57TH ANNUAL WORLD SERIES OF POKER

News

ERICK LINDGREN WINS SECOND BRACELET IN PRESTIGIOUS $5K SIX-HANDED EVENT

2008 Player of the Year breaks through again in 2013, wins $606,317.
Jun 21 2013 01:33 AM EST
ERICK LINDGREN WINS SECOND BRACELET IN PRESTIGIOUS $5K SIX-HANDED EVENT
In 2008, Erick Lindgren recorded five cashes including first, third and fourth place finishes, en route to earning Player of the Year honors. By those standards, he's cooled off in the time since, recording 17 cashes, but just two final table appearances.

In recent years, things have started to fall back into place for the World Series of Poker winner. He married fellow pro Erica Schoenberg and together they had their first child. The WSOP cashes kept coming, and it seemed it was only a matter of time before he'd be back in the winner's circle.

Indeed, that time came for Lindgren in Event 32, a $5,000 Six-Handed No-Limit Hold'em tournament.  Lindgren outlasted a tough, pro-heavy field to earn $606,317 and, of course, his second gold bracelet.

Lingren's WSOP resume now boasts two bracelets, 36 cashes and more than $3.4 million in career earnings. Needless to say, it wouldn't be surprising to see him don bracelet number three sooner rather than later.
 
With the win, Lindgren became the third former Player of the Year to win a gold bracelet in 2013.  The 2004 winner, Daniel Negreanu won the WSOP APAC Main Event, while 2007 POY Tom Schneider has won two bracelets already this summer.
 
The $5,000 Six-Handed No Limit Hold’em event drew a positively stacked field of 516 players and generated a prize pool of $2,425,200. The top 54 players each earned a payday of $9,240. Notables who made the money, but missed out on the final table were Matt Glantz (50th), Eric Froehlich (49th), Brock Parker (48th), Justin Smith (22nd), Matthew Waxman (20th), Max Steinberg (15th), Dan Smith (11th), Allen Bari (9th), and Andrew Robl, who bubbled the final table in seventh place.

The final table featured no soft spots, not to mention a combined eight figures in career tournament earnings. However, despite the rock solid line-up, there was only one bracelet winner among the six players, Lindgren. In fact, a number of the players at this table often get their names brought up in the conversation of who is the best without a bracelet, including Lee Markholt and Jonathan Little. Two up and coming pros from the online world, Ryan D’Angelo and Connor Drinan, were also in the line-up, with Vasile Buboi rounding out the sextet.

Here are the final table results from the $5,000 Six-Handed No Limit Hold’em event:

1st: Erick Lindgren - $606,317
2nd: Leo Markholt - $374,960
3rd: Jonathan Little - $238,833
4th: Connor Drinen - $157,274
5th: Vasile Buboi - $106,830
6th: Ryan D’Angelo - $74,768

An in-depth profile and interview with the now two-time bracelet is available on WSOP.com.

© 2026 Bracelet IP Limited. WSOP is a registered trademark used under license by Bracelet IP Limited.
Unauthorized use is prohibited.

If you've ever watched the World Series of Poker and thought that could be me, you're not alone. Since 1970, the WSOP has been the place where that dream lives. Most people know the summer series in Las Vegas, where the $10,000 Main Event turns ordinary players into legends. But the WSOP calendar has grown well beyond that. WSOP Europe and WSOP Paradise now bring bracelet competition to international destinations, and dozens of Circuit events run year-round for players who want serious competition closer to home. Whether you're grinding a Circuit stop or taking your shot at the Main Event, the hardware means something. Winning a gold bracelet or Circuit ring is more than just a trophy. It's a permanent record that you are a champion. For players in Nevada, New Jersey, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, WSOP Online has become something worth paying attention to. It's the only platform in the US where you can win a poker tournament for official WSOP gold bracelets without leaving home! The WSOP also offers deposit limits and self-exclusion tools because the best poker rooms have always known that keeping poker players healthy keeps the game healthy. From your first Circuit event to a final table in Las Vegas, WSOP is still where you go to prove something.