Instant Header

MGM National Harbor Potomac Poker Open

February 5, 2025
CURRENT HOSTS: Jeremy Geist, Paul Oresteen
Updates
Chip Counts
Payouts
Event Info
February 27, 2025
Jeremy Geist, Paul Oresteen
See latest posts
|
Load more recent posts

Seunghyun Nam and Nolan Hanessian chop, Nam takes trophy

Event 10 - $3,000 Main Event

Seunghyun Nam winner Seunghyun Nam winner
Danny Maxwell Photography - DMP

Day 3 of the 2025 Potomac Winter Poker Open $3,000 Main Event returned eight players from the 401 entrants in the event on Monday afternoon. The final table played out over seven hours before Seunghyun Nam and Nolan Hanessian got heads-up, virtually even in chips and they split the prizepool nearly evenly, with Nam edging out Hanessian for the trophy.

Nam earned $190,512 and Hanessian signed for $187,878. The ICM calculations resulted in only a $2,634 difference between them. After the deal Nam said, “My flight leaves in two hours, I’m not sure if I’m going to make it.”

“The tournament was great, I had a lot of fun,” Nam said. “I tried to play well, I ran really well and I’m super happy with the result. I had a big stack during the end of the tournament, and I was trying to take spots and be aggressive.”

“Everyone at the table played well, but luck was on my side today,” he added.

“I don’t have many live tournaments, I play mostly cash,” Hanessian said. “But it still feels good. It’s my biggest score ever.” He plays mostly No Limit Hold’em and Pot Limit Omaha in the region but claims to be much worse at Big O.

The first elimination came in the first orbit before players even settled in. Brady Bash shoved holding , Danny Fish called with , the boar ran queen-high and the better ace won.

Adron Countryman was short-stacked from the start of the day and his final hand came in a cooler. He had pocket aces, bet the whole way and Hanessian had him beat with a turned set of nines.

Five minutes later, Hanesessian open-shoved, Jeremy Rodriguez called off holding and Hanessian had . Rodriguez turned a Broadway draw but missed and Hanessian’s ace-high was good enough to send Rodriguez to the payout cage.

Next to go was Peruvian-Japanese Alfonso Yamakawa when he shipped his stack all in from the small blind with a weak ace and Nam called in the big blind with . The board ran nine-high, Yamakawa ran out of outs and was done in fifth place.

Danny Fisher took the ugliest beat of the final table – and maybe of the tournament. He three-bet shoved preflop with two black aces and Hannessian called with two red sevens. The flop came eight high, a rag on the turn but Hannessian spiked the on the river. Fisher’s aces were cracked, he still shook the remaining players’ hands and left the area.

Three-handed play stretched out over almost four levels with each player taking a turn with the chip lead. The short stack seemed to double up umpteen times before Chris Carusso lost with Broadway cards and was eliminated in third place. He moved in with , Hanessian called with and he never improved.

As Carusso was filling out his paperwork, Hanessian and Nam agreed to an ICM chop as their stacks were virtually even. Nam came out on top to earn the trophy and nearly $200,000. Their stacks were so close, that there was only a $2,634 difference between the two spots.

Final Table Payouts

  1. Seunghyun Nam - $190,512*
  2. Nolan Hanessian - $187,878*
  3. Chris Caruso - $100,215
  4. Danny Fisher - $66,695
  5. Alfonso Yamakawa - $51,230
  6. Jeremy Rodriguez - $42,495
  7. Adron Countryman - $35,675
  8. Brady Bash - $28,960

*denotes heads up deal

Main Event Winner

Seung Hyun Nam takes home the trophy and $190,512.

Nam and Hanessian have agreed to a deal

Seung Hyun Nam Seung Hyun Nam
Nolan Hanessian Nolan Hanessian

The two remaining players in Event #10: $3,000 Potomac Winter Poker Open Main Event have just agreed to an ICM Chop.

Seung Hyun Nam takes the trophy and a slightly larger portion of the prize pool with a payout of $190,512. 

Nolan Hanessian takes home $187,878.

Play has stopped, Seung Hyun Nam is your champion.

Full recap coming soon.

Chris Caruso eliminated in 3rd place ($100,215)

Event 10 - $3,000 Main Event Day 3

Blinds: 150,000/300,000/300,000 - 1 remain

Chris Caruso Chris Caruso

Chris Caruso jammed button for about 425,000 before getting called by Nolan Hanessian in the big blind. The cards hit their backs with Caruso at risk.

  • Chris Caruso:
  • Nolan Hanessian:

The full board ran out , and Caruso was sent to the rail in third place for a career high score.

Nolan Hanessian and Seung Huyn Nam are now heads up for the title.

Watch
WSOP Main Event 2024 FINAL TABLE - A Champion is Crowned [$10,000,000 FIRST PRIZE]
Expand
Move
CloseClose
arrow-right
arrow-left
Watch
Tom Dwan's big pots : The Biggest Pot EVER Televised
Expand
Move
CloseClose
arrow-right
arrow-left