Brett Lim to Sail Off into the Sunset After Senior's Championship Win

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Nearly seven hours after Event #48: $1,000 Senior's No-Limit Hold’em Championship brought back as many hopefuls to the Horseshoe Event Center, the 2025 World Series of Poker (WSOP) in Las Vegas has crowned another winner. Brett Lim started the final day second in chips and overcame multiple obstacles to defeat Elan Lepovic in heads-up with both players earning the lion's share of the $6,666,000 prize pool in a gargantuan field of 7,575 entries.
During the tense heads-up duel which lasted nearly two and a half hours, Lim became visibly frustrated and even suggested to his family on the rail to move to a different state where gambling was illegal. He would later change his sunglasses because the lights of the live stream table were starting to bother him and Lim jokingly said "now I gonna win" with a smirk on the face.
Shortly thereafter, he doubled into a commanding lead and closed out the victory moments later for his first WSOP gold bracelet and top prize of $653,839.
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$1,000 Senior's NLHE Championship Final Table Results
Place | Player | Country | Prize |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Brett Lim | United States | $653,839 |
2 | Elan Lepovic | United States | $435,572 |
3 | Dennis Carlson | United States | $326,508 |
4 | Jose Boloqui | Argentina | $246,464 |
5 | Lawrence Rabie | Canada | $187,351 |
6 | Jason Reels | United States | $143,425 |
7 | Manish Madan | United States | $110,581 |
8 | Ron Fetsch | United States | $85,872 |
9 | Peter Fellows | United States | $67,166 |
Winner's Reaction
“You always dream or aspire that something like this is gonna happen, but 48 hours ago this was the furthest thing from my mind,” Lim explained moments after holding his first WSOP bracelet. “I barely min-cashed. I was happy with some money jumps, and up until 20 minutes ago I thought I had lost the heads-up match. A lot of things were going pretty grim, and then two key hands just came by 'boom, boom, boom'. I didn’t think I was gonna win, to tell you the truth, but luck finds you in strange ways, and it found me this time,” he admitted with humility.
Although Lim felt like his tournament could have ended before the money, he managed to fight back and finish Day 3 as the chip leader, never straying far from the top until the end. At one point during the final table, he even held more than half the chips in play, until Elan Lepovic managed to close the gap. “I don’t really play final tables that much, so I don’t know what the heads-up dynamic is like,” Lim explained. “We were both kind of in between, passive and neutral. Not a lot of money was going in, but all it takes is a couple of big pots, and that’s what happened.”

At 58 years old, Brett Lim is a relatively young competitor in a Seniors event where players must be at least 50 years of age. But behind that relative youth is a player with over three decades of experience at the tables. “I started in the ’90s, but back then all we played was Limit Hold’em. I didn’t really start playing No-Limit until maybe about seven years ago,” Lim said. “Back then, you didn’t really have to be that good to win, but now there are a lot of young people who, you know, try to solve the game.”
Talking about the different generations, this brings to the question of his feeling about the Seniors event, often described as a softer event than the others : “In general, I think it’s the kind of tournament where you don’t have to bluff too much, because people’s playing styles are quite similar, for about 80% of them. But I bluffed a lot in this tournament. I could tell that people’s impressions of me were contrary to what they expected. That helped. But there were some top-notch pros who just turned 50, and their aggressive styles can be a problem. I ran into a couple of them, but somehow, I flipped the switch. Other than that, 7,500 players, it’s a tough field no matter how good you are. And I always believe that whoever wins the poker tournament probably wasn’t the best player.”
Surrounded by his family during the entire final table, Lim now plans to “go home and celebrate or go to a nice restaurant” before heading off on a “long-scheduled cruise” tomorrow morning. “We’re leaving and coming back in about a week, and the World Series is still going on, so I’m gonna play. Maybe I’ll play the Main Event for the first time,” he said with a smile, before rejoining his family whose smiles were even bigger than his.

Final Day Action
After a short Day 4, which brought the field from 19 to 7 players, the finalists returned on Day 5 for a streamed final table. Manish Madan had the shortest stack of all with less than four big blinds and was looking for an early double-up. He took his chance on the very first hand with ace-seven against Jason Reels’ king-seven, but a king on the flop sealed his fate in seventh place for $110,581.
Reels moved all in again a few hands later, and this time he was far luckier than Madan, hitting a queen on the river for trips to crack Dennis Carlson’s kings and double up.
After the first break of the day, it was Lepovic’s turn to secure a double-up and close the gap with his opponents. Lim, however, was still in the lead, and he even extended it to hold nearly half of the chips in play by eliminating Reels in 6th place for $143,425 with ace-jack against queen-ten.
A long five-handed battle followed, during which Boloqui doubled through Carlson. After several uncalled all-ins, Lawrence Rabie was also looking for a double-up when his pocket fours were called by Lepovic’s ace-six. But a six on the turn sent Rabie to the rail in 5th place for $187,351.

Another break followed, with Boloqui finding a straight after the restart, and Lim hitting quad deuces for the second time at the final table. Lepovic then managed to secure a double up, and a second one just a few hands later to go from last to second in chips.
Lepovic was even to one who ended Boloqui's tournament (4th - $246,464) moments later after his ace-king held against Boloqui's ace-ten. It didn't take much longer to see Carlson losing all of his chips to Lepovic's flopped set to finish in third place for $326,508 and let Lepovic and Lim start the heads-up play with even stacks.
The final duel swung in Lim’s favor during the early hands, especially after the future winner jammed on the turn with aces. Lepovic correctly folded his top pair but still lost a significant pot. However, he managed to come back little by little, eventually building a two-to-one chip lead.
That situation remained unchanged until the first all-in and call with Lim holding kings and Lepovic ace-jack. The kings held, and Lim secured a massive double-up. Shortly after, the chips went in again, this time with Lim holding ace-jack against Lepovic’s ace-four. The board ran clean, and Brett Lim was crowned the 2025 WSOP Seniors Champion.
In this Series
- 1 Who Won $64K and the First 2025 WSOP Bracelet?
- 2 David Shmuel Wins First WSOP Bracelet in Omaha Hi-Lo for $205,333!
- 3 Furth Wins Second WSOP Bracelet; Denies Kabrhel in $5,000 Pot-Limit Omaha
- 4 GTO Study Sees Antonio Galiana Win Second WSOP Bracelet in $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em
- 5 Persistence Pays Off: Dan Heimiller Wins $1,500 Seven Card Stud for Third WSOP Bracelet
- 6 Artur Martirosian Wins WSOP $25,000 Heads Up Championship ($500,000)
- 7 Benny Glaser Adds to His Legacy With Bracelet No. 6 in Event #8: $1,500 Dealers Choice
- 8 Michael Wilklow: Once a Mystery, Now a Millionaire (and WSOP Bracelet Winner)
- 9 Kenneth Kim Storms Back to Win His First WSOP Bracelet
- 10 Father-Son WSOP Bracelet Duo Made as Yosef Fox Wins $10,000 Mystery Bounty
- 11 Five Bracelets in Five Years: Brad Ruben Wins the $1,500 No-Limit 2-7 Lowball Draw ($138,080)
- 12 Ryan Bambrick Denies Daniel Negreanu to Claim Second WSOP Bracelet
- 13 Christopher Staats Denies David Jackson in WSOP $1,500 6-Handed NLH for $414,950
- 14 Corey Thompson Nearly Wins Two WSOP Online Bracelets Right Off the Bat
- 15 Cristian Gutierrez Wins $600 PLO Deepstack For His First Bracelet and $193,780
- 16 Lou Garza Mounts Memorable Heads-Up Comeback to Clinch Second WSOP Bracelet
- 17 Benny Glaser Goes Back-to-Back (Again) for 7th Bracelet in $1,500 Mixed
- 18 Zachary Zaret Overcomes Stacked Final Table to Win First Bracelet
- 19 Michael Lavin Steamrolls the Competition on Way to a Second WSOP Bracelet
- 20 Ryan Hoenig Goes Wire-to-Wire to Win Event #18: $10,000 Dealers Choice Championship
- 21 Bohlman's Breakthrough: Mixed Game Vet Wins 2nd Bracelet in $2,000 NLH ($436,044)
- 22 Blaz Zerjav Wins Maiden WSOP Bracelet in $25,000 6-Handed High Roller
- 23 Aloisio Dourado Claims Redemption with First WSOP Bracelet in Record-Breaking Badugi Event
