It took until the final event of the series, but one man won his bracelet bet against Daniel Negreanu, and that man’s name is Connor Drinan.

Ahead of the tandem World Series of Poker (WSOP) series on WSOP.com and GGPoker, Drinan was always going to be Negreanu’s biggest problem, especially after a year that saw him collect a record five Spring Championships of Online Poker (SCOOP) titles on PokerStars.

But boy did Drinan leave it late.

Event #83: $10,000 Super MILLION$ saw the $5m guarantee pale into insignificance as 899-entrants turned up for the final WSOP hurrah of the 2020 season, and Drinan placed a clean white pillow over the heads of the last six players suffocating the lot on his way to a $1.4m payday, and a $100,000 flick of the wrist from Negreanu.

It was the 37th time that Drinan had made money in a WSOP bracelet event and his seventh final table. Before this win, he had finished ninth in Event #75: $300 Double Stack No Limit Hold’em (3,552 entrants), and seventh in Event #50: $2,100 No Limit Hold’em Bounty (1168 entrants), both on GGPoker. He also finished sixth in Event #13: $1,500 No Limit Hold’em (649-entrants) on WSOP.com.

Drinan has also made three final tables in Las Vegas finishing 4/516 in a 2013 $5,000 No Limit Hold’em 6-Handed event, 4/815 in a 2015 $1,500 Pot Limit Omaha Hi/Lo 8 or Better, and 7/1117 in the same event in 2019.

It was a final table with a lot of class.

Chris Oliver is a former PocketFives World #1 with more than $13.3m in online earnings, who in 2011 picked up $1.8m for finishing second to Galen Hall in the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure (PCA) Main Event.

Sylvain Loosli finished fourth in the 2013 WSOP Main Event for $2.8m and was appearing in his third final table after finishing 5/113 in a €25,000 No Limit Hold’em event at the 2017 World Series of Poker Europe (WSOPE). Chris Kruk appeared in his third WSOP final table after finishing 3/400 in a $3,000 No Limit Hold’em Shootout in 2016, and 8/109 in the 2018 $10,000 Limit 2-7 Lowball Triple Draw Championship.

Suraj Mishra also brought the heat, booking a sixth-place finish for $288,836 a hop, skip and a jump away from finishing runner-up to Ivan Zufic in the 15,205-entrant $500 Mini Main Event for $586,157

Here are the final table results.

Results

  1. Connor Drinan – $1,423,049
  2. Daniyar Aubakirov – $1,041.414
  3. Viktor Ustimov – $755,754
  4. Chris Oliver – $548,450
  5. Sylvain Loosli – $398,010
  6. Suraj Mishra – $288,836
  7. Chris Kruk – $209,609
  8. Arsenii Malinov – $152,113
  9. Kenneth Smaron – $110,389

Three other high rollers who went deep into this thing before turning into David Bowie’s ashes were Elior Sion (23rd), Joao Vieira (26th), and Sam Trickett (27th).

Fedor Holz

Fedor Holz has earned a second career bracelet on the final day of the World Series of Poker (WSOP) Online Series on GGPoker. The GGPoker Ambassador conquered a field of 127-entrants in Event #79: $25,000 Heads-Up No-Limit Hold’em to win the sliver of gold and $1m first prize.

Holz is a modern-day legend of the felt racking up more than $32.5m in live tournament earnings, and countless millions more playing online multi-table tournaments (MTTs).

The German All-Time #1 Live Tournament Money Earner is one of those strange beasts who seem capable of winning the lot in both realms. He is a multiple PocketFives World #1, and in 2014 he won the World Championships of Online Poker (WCOOP) Main Event for $1.3m.

The last time Holz appeared in an ITM list of a WSOP event came in 2018 when he finished runner-up to Justin Bonomo in the $1m buy-in Big One for One Drop for $6m. Holz defeated Bonomo en route to this win, and the man Bonomo beat for the 2018 $10,000 No Limit Hold’em Heads-Up bracelet, Jason Mcconnon, also had a deep run, making the final eight.

Holz defeated Bruno Botteon in the final bracket. Botteon finished 6/407 in the $25,000 No Limit Hold’em Poker Players Championship. There was also a third deep run in the GGPoker series for Sergi Reixach. The Spaniard made it to the final four in this one, adding to his 7/328 in the $5,000 Pot Limit Omaha Championship, and 3/301 in the $10,000 Short Deck No Limit Hold’em Championship.

