The $25,000 Six-Handed No-Limit Hold'em championship had just about everything compelling in a poker tournament. It was one of the biggest buy-in tournaments in WSOP history. It attracted just about every big name in poker. And, it had a memorable breakthrough career victory for a player already acknowledged as one of the game's top online players but who had yet to prove his talent in live tournaments.
Dan Kelly, a 21-year-old student at Villanova, won the second-highest buy-in event at this year's WSOP to pick up his first WSOP gold bracelet as well as over $1.3 million in winnings on Saturday. The mechanical engineering major is scheduled to return for his senior year this fall.
"I definitely thought I could win, or I wouldn't be playing," said Kelly. "But you can't expect to win a tournament, even if you play perfect. This definitely exceeds my expectations."
Kelly's parents were initially not enthusiastic about his poker playing. But the fact that he has performed well in school despite using much of his free time to play poker combined with the large sums of money he has won at the at poker tables, Kelly's parents have become more supportive. Kelly's father was a trademark attorney. His mother is a former nurse.
Kelly does not have much experience playing in U.S.-based poker tournaments. However, he has previously played major events held in The Bahamas, Spain, and Germany. Incredibly, the first WSOP tournament Kelly ever entered was this year's $50,000 buy-in Poker Players Championship. This is believed to be the first time in history a new player has ever made his maiden WSOP voyage in the highest buy-in tournament, with one of the toughest fields in WSOP history.
The runner up was Shawn Buchanan, from Vancouver, B.C. Buchanan has been playing poker seriously for about nine years. He currently has eight cashes this year, which places him in a tie for most in-the-money finishes along with Allen "Chainsaw" Kessler. The all-time record for most cashes in a single year at the WSOP is 10, held by Nikolay Evdakov. He set the record in 2008. Buchanan collected $812,941.

Kelly will return to Villanova with more than $1.3 million in poker winnings this fall. (photo by GreasieWheels)