Winners of Non-WSOP Poker Tournaments Who Made Splashes in 2017

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Late December is a slow time for poker tournaments, as players tend to spend time with family and friends over the holidays. They’re content to wait for the New Year, which brings about series such as the PCA and Aussie Millions. Now that we’re into 2018, we thought we’d look back at those who won non-WSOP poker tournaments throughout 2017.

Jason Koon, Bryn Kenney and Steffen Sontheimer were just a few of the players who won non-WSOP poker tournaments in 2017. (Image: PokerStars & Poker Central)

Big Names, Bigger Scores

Arguably the most prestigious non-WSOP poker tournament was the third annual $300,000 Super High Roller Bowl. The event drew 56 players, and in the end German player Christoph Vogelsang, who goes by “Tight-Man1” online, came out on top to win a smooth $6 million.

One of the hottest players in 2017 was Bryn Kenney, who kicked off the year by winning the PokerStars Championship Bahamas $25K Shot Clock for $392,876.

Kenney then went on to win the Aria Super High Roller 17 for $300,000, PokerStars Championship Monte Carlo Super High Roller for a career-high $1,946,911, and the Poker Masters Event #3: $50,000 NLHE for $960,000.

Speaking of the Poker Masters, Steffen Sontheimer absolutely destroyed that series cashing four of five events (he made final tables in each but money bubbled one) and winning two of them. All told he won $2,733,000 and became the first “Master of Poker.” In addition, he had two wins back in July taking down the Bellagio High Roller 13 and Poker EM Velden Super High Roller for $111,648 and $501,183 respectively.

In October, Poker Hall of Famer John Juanda showed his career was far from over by winning the Triton Super High Roller Series Macau Main Event for $2,870,092, his largest win ever.

Meanwhile, Adrian Mateos continued to add to his Poker Hall of Fame worthy résumé. First, he won the PokerStars Championship Monte Carlo €50K Shot Clock for $988,824, and then in late October won the 2017 ACOP Macau Mini High Roller for $297,927. That doesn’t even include all he did at the WSOP, such as winning his third bracelet.

Worldwide Winners

At the beginning of 2017, Shurane “Shaz” Vijayaram experienced a life-changing score in the land down under. The Melbourne local managed to win the Southern Hemisphere’s most prestigious tournament, the Aussie Millions, for $1.6 million.

Season XVI of the World Poker Tour crowned its fair share of champions in 2017, but no one made more of an impact than Art Papazyan. In August, he and Phil Hellmuth were the last two players out of a 763-entry field in the WPT Legends of Poker. Hellmuth was seeking his first WPT title, but Papazyan denied him history. The “Poker Brat” had to settle for second place and a $364,370 consolation prize, while Papazyan won the title and $668,692.

A little more than a month later, Papazyan was at it again, this time at the WPT Maryland Live! It was there he bested a 561-entry field to win his second WPT title and $389,405 more in prize money.

While the current season bleeds into 2018, it appears Papazyan will earn WPT Season XVI Player of the Year honors.

Another player who did well this year was Jason Koon. In 2016, he won $2,890,926 playing tournament poker, and he somehow managed to better that in 2017 with nearly $3.9 million in winnings. A big chunk of that, $1,650,300 to be exact, came back in January when he won the PokerStars Championship Bahamas $100K Super High Roller. In April, he won the Aria High Roller 71 for $324,000, and in September claimed $300,000 for winning the $50,000 Rumble with Jungle SNG Event on “Poker After Dark.”



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