Here are the results of the last four.

Results

Final

Fedor Holz ($1,077,025) beats Brunno Botteon ($622,300)

Semi-Finals

Brunno Botteon beats Oktay Kahyaoglu ($311,150)

Fedor Holz beats Sergi Reixach ($311,150)

Fedor Holz’s Run

Round of 128 – Luc Greenwood
Round of 64 – Anton Morgenstern
Round of 32 – Robert Flink
Round of 16 – George Wolff
Round of 8 – Justin Bonomo
Round of 4 – Sergi Reixach
Round of 2 – Bruno Botteon

2020 WSOP Online: Bryan Piccioli Leads Final 38-Players in The WSOP Main Event

In 2017, moments after falling in sixth place in the World Series of Poker (WSOP) Main Event for $1.675m, Bryan Piccioli told reporters, “I’ve always dreamed of making it here. When I started playing poker, it was my dream to make the Main Event final table. I always knew that if I made it, I would have an incredible support group with me, and they lived up to expectations and beyond. They’ve been amazing.”

I wonder how they will all fit inside his house?

Piccioli is the chip leader with 38-players remaining in Event #77: $5,000 No Limit Hold’em Main Event at the WSOP Online Series on GGPoker. The event attracted an astonishing 5,082-entrants, smashing the $25m guarantee, and creating the largest prizepool in online multi-table tournament (MTT) history ($27,559,500).

At the start of Day 2, there were 1,171 players in the mist, but by the time birdsong broke, only 38-remained with Piccioli looking to make his second WSOP Main Event Final Table, albeit two very different types of table.

Piccioli isn’t the only known player in the mix. Stefan Schillabel has come out of retirement to snatch a 15th place spot, and high stakes star Chris Brewer sits in 27th. Online stars Benjamin Rolle (8th) and Samuel Vousden (29th) are also in contention, as are fellow bracelet winners Michael Lech (30th) and Arkadiy Tsinis (34th).

Here are the chip counts.

Chip Counts

  1. Bryan Piccioli – 18,417,494
  2. Michal Kane – 15,907,969
  3. Stoyan Madanzhiev – 15,299,783
  4. Kellyyy – 13,108,575
  5. Criag Timmis – 12,809,181
  6. Dinesh Alt – 11,681,173
  7. TiroGiro – 11,116,489
  8. Benjamin Rolle – 10,789,181
  9. HappyDX – 10,553,281
  10. Joao Santos – 10,433,786
  11. Tyler Cornell – 10,152,249
  12. Dingxiang Ong – 9,320,927
  13. Xuming Qi – 8,842,916
  14. WhyEsEi – 8,635,342
  15. Stefan Schillhabel – 8,412,841
  16. Satoshi Ismoae – 8,359,674
  17. Maicon Gasperin – 8,171,017
  18. Joshua Mccully – 7,906,110
  19. Tyler Rueger – 7,692,938
  20. Tzai Wei Phua – 7,338,038
  21. Martin Arce – 6,131,772
  22. Jonas Lauck – 6,118,751
  23. Avidan Cohen – 5,880,731
  24. Manuel Saavedra – 5,847,283
  25. Lucas Tabarin – 5,695,282
  26. Phachara Wongwichit – 5,135,525
  27. Chris Brewer – 4,908,096
  28. Julien Perouse – 4,866,548
  29. Samuel Vousden – 4,241,694
  30. Michael Lech – 4,192,636
  31. Thomas Ward – 4,083,422
  32. Mateusz Rypulak – 4,079,246
  33. Ricky Tang – 3,397,845
  34. Arkadiy Tsinis – 2,394,386
  35. Freek Scholten – 2,248,788
  36. Julian Stuer – 2,111,979
  37. Aleksandr Trofimov – 1,602,207
  38. Evgeny Galakhov – 958,516

And payouts.

Payouts

  1. $3,904,686
  2. $2,748,605
  3. $1,928,887
  4. $1,353,634
  5. $949,937
  6. $666,637
  7. $467,825
  8. $328,305
  9. $230,395

The bracelet for the $25,000 No Limit Hold ’em Poker Player’s Championship is currently sealed in a DHL bag heading to the home of Christian Rudolph. The German star overcame a 407-entrant field to win the $1.8m first prize.

