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June 12, 2014 11:00 amChris Wallace Poker
![Chris Chris](/uploads/1/3/6/9/136950353/524291506.jpg)
Minnesota resident Christopher Wallace has won the $10,000 World Series of Poker H.O.R.S.E. championship (Event #22), after besting a field of 200 players over three days on his way to capturing a prestigious gold bracelet, and collecting the $507,614 first place prize. Following his impressive victory at the Rio in Las Vegas, the 40-year-old poker pro, said:
“If I was going to pick an event to win, this would be it. It feels great.It wasn’t intimidating for me. I know that I can beat a lot of these players. Having made a living off beating red name pros on Full Tilt, that got me over the star struck thing and the fear of good players.”
The specialized event attracted a small but tough field of pros to create a prize pool worth $1,880,000. Amongst those players then seeing a return on their $10k investment was Greg Mueller in 23rd ($18,254), Daniel Negreanu in 18th ($18,254), Bertran ‘ElkY’ Grospellier in 16th ($21,958), Justin Bonomo in 15th ($21,958), Nick Schulman in 14th ($26,432) and David Benyamine in 11th ($32,430).
Coming into the final table of eight, Chris Wallace’s best live tournament score was a 1st place finish in 2012 at the $275 Nightmare Hallow-Scream Tournament for $27,650. This time around the stakes were significantly higher for Wallace, who was then able to reach heads-up play against Randy Ohel with both players fairly even in chips.
Soon after, however, Wallace managed to pull away to a 5-to-1 lead before making a full house when his opponent had trips, to send Randy Ohel to the rails in a runner-up position worth $313,715. Meanwhile, Chris Wallace was awarded the bracelet and more than half a million dollars in prize money. Commenting after his triumph, Wallace explained:
“We got to five-handed and I thought ‘This is great. I’ve made a lot of money. Then we we got to three-handed, I knew I was going to be really angry if I didn’t win. You get to that point and you can see half a million dollars from there. And then you got to have it. If I had ended up second, I’d be pretty mad right now. This is such a big change for me.”
Final Table Results:
1 Chris Wallace – $507,614
2 Randy Ohel – $313,715
3 Richard Sklar – $206,499
4 Richard Ashby – $150,625
5 Max Pescatori – $112,066
6 Lee Goldman – $84,844
7 Bill Chen – $65,273
8 Calvin Anderson – $50,966
“If I was going to pick an event to win, this would be it. It feels great.It wasn’t intimidating for me. I know that I can beat a lot of these players. Having made a living off beating red name pros on Full Tilt, that got me over the star struck thing and the fear of good players.”
The specialized event attracted a small but tough field of pros to create a prize pool worth $1,880,000. Amongst those players then seeing a return on their $10k investment was Greg Mueller in 23rd ($18,254), Daniel Negreanu in 18th ($18,254), Bertran ‘ElkY’ Grospellier in 16th ($21,958), Justin Bonomo in 15th ($21,958), Nick Schulman in 14th ($26,432) and David Benyamine in 11th ($32,430).
Coming into the final table of eight, Chris Wallace’s best live tournament score was a 1st place finish in 2012 at the $275 Nightmare Hallow-Scream Tournament for $27,650. This time around the stakes were significantly higher for Wallace, who was then able to reach heads-up play against Randy Ohel with both players fairly even in chips.
Soon after, however, Wallace managed to pull away to a 5-to-1 lead before making a full house when his opponent had trips, to send Randy Ohel to the rails in a runner-up position worth $313,715. Meanwhile, Chris Wallace was awarded the bracelet and more than half a million dollars in prize money. Commenting after his triumph, Wallace explained:
“We got to five-handed and I thought ‘This is great. I’ve made a lot of money. Then we we got to three-handed, I knew I was going to be really angry if I didn’t win. You get to that point and you can see half a million dollars from there. And then you got to have it. If I had ended up second, I’d be pretty mad right now. This is such a big change for me.”
Final Table Results:
1 Chris Wallace – $507,614
2 Randy Ohel – $313,715
3 Richard Sklar – $206,499
4 Richard Ashby – $150,625
5 Max Pescatori – $112,066
6 Lee Goldman – $84,844
7 Bill Chen – $65,273
8 Calvin Anderson – $50,966
![Chris Chris](/uploads/1/3/6/9/136950353/912290229.jpg)
Chris Wallace Poker
Who Is Chris “Fox” Wallace? Want to learn more about Chris “Fox” Wallace? Learn about his poker history here: Where is your original hometown, and where do you call home now? I was raised in various cities all over the state of Michigan. I left Michigan for Minnesota in 1997. I split my time now between Vegas and Minnesota depending on. Chris Wallace believes that live tournament poker’s current model is broken. In most other forms of professional competition, sponsorship dollars help pay for the events to take place and players earn winnings from sponsor-provided prize pools. The iNinja Poker Tour owner believes poker. A preview of what LinkedIn members have to say about Chris: Chris is simply one of the best poker coaches and players working today. I've seen him take numerous losing players and turn them into. Chris Wallace then shoved from the five-seat with A♥Q♥. Chris “Fox” Wallace from St. Paul, Minnesota is a professional poker player, poker coach and widely respected theorist and author on the game. Illingworth in the six-seat looked down and amazingly found aces. He had Harvey and Wallace covered when he made the call. Poker regeln wann split pot pea soup. Chris 'Fox' Wallace is a WSOP Bracelet winner and great friend of RecPoker. He has authored 'No Limits, The Fundamentals of No-Limit Hold'em' and more recently, 'Short Stack Ninja: Tournament Strategy From A Professional Poker Coach' which is the book for the next RecPoker book study.