Tyler Groth was the bring-in with the and Ian Shaw completed with the . Hani Awad called, as did Brendan Taylor and Daniel Ospina. Tyler Groth decided to call as well.
Tyler Groth: //
Ian Shaw: //
Daniel Ospina: //
Hani Awad: / - fold on fifth
Brendan Taylor: / - fold on fourth
On fourth street, action checked to Groth who led out with a bet. Shaw called as did Awad. Taylor folded then Ospina decided to call as well.
On fifth street, Ospina led out. Both Groth and Shaw called before Awad let it go. On sixth street, Groth was first to act, making a pair of deuces and he bet. Shaw called as did Ospina.
On seventh, Groth bet again. This time only Shaw called. Groth showed down his for a flush. Shaw showed his own for a flush as well, but Groth's flush was a bit higher, so he took down a massive pot.
William Shelton raised from the cutoff, Ian Shaw called from the small blind, and Hani Awad called from the big blind.
The flop came down and action checked to Shelton who bet his remaining 11,000. Shaw folded and Awad called with for trip jacks. Shelton trailed with and found no help from the turn and river to bust in seventh place.
Daniel Ospina raised on the button and from the big blind, David Brookshire called.
The flop was and Brookshire checked. Ospina bet. Brookshire then made it two bets. Ospina dropped into the tank and thought for a bit before making it three bets. Brookshire made it four bets and Ospina called.
The turn was the and Brookshire led out. Ospina moved all in and Brookshire called.
David Brookshire:
Daniel Ospina:
Both players had three tens but Ospina was in the lead with his better kicker. Brookshire would need to catch up on the river and he did when the rolled off, giving him a full house. That meant that Ospina would be eliminated in third place. For his run he collected $89,968.
From the button Brendan Taylor raised. David Brookshire called from the big blind.
"Let's see a flop," Brookshire said.
The flop was and Brookshire checked. Taylor bet. Brookshire made it two bets. Taylor made it three bets. Brookshire made it four bets and Taylor called all in for less.
David Brookshire:
Brendan Taylor:
Taylor flopped two pair, but Brookshire flopped the nuts with a straight. Brookshire needed to fade the board pairing to lock up his first bracelet and he did on the turn and the river. That meant that Taylor would be eliminated while Brookshire took down Event #46 winning $214,291 and his first gold bracelet.
For his second-place finish, Brendan Taylor collected $132,443.
David Brookshire already had a World Series of Poker Circuit ring on his résumé and now he has a WSOP gold bracelet to add to his mantle, winning Event #46: $2,500 Mixed Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better/Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or Better for a first-place prize of $214,291.
Brookshire denied Brandon Taylor his second bracelet after a fiercely contested heads-up battle, where he battled back from an 8:1 deficit in chips. The man from Baltimore, Maryland scored a key double up when he was freerolling for a scoop. With the low already locked up, he held four to a flush and slowly peeled his final card. He turned over a heart, giving him the double up that paved the way to his comeback victory.
"It's really emotional. It feels so good to win after Brendan had an 8:1 chip lead on me, and then coming back. Kind of felt like he had it in the bag and was praying real hard inside while I was playing. I felt really blessed to be able to make a comeback and pull out the win," Brookshire said after his stunning comeback.
Final Table Results
Place
Player
Country
Prize
1
David Brookshire
United States
$214,291
2
Brendan Taylor
United States
$132,443
3
Daniel Ospina
Colombia
$89,968
4
Ian Shaw
Mexico
$62,331
5
Tyler Groth
United States
$44,059
6
Hani Awad
United States
$31,789
7
William Shelton
United States
$23,421
8
Eric Rodawig
United States
$17,628
402 players took part in the event and after 10 levels of play on Day 1, Brookshire bagged a below average stack, ranking 106th of the 152 returning players the following day. It was a much different story on Day 2, however, as Brookshire steadily rose up the counts before seizing the chip lead after the dinner break when about 30 players remained. By night's end, Brookshire was ninth in chips out of the 15 players that were set to return on Day 3.
The first level of Day 3 saw Brookshire slide a bit, but in the second level he began to make his move up the leaderboard. By the time the players converged to one table, Brookshire was second in chips and maintained a comfortable stack. However, eventual runner-up Brendan Taylor soon began to seize control. Together, they held more than half the chips when six players remained, but Taylor went on a heater from there and soon held half the chips own his own when the field was down to five players.
It was at this point where Brookshire, who was second in chips, had to adjust his strategy. Taylor held more than 31 big bets while the remaining players held a combined 19. While Brookshire was second in chips, one misstep could have meant a fifth-place finish.
"He (Brendan Taylor) had the chip lead and was very good at leaning on the shorter stacks. He was making a lot of raises regardless of what his cards were and he was playing really well. There were a lot of hands I really wanted to play tonight, but I had to fold just because I wanted to hold my chip position. The pay jump is so different between fifth and second, and me being second in chips there were numerous times I had to lay down amazing hands that I really wanted to play just because of the stacks and the pay jumps."
Taylor eliminated Tyler Groth in fifth place and Ian Shaw in fourth place to extend his lead, while Brookshire eliminated 2018 bracelet winner Daniel Ospina in third place to set the stage for heads-up play. Brookshire was down more than 3:1 in chips and soon found himself down 8:1. The key scoop put him back in contention, and he never looked back from it.
As for his plans going forward, Brookshire hopes this win is the first step in more successes to follow.
"This is a great event. I love all the mixed-game events here, and now I'm going to have a bankroll to play them for the next few years. Hopefully, I'll be able to run it up. There's a lot of events I've missed because I can't afford to play them, and that's going to change right now."