Coming into the event, Jason Koon had all of the skills, experience and chip lead. Still, it would be a final table to forget for the Triton Ambassador, who doubled up Chris Hunichen, on his way to a disappointing seventh-place finish.

Hunichen would make fair use of those chips, finishing in second place for $1.3m. It’s the second time that Hunichen has earned a million bucks after pocketing $1m for coming third in the 2019 partypoker MILLIONS World Bahamas. It’s also his second bridesmaid finish in a World Series of Poker (WSOP) event, finishing second to Nadar Kakhmazov in a 2017 $5,000 No Limit Hold ’em 6-Handed event.

Rudolph also knows what it feels like to come a mosquito’s thong width from a bracelet win. The German star lost out to Michael Addamo in the live version of this event during the 2018 World Series of Poker Europe (WSOPE). He made two more final tables before this one. In 2017, he finished fifth in a $1,500 and sixth in a $5,000 No Limit Hold ’em event.

Here is the nutshell action.

The Nutshell Action

Alaiksei Boika became the first player to hit the rail after jamming over a Shankar Pillai open with Ad5d. Pillai showed AhJh and flopped a much-needed second jack after Boika also hit a pair on the turn. Two fives didn’t cut the mustard and Boika left in ninth.

Then a big moment when Chris Hunichen doubled through Jason Koon for the chip lead. Big Huni opened for 500,000 from the hijack and then called after Koon had moved all-in with AdJs from the button. Hunichen called and held with pocket queens.

Paulius Plausinaitis exited in the eight place after shoving from the small blind, holding Kc9c, and finding a caller in the shape of Aram Zobian in the big blind. Zobian showed Td8c and flopped a second ten to move into third in chips.

The overnight chip leader, and favourite, fell in seventh.

Rudolph opened in midfield with AhQs, and then called and won when Koon shoved holding pocket tens.

Brunno Botteon fell in the sixth place when his pocket queens failed to get past the Ac8c of Rudolph when all-in during a blind turf war. Rudolph turned a straight to end Botteon’s involvement in the tournament.

Rudolph kept hacking away, and this time it was the head of Zobian that flew over the rail after winning a flip with pocket nines versus ace-queen. Aleksejs Pnakov left in fourth place when his KsQs couldn’t beat the Qc8c of Rudolph, and we reached heads-up when Hunichen eliminated Pillai AK>A9.

Heads-up began even in chips, but it was all Rudolph, who ended things in a 20-minute sweep. The final hand saw QT beating KQ when all-in pre-flop after Rudolph flopped a second ten.

Here are the final table results.

Results

  1. Christian Rudolph – $1,800,290
  2. Chris Hunichen – $1,332,097
  3. Shankar Pillai – $979,138
  4. Aleksejs Ponakovs – $719,700
  5. Aram Zobian – $529,005
  6. Brunno Botteon – $388,837
  7. Jason Koon – $285,808
  8. Paulis Plausinaitis – $210,079
  9. Aliaksei Boika – $154,416

Seven years ago, Yan Shing “Anson” Tsang finished seventh in an HKD 1,000,000 (USD 129,000) No Limit Hold’em event at the GuangDong Asia Millions in Macau for a million bucks.

Seven years later, and he enters a tournament with a total prizepool of a million bucks, and wins a World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet, all from the sanctity of whatever four walls he is currently calling ‘home’.

Tsang picked apart the 2,315-entrant field in Event #68: $500 No Limit Hold’em Deepstack like an experienced electrician picking apart a string cheese switchboard to collect the $150,460 first prize on GGPoker. It’s his 12th cash of the 2020 WSOP series, and before this win his deepest dive came in the event prior, finishing 12th in the $500 Limit Hold’em event.

It’s not the first time Tsang has won a bracelet. In fact, Tsang has finished a few cards away from a barrage of bangles in the past two years making five live final tables. In 2018, he won the €2,200 Pot Limit Omaha 8-Handed bracelet in Rozvadov. Last year, he finished seventh in the €550 Pot Limit Omaha, fifth in the €1,100 Turbo Bounty Hunter, and sixth in the €2,200 Pot Limit Omaha – all in Rozvadov. He also finished third behind Alex Epstein and Thai Ha in the $10,000 Short Deck No Limit Hold’em in Vegas.

