![]() Chang won several medium-sized pots to take more than a 3:1 edge of his own. The two swapped the lead throughout the day, though Osterman appeared to be in control late, after busting France’s Adrian Delmas in third.Īs heads-up action began, Osterman held nearly a 2:1 edge over Chang, until a series of all-in collisions finally ended with Chang claiming the win. No other player began with more than 4.8 million. Chang arrived at the final with 8.14 million in chips, while Osterman was close behind at 7.69. ![]() Saturday’s final table figured to be a battle between Chang and the U.S.’s Brady Osterman. On Saturday, he came out on top of an 896-player field in this freezeout event, in which busted players could not re-enter. Chang almost won his first bracelet in 2019, when he finished fourth in that year’s “The Closer” event.Ĭhang also final-tabled the Little One for One Drop in 2015 and has shown a flair for large-field no-limit hold’em events during his seven-year WSOP career. With the win, Taipei’s Chang joins James Chen (2019) and Pete Yen Han Chen (online Event 3 earlier in this series), as Taiwan’s only bracelet winners. ![]() Chang’s best-ever $364,589 payday accompanies his first-ever WSOP bracelet and boosts his global tourney winnings over $1.5 million. ![]() Taiwan has the third World Series of Poker bracelet winner in its history as Carlos Chang took down the 2021 WSOP’s Event 41, $2,500 No-Limit Hold’em Freezeout on Friday. ![]()
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