Jonathan Tamayo Is the 2024 WSOP Main Event Champion

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18 Jul 2024
Site Editor 18 Jul 2024
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  • Jonathan Tamayo Wins 2024 WSOP Main Event
  • Defeats Jordan Griff Heads Up to win the $10m First Place Prize

WSOP 2024 Main Event Winner Jonathan Tamayo
Jonathan Tamayo, 2024 WSOP Main Event Winner (photo courtesy of WSOP)
Jonathan Tamayo Wins $10m, Becoming the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event Champion

The record breaking Main Event of the 55th Annual World Series of Poker has been won by Jonathan Tamayo, who claims his first WSOP bracelet and scoops the $10m first prize.

He was the shortest stacked of the three players who returned for the 10th and final day of the most prestigious poker tournament in history. However, he was not far behind his two rivals, Jordan Griff and Niklas Astedt, as less than 9 big blinds separated them as play commenced.

Although it was the biggest Main Event in history, with 10,112 entries, it is not the biggest first prize, as changes to the prize structure were made before the start of the 2024 series. It is in fact $2.1m less than Daniel Weinman won in 2023 and $2m less than Jamie Gold won in 2006.

How the Final Day of the 2024 WSOP Main Event Unfolded

The last three players all started with similar stacks:

  • Niklas Astedt (Sweden) - 223m
  • Jonathan Tamayo (USA) - 197m 
  • Jordan Griff (USA) - 187m

It was a perfectly balanced way to start, with the last three final table protagonists including one of the best online tournament players ever (Astedt), a professional grinder (Tamayo) and an enthusiastic amateur (Griff) playing the game of his life. 

To be fair, it’s the game of their lives for all three players, as very few players have managed to make it this far more than once and especially with growing field size, even harder to achieve in future.

The early exchanges saw Griff and Astedt lock horns, trading the chip lead on more than one occasion in the first half dozen hands of the day. Tamayo then played a couple of pots, by which time Jordan had started frequently employing the all-in re-raise tactic.

Niklas Astedt Exits in 3rd Place for $4m

Just nine hands after play began Astedt and Griff tangled again in a big hand. With blinds at 2m/4m and  big blind ante of 4m, the Swedish online phenom made it the minimum 8m to play. Griff raised it up to 28m and Astedt called, after which they saw a flop of 1093.

Griff led out with another 28m sized bet, which was also called, upon which the J was dealt as the turn card. Griff moved all in on this board for his remaining 159m chips, which just had Astedt covered. 

After a long dive into the tank, the Swedish online pro, known online as Lena900 finally made the call, tabling KJand instantly regretting his decision to call when he was shown 99 His very professional top pair was no match for the amateur set of nines, which sent him to the rail tail between his legs, but ultimately $4m richer for the experience.

Heads Up For the WSOP Main Event Title

With Astedt eliminated and Griff being the beneficiary of his entire stack, the amateur player from Illinois went into the heads up stage with a considerable chip lead, possessing 432m chips to Tamayo’s 175m, with Tamayo barely having played a hand to conclusion at this point. 

They were still fairly deep at this stage, with Jordan’s stack representing more than 100 big blinds, but

Buoyant after dispatching Astedt, Griff came out firing and betting big in the first few hands against Tamayo. However these hands went against him and he ended up relinquishing the chip lead to Tamayo within four hands. 

Play then slowed down with a series of cautious hands before Tamayo began to increase his lead and within twenty hands of heads up play he had reversed the chip counts they had begun the final stage of the tournament with.

Just as it looked like Tamayo would pull even further ahead, Griff began a fight back, which resulted in him retaking the chip lead after a double up with J6 on a Q65J board. Tamayo had AJ and could have won the Main Event there and then, but the river was no help, propelling Griff back into a narrow chip lead.

Once again the amateur player was radiant at having taken the lead and rode the wave further to establish a healthy lead. Several hands into this period of Griff dominance it was his turn to be one board away from the title, as Tamayo found himself all-in with KT off-suit to Griff’s pocket sevens. However Tomayo flopped a straight and in doubling, he moved into a slender lead in the chip charts.

Tomayo once again began to establish a decent chip lead, but after the first break of the session, Griff once again won a massive pot, with pocket sixes versus A8 off-suit, to reestablish himself at the top of the table.

However just a fee hands later Tamayo managed to double up again, to once again even up the chip counts and he then moved into the lead a few hands later. 

It was always looking likely that a big hand would settle this tournament and that did indeed turn out to be the way it ended. In the final hand, Jonathan Tamayo raised to 12.5m, which Jordan Griff called.

The flop was 983, to which Tamayo led out a 10m bet. Griff upped the stakes to 40m, Tamayo shoved and Griff called, for his last 230m chips.

Jordan had 96 for top pair on the flop, however Jonathan had flopped two pair, holding 83. The A and 5 on the turn and river did not change anything and on that note, the tournament was brought to an end, with Jonathan Tamayo winning his first bracelet and an eight figure payday of $10,000,000.

Griff will be disappointed after the rollercoaster he has ridden took his so close to the title, but $6m in prize money is a pretty decent consolation prize!

Finishing PositionPlayerPayoutCountry
1Jonathan Tamayo$10,000,000United States
2Jordan Griff$6,000,000United States
3Niklas Astedt$4,000,000Sweden
4Jason Sagle$3,000,000Canada
5Boris Angelov$2,500,000Bulgaria
6Andres Gonzalez$2,000,000Spain
7Brian Kim$1,500,000United States
8Joe Serock$1,250,000United States
9Malo Latinois$1,000,000France

Reactions are Not Always Equal or Opposite

Jonathan Tamayo has an interesting and unique story that led him to the pinnacle of the game, becoming the WSOP Main Event Champion. Although this was his first Main Event final table, he had previously run deep in the Main Event, finishing in 21st place in 2008 for $350,000. 

He is also no stranger to the winners circle, as he has captured four WSOPC gold rings during his career and had amassed over $2.3m in live tournament winnings, prior to this year’s Main Event.

He has been very humble throughout the latter stages of the tournament, repeating on more than one occasion how happy he was to have gotten this far again, that he never expected to go deep again in his lifetime. 

He described the situation as like a dream, not reality and that he is still surprised at what has happened. But it is not the first time that Jonathan has celebrated success on the Main Event Final table. 

In 2015, Tamayo’s room-mate Joe McKeehan won the title and Jonathan was not only on the rail to support him, but credits his role in McKeehan’s victory as being the ‘Defensive Coordinator of the 2015 World Champion.’

This time it was McKeehan on the rail and he was the first person to congratulate Tamayo, along with Dominik Nitsche, who may well have been coordinating some aspects of Tamayo’s strategy this time.

Tamayo has recorded all his end of Day chip counts with a photo of his bagged up stack on his Twitter page. Today he simply posted the winning ticket that the floor person handed him.




The Guy With the Best Name Won

In the end, it came down to Jordan v Jonathan and a heads-up battle of biblical proportions, as not one, not two, but three floods changed the landscape during the final encounter. They may have gone into the WSOP Ark two-by-two, but in the end, there could be only one survivor and that honour went to the player with the best first name. Congratulations Jonathan,

Yours sincerely, 

Jonathan

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