The only other player at the final table with a hint of a record was Nobuaki Sasaki who finished fourth in the $10,000 Short-Deck No Limit Hold’em Championships earlier in the series.

Here are the final table results.

Final Table Results

  1. Anson Tsang – $150,460
  2. Mohaiman Ashrafee – $116,809
  3. Stephen Holford – $83,986
  4. Amir Divir – $60,387
  5. Wong Soon Heong – $43,419
  6. Malcolm Trayner – $31,219
  7. Marc Carola – $22,446
  8. Nobuaki Sasaki – $16,139
  9. Eder Campana – $11,604

Superstars who went deeper than an ant in a deprivation tank included Sam Vousden (26th), Daniel Dvoress (56th), and George Wolff (110th).

Not to sound too morbid, but once Jason Koon is ready to leave this earth he will want to bequeath a great many things for his children, and in a few days, a World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet may be amongst those many, many trinkets.

Koon ranked #9 in the All-Time Money List for live tournaments currently leads the final nine players in a misted window of a $25,000 No Limit Hold’em Poker Players Championship. The event attracted 407-entrants like robin nests attract cuckoos, and courtesy of the $10m GTD, Koon stands to collect $1.8m if he can put eight more players into their graves.

Koon is the most experienced WSOP practitioner at the final with double-digit final tables appearances. The closest the West Virginian has come to winning poker’s top prize came in 2012 when he finished runner-up to Leif Force in a $3,000 Heads-Up No Limit Hold’em/Pot Limit Omaha Mix.

As you would expect, we have a final table testament to the price tag.

Shankar Pillai is attempting to win his third bracelet after winning a $3,000 No Limit Hold’em in 2007, and the $1,500 No Limit Hold’em reserved for bracelet winners in 2019.

Christian Rudolph is making his fourth final table and was runner-up to Michael Addamo in a €25,000 No Limit Hold’em in the 2018 World Series of Poker Europe (WSOPE)

Aram Zobian finished sixth in the 2018 WSOP Main Event, and Chris Hunichen makes his fourth WSOP final table, including a runner-up finish to Nadar Kakhmazov in a $5,000 No Limit Hold’em at the 2017 WSOP.

Here are the final table chip counts.

Final Table Chip Counts

  1. Jason Koon – 7,863,055
  2. Shankar Pillai – 6,875,234
  3. Christian Rudolph – 5,544,188
  4. Aram Zobian – 4,405,440
  5. Chris Hunichen – 4,175,274
  6. Aleksejs Ponakovs – 3,883,951
  7. Aliaksei Boika – 3,297,276
  8. Paulius Plausinaitis – 2,905,555
  9. Brunno Botteon – 1,750,027

And those payouts.

Payouts

  1. $1,800,290
  2. $1,332,097
  3. $979,138
  4. $719,700
  5. $529,005
  6. $388,837
  7. $285,808
  8. $210,079
  9. $154,416

Nick Maimone Wins Event #69: $1,500 Marathon No Limit Hold’em

Former high stakes star, Nick Maimone, is a WSOP bracelet winner.

Maimone conquered a field of 1,438 entrants after more than 13 hours of play. The philanthropist poker pro had earned $2.2m playing live, with close to half of that coming in 2016 when he won the $25,000 High Roller at the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure (PCA) in 2016 for a million bucks, beating Sean Winter and Dario Sammartino, three-handed.

Maimone has two previous cashes in the GGPoker Series, finishing 446/12757 in the $400 COLOSSUS and 24/3247 in the $8,000 No Limit Hold’em Asia Championships. In 2009, Maimone got down to the final three tables of the WSOP Main Event finishing 15th.

Here are the final table results.

Final Table Results

  1. Nick Maimone – $302,4722*
  2. Diego Bittar – $228,212
  3. Giovani Torre – $165,613
  4. Nikolay Motsenko – $120,186
  5. Sebastian Sikorski – $87,219
  6. Ermo Kosk – $63,295
  7. Murilo Nascimento – $45,933
  8. Erik Lemarquand – $33,334
  9. Bert Stevens – $24,190
  • Also receives a $15,00 WSOPE package

When GGPoker and the World Series of Poker (WSOP) crossed distant shores to pull together the first-ever online WSOP bracelet series, the $10,000 Heads-Up No Limit Hold’em Championship became one of the premium events.

