event 74: Shaun Deeb Wins Second Bracelet of the Summer in $10,000 6-Max ($814,179)
- 75 2018 WSOP Event 75: Joe Cada Wins His Fourth Career Bracelet in The Closer ($612,886)
- 76 2018 WSOP Event 76: Brian Hastings Wins the $3,000 H.O.R.S.E and 4th Bracelet
- 77 2018 WSOP Event 77: Ben Yu Wins Third Bracelet in $50,000 High Roller $1,650,773