
But she was at a health spa and she deserves a break.” We have been married for 31 years and she has to be at all my final tables. She never misses my final tables because we have an agreement.

“My wife has been at a spa for two weeks, so she missed my tirade and two of my final tables. She was by his side for the big win after missing out on two of his final table runs earlier in the series. “What did I tell you, honey? I’ve always wanted a deuce-to-seven bracelet,” Hellmuth said to his wife Katherine shortly after shaking his opponent's hand. The tide soon turned and Hellmuth dominated the later stages of Day 2, going on a red-hot run to bag over a million chips and the second biggest chip stack of the final ten players for the Day 3 finale. The low point came early in Day 2 when Rok Gostisa turned over a nine-eight that left Hellmuth steaming with a handful of big blinds. The turning point came on Day 2 as Hellmuth continued to weather the breaks in the early going. The nature of no-limit 2-7 lowball draw lends itself to a lot of swings, and Hellmuth weathered them to finish Day 1 with a healthy chip stack. Hellmuth’s tournament run was not without problems, and he found himself on the brink of elimination at points throughout Day 1. He has reached seven final tables since his last win in 2018, four of which have come at the 2021 WSOP in $25,000 H.O.R.S.E.(6th), $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better (5th), and the $10,000 Seven Card Stud event (fourth). The win represents a breakthrough in the frustration that has followed Hellmuth in his pursuit of a 16th bracelet. The popular lowball variant drew a star-laden field of 272 runners and generated a prize pool of $363,120 that paid $84,851 to Hellmuth for the win. This is Hellmuth’s first WSOP gold bracelet in a deuce-to-seven poker game and his third in a non-Hold’em variation.

The win marks the sixteenth WSOP title for Hellmuth, whose incredible WSOP career includes 157 cashes and a breakout victory in the 1989 Main Event that made him the youngest champion in history at the time. After four final tables and a lot of frustration at the 2021 World Series of Poker (WSOP), Phil Hellmuth finally won his record-extending bracelet No.