It didn’t disappoint, with two of the world’s smartest decipherers of the game of No Limit Hold’em, David Peters and Michael Addamo, battling it out for the sliver of gold and $360,480, and it was Peters who thwarted Addamo to collect his second bracelet.

Peters, who has more than $33.7m in live tournament earnings, won his first bracelet in 2016, defeating 1,860-entrants to win the $412,557 first prize in a $1,500 No Limit Hold’em event. To win this one he had to overcome the likes of Sami Kelopuro and Sergi Reixach before taking out the Canadian live streamer Alyssa McDonald in the semi-final.

Addamo overcame the formidable presence of Chi Zhang in a skitter of a mouse semi-final that lasted no more than 30-minutes. It’s been a tough few days for the Aussie, surrendering the lead to lose to Peters a few days shy of being the wrong end of the largest ever online cash game hand – $842k versus Wiktor Malinowski. Peters denied Addamo what would have been his third bracelet after winning two in 2018 taking down the $2,620 No Limit Hold’em Marathon in Las Vegas and the €25,500 No Limit Hold’em in Rozvadov for a combined haul of $1.5m

David Peters Route to the Title

Round of 128: Beats Johan Guilbert
Round of 64: Beats Sami Kelopuro
Round of 32: Scott Woods
Round of 16: Sergi Reixach
Quarter-Finals: Stefan Burakov
Semi-Finals: Alyssa McDonald
Final: Michael Addamo

Event #54: $10,000 Heads-Up No Limit Hold’em Championship

128-entrants

Results

  1. David Peters – $360,480
  2. Michael Addamo – $223,488
  3. Alyssa McDonald – $124,160
  4. Chi Zhang – $124,160
  5. Stefan Burakov – $49,664
  6. Chris Brewer – $49,664
  7. Belarmino De Souza – $49,664
  8. Pedro Waldburger – $49,664

Israeli Ravid Garbi ghosted through a patchwork quilt of superstars to claim the bracelet in Event #58: $5,000 No Limit Hold’em 6-Handed Championship at the World Series of Poker (WSOP) Online Series on GGPoker. Garbi topped a 672-entrant field to claim the $531,513 first prize, an unbelievable score for a man whose online and live poker antics remain invisible to the naked eye.

What a final table.

Hun Wei Lim came into this one on the back of winning Event #37: $1,050 Pot Limit Omaha Bounty. Lim finished eighth. Mikita Badziakouski is one of the best No Limit Hold’em players in the world, and the Belarusian finished seventh. Ludovic Geilich made his second WSOP final table of his career. The Scotsman finished seventh in the 2016 $25,000 Pot Limit Omaha High Roller and claimed a fifth in this one. Preben Stokkan is an online star who finished 21st in the WSOP Main Event last year. Stokkan finished third.

Then you have Chris Moorman.

The British-pro, now based in Las Vegas, has a litany of near-misses to go with the bracelet he won in 2017 when he took down the $3,000 No Limit Hold’em Six-Handed title. His second-place finish to Garbi is his third, finishing runner-up to Joe Ebanks in the $10,000 No Limit Hold’em Championship and then Elio Fox in the World Series of Poker Main Europe (WSOPE) both in 2011. Most recently, Moorman finished 4/1137 in the $500 Pot Limit Omaha 6-Handed bracelet event on WSOP.com.

But Moorman didn’t win the bracelet, and neither did Badziakouski, Stokkan, Geilich or Lee – Garbi did, only I don’t know anything about the fella, so I can’t wax lyrical about him 🙁

Here are the final table results.

Event #58: $5,000 No Limit Hold’em 6-Handed Championship

672-entrants

Results

  1. Ravid Garbi – $531,513
  2. Chris Moorman – $398,393
  3. Preben Stokkan – $292,021
  4. Urmo Velvelt – $214,051
  5. Ludovic Geilich – $156,989
  6. Shyngis Satubayev – $115,006
  7. Mikita Badziakouski – $84,299
  8. Hun Wei Lee – $61,791

Three more high rollers who ventured into the delicate end of things included Davidi Kitai (12th), Luke Schwartz (15th) and Sergi Reixach (18th).

