Team Savakinas Reign Supreme in WSOP Tag Team Event ($190,662)

After three days of play, Michael Savakinas and Satoshi Tanaka were the last duo standing after they topped the record setting field in Event #51: $1,000 Tag Team at the 2023 World Series of Poker.

The members of Team Savakinas bagged their first WSOP bracelets and took home the first-place prize of $190,662.

The event gathered 1,282 teams and 193 of them secured the $1,602 min-cash. Team Savakinas started Day 3 as a short stack but were able to nav and managed to cruise to the 10-handed final table with 23 big blinds. Michael Savakinas and Satoshi Tanaka each took their turn, making their way through the final heads-up battle to secure the victory.

Tanaka attributed their natural chemistry as friends as one of the main keys to their success. “I think we get along outside of poker too, so naturally, if things go wrong in poker, we help each other out.”

Tanaka also mentioned that their strategy of how often they tagged in and out gave them an advantage. “When the final table started, we decided to switch on the levels, and I think that gave us an edge because no one else was doing that.”

Event #51: $1,000 Tag Team Final Table Payouts

Place Team/Players Country Prize
1 Michael Savakinas – Satoshi Tanaka United States $190,662
2 Vincent Moscati – Tanner Bibat United States $117,872
3 Jonah LaBranche – Dustin Wills United States $85,040
4 Rickey Evans – Roberto Valdez United States $62,090
5 John Ventre – Kenneth Gallo United States $45,884
6 Marcus Stein – Amber Donatelli United States $34,326
7 David Williams – Theo Tran United States $26,000
8 Carlos Inukai – Emmaniel Avila United States $19,942
9 Justin Pechie – Ronnie Bardah United States $15,492
10 Ramon Kropmanns – Jessica Serial Brazil $12,190

Final Day Action

Just 26 duos came back for the final day, and the action was hectic, with the final table being quickly established.

Ramon Kropmanns and Jessica Serial of Team Kropmanns, the only non-American team among the final table, finished in tenth place just before known grinders Justin Pechie and Ronnie Bardah of Team Pechie.

As the players moved to the feature table, a rail started to form to create a fun atmosphere which is ever present in this unique event.

Team Inukai (Carlos InukaiEmmaniel Avila) and Team Williams (David WilliamsTheo Tran) were the next to exit. Six-handed play lasted for a while before Team Stein (Marcus SteinAmber Donatelli) were eliminated.

Team Ventre (John VentreKenneth Gallo) lost a crucial flip against Team Moscati (Vincent MoscatiTanner Bibat), which allowed the latter to shoot of the chip counts.

Team Evans (Rickey EvansRoberto Valdez) took fourth place and Team Moscati held the lead when Jonah LaBranche of Team LaBranche (Jonah LaBranche – Dustin Wills) decided to put his stack in with king-seven of diamonds. He ran into aces, and Team Moscati started the heads-up battle with a huge advantage.

Heads-up play remarkably turned into an epic back-and-forth battle, with Team Savakinas staring down a four-to-one chip lead and at one point being down as much as eight-to-one. However, after three straight double-ups, Team Savakinas evened it up and won the next two all-in confrontations to seal the victory.

Sharelines

Leave a Reply