Esfandiari wins $18.3 million
Largest buy-in tournament in poker history attracts field of 48 players
$18,346,673.
It's a monumental number, the kind that only Manny Pacquiao, Floyd Mayweather and one or two other athletes will get in one lump payment throughout their careers. Now, you can add Antonio Esfandiari to that very limited list.

Esfandiari was one of 48 professional poker players and amateurs who put up $1 million each to participate in The Big One for One Drop, the Guy Laliberte brainchild that concluded Tuesday at the 2012 World Series of Poker. The 11.111 percent of the total entry fee that went to Laliberte's One Drop charity made the event an altruistic endeavor, but that was over and done with when the first cards were dealt on Sunday.
Through three days, Esfandiari glowed. He ran from table to table, joking with friends and seeming entirely at home in the largest-buy-in tournament in poker history. He seemed like a man who knew what awaited him.
"Yes, I did think [I'd win]," Esfandiari said as he basked in the afterglow of his victory. "I believed it, I declared it and I wanted to win even more since I took third [last week]. I was determined to come back and win."
Esfandiari entered the final day's play with a small chip lead over England's Sam Trickett, with whom he flip-flopped in the standings for most of the table play that was broadcast on ESPN. Malaysian businessman Richard Yong was eliminated during the first few hours of the final table. After the dinner break, 1978 world champion and City Center CEO Bobby Baldwin went out next in seventh and Esfandiari's close friend, Brian Rast, was stopped by Sam Trickett in sixth with a massive cooler.
As Esfandiari took out the event's creator, Guy Laliberte, A-K over Q-Q, he suddenly held a commanding chip lead. Phil Hellmuth's quest for his 13th bracelet ended with a fourth-place finish, and David Einhorn, a hedge fund manager who donated his prize purse to the education-focused non-profit City Year, finished third. In a match that many expected to see as the final table played out, it was Esfandiari versus Trickett for the $18.3 million. Esfandiari got Trickett all-in on a Jd-5d-5c board, holding 7d-5s for three of a kind. Trickett showed Qd-6d for a flush draw.
"My heart wasn't beating that hard actually," Esfandiari said, surprised. "I just went through the process and thought, 'Here we are. This is the moment. If you fade this flush draw, you win the biggest tournament in the history of the world. Please, Jesus, one time!' I think I used up my 'one times' in this tournament. I'm OK with that though."
Esfandiari got his one time. The diamond never came. The turn was 3h, the river 2h, and Esfandiari was the champion. He was immediately swarmed by his friends and family on stage.
In addition to the money, Esfandiari won a special edition platinum bracelet, which he immediately gave to his father. This was Esfandiari's second career WSOP title. With the $18,346,673 first prize, his total tournament winnings come to $23,245,828, the most any player has won in organized tournament history. Trickett's $10,112,001 consolation prize gives him a career total of $16,471,097, good for fourth all-time behind just Esfandiari, Erik Seidel and Phil Ivey. Trickett's cash was also the third largest single prize awarded in WSOP history behind Esfandiari and 2006 WSOP champion Jamie Gold. That the all-time standings were so effected indicates the true scope of this event.
"I think it had everything," said Mitch Garber, CEO of Caesars interactive Entertainment, Laliberte's partner in The Big One. "It had drama, charity, great poker, every major hand you could possibly see. We had a great final table, a terrific performance by businessmen and pros alike. We put on a fantastic show and raised $5.3 million for charity so, for me, it's a total success for everybody."
"For One Drop it was fantastic," Laliberte said. "What could I expect more than that? Antonio is a worthy champion. He was great. He scooped me. When you're running good, you're running good. Like I said at the opening of the tournament, I was already a winner."
For Esfandiari, the victory represents maturation. Finding poker celebrity at a young age, his penchant for partying became a major storyline in his life. "I did some self-awareness work, tried to put things in perspective," he said. "What was important, what wasn't important. Going out and partying all the time, it really didn't make me happy. I loved it, don't get me wrong, but I kind of grew out of it. I'm 33 now. I decided to live a better life. This WSOP, I decided I was going to be focused, wake up every day, go to the gym and win a bracelet. It's 100 percent the reason I won."
Many of Esfandiari's competitors noticed the change.
