
Thomas Bihl, first WSOPE bracelet winner
The first round in the new battle for global poker bragging rights goes to Europe, thanks to Thomas “Buzzer” Bihl who made poker history today at the inaugural World Series of Poker Europe Presented by BetfairPoker.
Bihl, a native of Frankfurt, Germany, who started playing poker just four years ago, won £70,875 and the first-ever WSOP bracelet awarded outside the United States. Bihl – who is a Betfairpoker sponsored professional player – outlasted a field of the world’s top poker pros in one of the most challenging of all poker games, the £2,500 HORSE championship that kicked off the inaugural WSOP Europe.
“Thomas Bihl has earned a place in poker history with this incredible win,” said WSOP Commissioner Jeffrey Pollack. “The fact that he is a Betfair player, when Betfair is our presenting sponsor, makes this even sweeter.”
“He’s a world class player,” said Betfair’s Head of Poker Ben Fried. “I am thrilled for him on a personal level because he has been working hard for this but it is also great news for Betfair and European poker players in general.”
Two-time World Series of Poker winner and Nevada native Jennifer Harman finished a disappointing second after relinquishing a two-to-one chip lead to Bihl, who played a quiet waiting game for most of the 13-hour final table. Harman had hoped to add a third WSOP bracelet to her total today at the 2007 WSOP Europe.
Bihl emerged victorious in the three-day HORSE event – a tournament featuring five variations of poker – at 4:15 a,m. GMT at The Casino at The Empire in London, capturing the £70,875 first-place prize and a coveted WSOP gold bracelet made by luxury Swiss watchmaker CORUM.
Up to today’s event, the 32-year-old Bihl had won $132,226 in official prize money in his four-year career. The event was the eighth major-tournament final table for Harman, whose official career winnings totaled $1,557,372 leading up to this competition. She has won millions more in the world’s biggest cash games in the course of a professional poker career that began two decades ago in her hometown of Reno, Nevada.
WSOP bracelet winner Kirk Morrison finished third, winning £28,250. Five-time World Series of Poker bracelet winner Chris Ferguson finished fourth, adding £21,656, or more than $42,000, to his career earnings of $5,551,650. Russian phenom Alex Kravchenko collected £17,714 for fifth place, while Yuval Bronshtein won £14,438 for sixth, Joe Beevers £11,812 for seventh and Gary Jones £9,118 for eighth. In all, the top 16 of the 105 entrants won £262,500 in prize money.
An hour before the HORSE final table began, 156 of the world’s top players anted up £5,000 pounds to play in the WSOP Europe Pot-Limit Omaha championship. The WSOP Europe HORSE and Pot-Limit Omaha tournaments established record prize pools.
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