There’s a lot of controversies emanating from GGPoker that’s making for good TV during the World Series of Poker (WSOP). Still, one thing that’s not controversial or unusual is the ascent to the top of the $400 PLOSSUS pile from Yuri Dzivielevski.

The former PocketFives World #1 (currently ranked #6), dismembered the 4,356 field with the precision of a sushi chef dissecting the anatomy of a sea urchin. Dzivielevksi now has two gold bracelets, his first coming last year when he conquered a field of 401-entrants in a $2,500 Mixed Omaha Hi/Lo 8-or-Better, Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo 8-or-Better event (man, that was a mouth full). He also finished 28th in the Main Event last year.

The $221,557 Dzivielevski banked for his victory is his second most significant haul. In 2014, he finished runner-up to Fedor Holz in the World Championships of Online Poker (WCOOP) Main Event for $1,253,070. All told, the Brazilian star has earned $7m playing online multi-table tournaments (MTTs), with most of it coming on PokerStars, playing under the pseudonym ‘theNERDguy’.

Dzivielevski has 22-cashes in WSOP events, and also won the PokerStars Latin American Poker Tour (LAPT) Grand Final in Sao Paulo back in 2015 for $175,155. His PLOSSUS win was his ninth cash of the series, including finishing 6/328 in the $5,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship, won by Juha Helppi. Dzivielevski proved to be an impenetrable mass for his heads-up opponent Matt Vengrin, who also finished runner-up to Daniel Idema in the 2015 $3,000 HORSE.

Here are the final table results.

Results

  1. Yuri Dzivielevski – $221,557*
  2. Matt Vengrin – $165,147
  3. Tautvydas Jokubauskas – $116,777
  4. Gabi Livshitz – $82,573
  5. Samuel Bernabeu – $58,388
  6. Juan Perez – $41,287
  7. Chad Layne – $29,194
  8. Dustin Dirksen – $20,643
    *Also receives a WSOPE package valued at $15,000

Three other high stars that went deeper than a hole in a bagel in a boulangerie include Simon Higgins (23rd), Fedor Holz (28th) and Juha Helppi (65th).

For some, a $1,500 buy-in is a walk along a cliff-edge path.

For some, a $1,500 buy-in is an untrammelled flick of a chip.

Daniel Dvoress is the chip flicker.

The Canadian high stakes star is a World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet owner after roaming through the mist of the 6,299-entrant Event #48: $1,500 MILLIONAIRE MAKER at the GGPoker WSOP Online Series. Dvoress walked into no-mans-land, trading blows with anyone and everyone until he remained, untouchable, eternal.

Amazingly, throughout his $15.6m in live tournament earnings, and multi-millions earned playing online, Dvoress, had never made money in a WSOP event until the GGPoker series began (taking 251st in Event #32: $100 The Opener, before winning this).

His sojourn into the WSOP web was a sticky one, turning a $1,500 investment into a $1.5m payday. Big money finishes are common to a man like Dvoress, taking the $4m first prize in the Super High Roller Bowl Bahamas in November. But to turn a $1.5k investment into $1.5m is massive, even for a high roller like Dvoress.

It’s another incredible performance for the Canadia. While he has been a serious contender for many moons, especially on the European Poker Tour (EPT) circuit, Dvoress began venturing into the deeper waters of high stakes tournaments during the 2019 Triton Poker Super High Roller Series, peaking with that SHRB victory.

Dvoress wasn’t the only titan to make it to the final table. partypoker’s Anatoly Filatov once again underlined his ever-growing reputation with a third-place finish, and the former EPT Main Event winner, Ronny Kaiser, finished seventh.

Here are the results.

Event #48: $1,500 MILLIONAIRE MAKER

Results

  1. Daniel Dvoress – $1,489,289
  2. Caio De Almeida – $1,072,428
  3. Anatoly Filatov – $772,251
  4. Michael Nugent – $556,095
  5. Alejando Caridad – $400,412
  6. Neville Endo Costa- $288,356
  7. Ronny Kaiser – $207,644
  8. Tomasz Cybulski – $149,523

Three more high stakes stars who ventured deeper than a Zen master in meditation were Michael Addamo (16th), Isaac Haxton (20th), and Seth Davies (37th).