Mohsin Charania Wins First World Series of Poker Bracelet and Completes Triple Crown

Card Player’s 2017 WSOP coverage is sponsored by BetOnline Poker.

The rules for winning poker’s Triple Crown got a little murky late last year when the European Poker Tour was rebranded as the PokerStars Championship series, but there’s no doubt that Mohsin Charania joined a very exclusive list of players when he won his first World Series of Poker bracelet Thursday night.

Charania, a 32-year-old poker pro from Chicago, topped a field of 1,580 in a $1,500 no-limit hold’em event at the 2017 summer series. The final 237 players made the money, divvying up the $2,133,000 prize pool. For his efforts, Charania took home $364,438, bringing his total live tournament earnings to more than $5.6 million.

To earn a Triple Crown, a player has to win a World Poker Tour main event, a WSOP bracelet, and an EPT or PokerStars Championship main event. The first player to win the Triple Crown was Gavin Griffin in 2008. He was followed by Roland De Wolfe, Jake Cody, Betrand Grospellier and Davidi Kitai.

Charania picked up his first title in 2012, taking down the EPT Grand Final in Monte Carlo. He followed that up by winning the 2013 WPT Grand Prix De Paris in France and the 2014 WPT Five Diamond World Poker Classic in Las Vegas, but the bracelet eluded him until his 45th cash in the series.

“This is pretty damn awesome,” Charania said in front of his raucous rail. “You’re kind of excited because you know that when you win a pot, everyone is going to cheer for you.”

Despite the relatively low buy-in, a number of well-known pros managed to make deep runs in the event, including Cary Katz (2nd), Andy Frankenberger (4th), Ian Steinman (7th), Rainer Kempe (15th), Philip Collins (16th), Jason Mercier (17th), Richard Seymour (24th), Kelly Minkin (26th) and Eugene Katchalov (35th).

Here is a look at the final table results.

Finish
Player Name
Payout
POY Points

1
Mohsin Charania
$364,438
1080

2
Cary Katz
$225,181
900

3
Brandon Ageloff
$161,844
720

4
Andy Frankenberger
$117,611
540

5
Mikhail Rudoy
$86,424
450

6
Samuel Phillips
$64,226
360

7
Ian Steinman
$48,276
270

8
Yanki Koppel
$36,708
180

9
Milan Simko
$28,239
90

For more coverage from the summer series, visit the 2017 WSOP landing page complete with a full schedule, news, player interviews and event recaps.

If you can’t make it down to the WSOP at the Rio, you can still play with BetOnline Poker. Click the banner below for more information. Card Player readers are eligible for an initial deposit bonus offer of 100 percent up to $2,500. Enter code ‘NEWBOL’

 

Source

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *