After 16 years of grinding on the poker tournament trail, Nick Yunis finally broke through and won his first major title in Florida.
Yunis is the winner of the $5,000 World Poker TourĀ bestbet Scramble Championship. He won $315,791 plus a $10,400 entry into the $10,400 WPTĀ World Championship at Wynn Las Vegas this December, as well as a Golden Passport to the ClubWPT Gold $5 Million Invitational Freeroll.
Yunis, who was born in Chile but makes his home 355 miles south of Jacksonville in Coral Gables, was āover the moon.ā
āI still canāt believe it. Iām like, āAm I dreaming?ā Iāve been playing for so long and I always wanted to accomplish this ā a major title,ā he the WPT. āIām thankful to God, to my supporters, my family thatās watching. My wife couldnāt come because of the baby, but I know they are extremely happy for me and Iām just over the moon.ā
Two starting flights attracted 361 entrants who generated a prize pool of $1,642,550. The top 46 finishers were paid.
This is Yunisā largest lifetime cash. While heās won plenty of events, he never took home a WPT title or a World Series of Poker bracelet. He came close several times, including a runner-up finish in a $1,500 WSOP Eight Game Mix event in 2022 where he started heads-up play with a 4-1 chip advantage, but never sealed the deal.
It has not been easy for the 40-year-old.
āItās very hard,ā Yunis told WPTās Tim Fiorvanti. āI think that most poker players, you know, have all kinds of superstitions, and itās just hard because tournaments are so emotional. You get so deep, you put in so many hours. Youāre tired, youāre emotional, and then you take a bad beat. When that happens over and over and over again, you start to think itās never gonna happen, and itās just the nature of the beast. Itās a really tough game in that sense.ā
He got some great advice from friend Farrid Jattin that helped him at the final table.
āHe actually told me, āDisconnect yourself from the result completely. Just try to be in the zone. Play your game, no matter what happens. You should be proud of yourself.ā And that, I think, was very key for me, you know, you just have to not think about the result, because at the end of the day, thatās just anxiety. You donāt need that while youāre trying to perform,ā Yunis said.
Song nearly double-dips
While Yunis was going for his first WPT title, two players at the final table were trying to add more. Three-time WPT champ Eric Afriat stalled in third, which left Yunis facing Yunkyu Song heads-up. Song, a relative newcomer to live tournament poker, just won his first WPT major in Montreal last month.
Like Yunis, the $252,059 prize for second was Songās best lifetime cash ā but his top seven cashes all came in 2024 and includes a third-place finish in a $2,000 WSOP bracelet event where he finished third for $197,443. His consecutive deep runs vaulted Song to the top of WPTās Player of the Year leaderboard, just 450 points in front of Afriat.
Rounding out the top six were Joe Jordan ( $123,000), Nick Funaro ($93,000), and Dion Jagroo ($71,000). Other notable players who made the money include WPTĀ Commentator and Champion Tony Dunst (sixteenth), Joe McKeehen (seventeenth),Ā WPTĀ Champion Vitalijs Zavorotnijs (twenty-second),Ā WPTĀ Champion Josh Reichard WSOP Circuit guru (thirtieth), and Dan Stavila (thirty-fourth).
āThank you to all the players that came out to bestbet Jacksonville, as well as the staff and dealers that helped put on such a fun event,ā saidĀ WPTĀ CEO Adam Pliska. āNick made his mark, and we happily welcome him to theĀ WPTĀ Champions Club and look forward to seeing him next month at theĀ WPTĀ World Championship.ā