Allen Kessler Wins 4th WSOPC Ring; Daniel Lowery Claims 14th

Name Surname
Senior Editor U.S.
4 min read
allen kessler wsop poker

Allen Kessler was so thrilled with winning his fourth World Series of Poker Circuit (WSOPC) ring on Saturday that he forgot to tell the server to leave off the "green stuff" at his victory dinner.

The "Chainsaw" won his first WSOP anything tournament since midway through President Obama's second term when he took down the $400 buy-in Stud-8/Omaha-8 event at Graton Resort & Casino in Northern California. He beat out a field of 57 entrants for a $6,314 payday.

On Friday, Daniel Lowery, by winning the $1,125 buy-in Pot-Limit Omaha in the same series, tied Josh Reichard for third place all-time with 14 Circuit rings. One day earlier, Ari Engel won his 15th ring, which put him in a tie with Maurice Hawkins at the top.

Valentin Vornicu, who once held the record but hasn't won a ring since 2018, is now alone in fifth place with 12 rings. Lowery's win, good for $21,518, was his fourth of the year and he now has nearly $1.6 million in WSOPC cashes. The all-time top 10 standings are as follows:

PlacePlayerRings
1tAri Engel15
1tMaurice Hawkins15
3tJosh Reichard14
3tDaniel Lowery14
5Valentin Vornicu12
6tJeffrey Trudeau Jr.10
6tRobert Hankins10
6tMartin Ryan10
6tDavid Larson10
10tMichael Lech9
10tRoland Israelashvili9
10tJohn Holley9
10tAlexandru Masek9

Small But Proud Victory

The buy-in was relatively small, and the field even smaller. But it was clearly a proud moment for Kessler as he ended a nearly decade-long drought. Still, that didn't stop Shaun Deeb from raining on his parade.

The mixed game event champion defeated Wendy Freedman, who was also chasing her fourth ring, heads-up for the title. Graton Poker Room's X page shared a clip of the final hand in Stud-8 (video below). Kessler caught a nine-high straight and his opponent was unable to hit her straight draw on seventh street.

"Unbelievable," an enthusiastic four-time ring winner said after the final card was dealt before holding up eight fingers.

Kessler's response to Deeb's negative comment was that he can't control the buy-in or field size. "I just came here to play mixed events." The Chainsaw, who is often fixated on The Hendon Mob results, now has 456 cashes across all lifetime live poker tournaments, per the database he frequents, for a total of $4.3 million in cashes.

allen kessler wsop poker
Allen Kessler

He's still chasing his first World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet despite breaking the 100 cashes mark this past summer in bracelet events.

Kessler ranks sixth all-time in combined WSOP brand cashes with 236, trailing only Roland Israelashvili (432), Arkadiy Tsinis (345), Engel (291), Daniel Negreanu (245), and Ian Steinman (239).

Many of those players have racked up cashes in online Circuit and bracelet events, tournaments that Kessler of course considers "fake." The now four-time ring holder was quick to share a picture with his X followers of his celebratory dinner, and he didn't disappoint.

Presumably, the meal was paid for with casino comps (that's how the "Chainsaw" rolls), and no word on if he asked the waitperson to remake the dish without all that icky green stuff. For those who haven't followed Kessler's Twitter/X account the past few years, you've been missing out on some culinary masterpieces.

The WSOPC Graton Resort stop has completed 15 of its 20 scheduled ring events. On Friday, the $1,700 Main Event, a $500,000 guaranteed no-limit hold'em tournament, began. Day 1b took place on Saturday, and the tournament will conclude with the final table slated for Monday.

*Images courtesy of Hayley Hochstetler and 8131 Media

Share this article
author
Senior Editor U.S.

More Stories

Other Stories

Recommended for you

Allen Kessler Reaches 100 WSOP Cashes; How Does He Rank Among his Peers? Allen Kessler Reaches 100 WSOP Cashes; How Does He Rank Among his Peers?