"The way he started out in poker, I didn't respect," Hellmuth said of Esfandiari after being eliminated in fourth place. "You know he'd bust Phil Ivey and start shouting, 'Hit the door!' and all this crazy stuff. You know, the early days. But he's come a long way, and he's actually turned into a really great guy. He's worked really hard on himself and he's turned into a great guy."
What of the Big One? With the phenomenal success it enjoyed and the interest it has inspired, Garber isn't shy about its future.
"You'll see it again," he asserted. "This is not about one-offs. I think that we've established that we can put on the greatest tournaments in the world, the highest buy-in events in the world, and that we can wrap in charity to those events as well. We'll do this again. It's a question of in what format, when and where. I think Guy and I need to spend some time thinking about it and we'll make a decision very quickly."
For Esfandiari, that's all down the road. With $18.3 million reasons to celebrate, he shared a shot of Jameson with friends on the WSOP's brightest stage. Even as you mature, you have to celebrate the greatest moments of your life.
Below are the complete results of Event 55 at the 2012 World Series of Poker:
Event 55: The Big One For One Drop
Buy-in: $1,000,000
Entries: 48
Prize pool: $42,666,672
Players in the money: 9
1. Antonio Esfandiari ($18,346,673)
2. Sam Trickett ($10,112,001)
3. David Einhorn ($4,352,000)
4. Phil Hellmuth ($2,645,333)
5. Guy Laliberté ($1,834,666)
6. Brian Rast ($1,621,333)
7. Bobby Baldwin ($1,408,000)
8. Richard Yong ($1,237,333)
9. Mike Sexton ($1,109,333)
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- July 16: The October Nine
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- July 4: Esfandiari wins $18.3 million
- July 3: One Drop Final Table
- July 2: One Drop Day 2 Update
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RESULTS AND SCHEDULE
- National Championship - Ryan Eriquezzo
- Event 60: $10,000 Lowball - Nick Schulman
- Event 59: $1,000 NLHE - Dominik Nitsche
- Event 58: $3,000 O8 - Viacheslav Zhukov
- Event 57: $10,000 6-max - Gregory Merson
- Event 56: $1,500 NLHE - Tomas Junek
- Event 55: Big One For One Drop - Antonio Esfandiari
- Event 54: $1,000 NLHE - Will Jaffe
- Event 52: $2,500 10-Game - Vanessa Selbst
- Event 51: $1,000 Ladies Championship - Yen Dang
- Event 46: $2,500 NLHE - Joey Weissman
- Event 45: $50,000 PPC - Michael Mizrachi
- Event 44: $1,000 NLHE - Rocco Palumbo
- Event 43: $1,500 NLHE - Henry Lu
- Event 42: $2,500 Mixed Split - Oleksii Kovalchuk
- Event 41: $3,000 NLHE - Greg Ostrander
- Event 40: $2,500 6-max LHE - Ronnie Bardah
- Event 39: $10,000 PLO - Jan-Peter Jachtmann
- Event 38: $1,500 NLHE - Dung Nguyen
- Event 37: $2,500 8-game - David Baker
- Event 36: $3,000 NLHE SO - Craig McCorkell
- Event 35: $2,500 MHE - Chris Tryba
- Event 34: $10,000 PLO - Naoya Kihara
- Event 33: $1,000 NLHE - Max Steinberg
- Event 32: $10,000 HORSE - David Baker
- Event 31: $1,500 NLHE - Carter Phillips
- Event 30: $1,500 Lowball - Larry Wright
- Event 29: $1,000 Seniors - Allyn Jaffrey Shulman
- Event 28: $2,500 4-max - Timothy Adams
- Event 27: $1,500 HORSE - Ylon Schwartz
- Event 26: $3,000 PLO - Gabe Scott
- Event 25: $1,500 LHE SO - Brian Meinders
- Event 24: $5,000 O/8 - Joe Cassidy
- Event 23: $3,000 6-Max NLHE - Simon Charette
- Event 22: $2,500 2-7 Lowball - Randy Ohel
- Event 21: $1,000 NLHE - Michael Gathy
- Event 20: $5,000 LHE - Benjamin Scholl
- Event 19: $1,500 NLHE - Clifford Goldkind
- Event 18: $2,500 Razz - Phil Hellmuth
- Event 17: $10,000 PLHE - Andy Frankenberger
- Event 16: $1,500 6-Max - Matt Matros
- Event 15: $5,000 SCS H/L - Adam Friedman
- Event 14: $1,500 Shootout - Brandon Schaefer
- Event 13: $1,500 LHE - David Arsht
- Event 12: $10,000 HU - Brian Hastings
- Event 11: $1,500 PLO - Vincent Van Der Fluit
- Event 10: $5,000 SCS- John Monnette
- Event 9: $1,500 Re-Entry - Ashkan Razavi
- Event 8: $1,500 O8- Herbert Tapscott
- Event 7: $1,500 SCS- Andy Bloch
- Event 5: $5,000 Mix-Max - Aubin Cazals
- Event 5: $1,500 PLHE - Nick Jivkov
- Event 4: $1,500 SCS H/L- Cory Zeidman
- Event 3: $3,000 HU NLHE/PLO - Leif Force
- Event 2: $1,500 NLHE - Brent Hanks
- Event 1: Casino Employees - Chiab Saechao
- All results: Complete Schedule and Results
POKER EDGE PODCAST
- July 17: The final table

- July 16: Day 6: Ladouceur, Strelitz, Gee

- July 15: Day 5: Somerville, Filippi, Keranen, Smigh, Jejelowo

- July 14: Day 4: Selbst, Baker, Volpe, Pollak

- July 13: Day 3: Boeree, Mizzi, Deeb, Smith, Luongo

- July 12: Day 2B: Esfandiari, Chan, O'Dea, Moorman

- July 11: Day 2A: Baldwin, Jett, Pollak, Lee

- July 10: Day 1C: Alexander, Force, Affleck

- July 9: Day 1B: Negreanu, Ho, Farha, Selbst, St. Pierre

- July 8: Day 1A: Pollak, Luongo

- July 6: Main event preview

- June 29: Mizrachi and Baker

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