Event #48
Deuce-to-Seven Triple Draw Lowball (with Re-Buys)
Buy-In: $1,000
Number of Entries: 209
Number of Re-Buys: 546
Total Prize Money: $721,804
Date of Tournament: June 29 – July 1, 2007

WSOP GOLD BRACELET WINNER
EVENT # 48 – RAFIT AMIT

  • The winner of the Ace-to-Five Triple Draw Lowball World Championship was Rafit Amit, from Holon Israel. He is a 27-year-old semi-professional poker player. This was Amit’s second victory at the World Series of Poker. He won the $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha championship in 2005, which was good for his first gold bracelet.
  • The tournament attracted 209 entries and was played over three days. Amit was second in chips when he arrived at the final table. Play lasted about five hours on the final day. First place paid $227,005.
  • Other than winning his two WSOP gold bracelets, Amit is perhaps best known for an unusual incident that took place when he won the first title. Amit was upset at one point late in the Pot-Limit Omaha tournament and was given a mandatory penalty for using inappropriate language at the table. He is the only player in WSOP history who has ever been given a 10-minute penalty during heads-up play. Amit was able to recover from that incident and stormed on to victory.
  • Amit now has six tournament cashes on his poker resume. All occurred at the WSOP. This was his fourth final table appearance.
  • Amit is the second Israeli to win a title at this year’s World Series. Eli Elezra won his first gold bracelet last week. Eli Balas is the Israeli who holds the most WSOP wins, with three.
  • The Deuce-to-Seven Draw event has been absent from the WSOP menu in recent years. However, it was added to the schedule this year in response to player demand for a greater variety of games -- including Lowball. In the early years of the WSOP, Lowball games constituted a substantial portion of the schedule, in large part because of the popularity of Lowball poker in California (Lowball games were the dominant games in California cardrooms until the late 1980s). However, Lowball’s popularity waned as increasing numbers of players gravitated towards Hold’em and Omaha.