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PokerCoaching WSOP 2017 Main Event Final Table Review is Jonathan Little’s hand-by-hand breakdown of the 2017 World Series of Poker Main Event Final Table — 7 modules (wsop 2017 review p1–p7), with 7-part analysis covering Scott Blumstein’s dominant chip leader run, including hands with Bryan Piccioli, Ben Lamb, Antoine Saout and the final table’s unique strategic dynamics. The 2017 WSOP Main Event attracted 7,221 entries players competing for a top prize of $8.15 million, with champion Scott Blumstein taking the title.
Part of the ongoing PokerCoaching WSOP review series at ElitePokerGuide. Browse our MTT Courses and all PokerCoaching content. Save with an active coupon.
📊 2017 WSOP Main Event — Key Facts
| Stat | Detail |
|---|---|
| Champion | Scott Blumstein |
| First Prize | $8.15 million |
| Field Size | 7,221 entries |
| Course Modules | 7 modules (wsop 2017 review p1–p7) |
🎯 What This Review Covers
The 2017 WSOP Main Event was the largest in years at 7,221 entries, and Scott Blumstein’s chip lead from Day 7 through the final hand made this one of the most dominant performances in Main Event history. Jonathan focuses particularly on how Blumstein managed his massive chip lead — specifically when to ease off the aggression, which reshove situations to avoid despite chip advantage, and how chip leaders should think about pay jumps differently from short stacks.
💡 Why WSOP Final Table Reviews Are Essential Study
The highest-stakes decisions in poker happen at WSOP final tables. Every hand involves massive pay jumps, extreme ICM pressure, and millions of dollars in equity differences between decisions separated by seconds. Jonathan Little has studied more WSOP final tables than almost any active coach — and his reviews identify the mistakes average players make repeatedly that cost them entry after entry at the WSOP.
Real hands. Real stakes. Real consequences. No training hand history can replicate the pressure of an $8M pay difference between 2nd and 1st. Studying how the actual players navigated these decisions — correctly and incorrectly — is the most effective preparation for your own deep WSOP run.
🔗 Complete the WSOP Series
→ All PokerCoaching WSOP Reviews — 2013 through 2019 in one catalogue
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Cross-reference every hand reviewed in this course against the official 2017 WSOP Main Event results at WSOP.com at WSOP.com.
🃏 Study the World’s Biggest Stage. Win Your Own.
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