- 24 Mixed Game Maestro Xixiang Luo Bags $290,400 and Third WSOP Bracelet
- 25 Nick Guagenti Crushes Chino Rheem’s Triple Crown Bid in $10K Stud Victory
- 26 Beginner's Luck? Surely Not. Chang Lee Wins $25,000 High Roller ($1,949,044)
- 27 Penalized Poker Player Wins WSOP Bracelet Despite Color Up Controversy
- 28 LA Poker Player Outlasts 16,300 Opponents to Win 2025 WSOP's Colossus
- 29 Igor Zektser Scoops His First Bracelet in Event #27: $1,500 Big O
- 30 A Few Cocktails on the Road to First WSOP Bracelet for Mark Darner
- 31 Rising New Jersey Poker Star Captures First WSOP Bracelet
- 32 Jason Koon Moves to Third on All-Time Money List w/ WSOP $50,000 High Roller Win
- 33 Toy Charizard, Pink Slipper Carry Canadian Family Man to WSOP Victory
- 34 Nick Schulman Joins Poker's Immortals With Bracelet No. 7 in the $10K 2-7 Championship
- 35 Ukraine's Renat Bohdanov Spikes Gutshot to Win Second WSOP Bracelet
- 36 John Racener Claims Third WSOP Bracelet For His Third Son
- 37 Philip Sternheimer Tears Up After Ending 13 Year Bracelet Chase
- 38 Joao Vieira Avenges WSOP Paradise Loss to Win WSOP $100K High Roller ($2,649,158)
- 39 Andrey Zhigalov Wheels In Second Bracelet in Event #39: $1,500 H.O.R.S.E. ($197,923)
- 40 Ian Johns Slays 'Isildur1' to Win WSOP Limit Hold'em Championship for a Second Time
- 41 Fourth Bracelet & $647K for Seniors High Roller Champ David "ODB" Baker
- 42 Carlos Leiva Defeats Weisman on Way to Winning WSOP $1,000 PLO Bracelet Event
- 43 A Father's Day Special: Allan Le Denies Shaun Deeb in $1,500 Razz
- 44 Seth Davies Wins $250K WSOP Super High Roller for First Bracelet and $4.75M Score
- 45 V for Vongxaiburana as 'Hobby' Player Beats Pros to $10k Big O Bracelet
- 46 Hellmuth Denied as Jason Daly Wins Second Bracelet in $2,500 Omaha/Stud Hi-Lo
- 47 Joey Couden Wins Second Bracelet in $500 SALUTE to Warriors ($187,937)
- 48 Tyler Patterson Grabs Second Bracelet in $3K 6-Handed NLHE for $574K
- 49 Klemens Roiter Finishes the Job for First Bracelet in Event #37: $1,500 MONSTER STACK
- 50 Brian Rast in Seventh Heaven w/ Miraculous Comeback in WSOP $10k Razz Championship
- 51 Texan Punches Ticket to WSOP Main Event with $1.5K Freezeout Bracelet Win
- 52 Dennis Weiss Claims Victory in $25K PLO High Roller for $2,292,155
- 53 After 3 Runner-Ups, Matt Vengrin Finally Gets His WSOP Bracelet in $1.5K PLO
- 54 Mateos Makes History as 5th Youngest to Win 5 WSOP Bracelets
- 55 Emotional Kristopher Tong Uses Inspiration to Capture First WSOP Bracelet
- 56 Brett Lim to Sail Off into the Sunset After Senior's Championship Win
- 57 Benny Glaser Wins Three WSOP Bracelets in Three Weeks w/ Mixed Triple Draw Triumph
- 58 Dylan Linde Takes Down the $50k PLO High Roller for Third Bracelet and Career-Best Score
- 59 Welshman Wells Roars to Victory in $3K 9-Game Mix for Maiden Bracelet
- 60 Sebastiaan de Jonge the Sole Survivor in WSOP Battle of the Ages
- 61 Gavrieli Denies Bohlman Second Bracelet of the Summer in $3K Limit Hold'em
- 62 Craig Savage Bides His Time to Triumph in WSOP $500 No Limit Hold'em Freezeout
- 63 Yaginuma Overturns 9:1 Deficit to Win Millionaire Maker & 4th Bracelet
- 64 It's Déjà Vu as Aaron Cummings Goes Back-to-Back in $1,500 2-7 Triple Draw
- 65 Nedelcu Dominates Final Table to Win First Bracelet in $1,500 Eight Game Mix
- 66 Queen of the Felt: Shiina Okamoto Wins Back-to-Back WSOP Ladies Championships
- 67 Michael Mizrachi Makes History with Fourth $50K PPC Title at 2025 WSOP
- 68 Yilong Wang "Lucky Enough" To Win Bracelet In $3k No Limit Hold'em
- 69 Runs In the Family: Alex Wilkinson Finally Wins The $10k 2-7 TD Event
- 70 Rainer Kempe Speedruns First Bracelet In $10,000 Super Turbo Bounty
- 71 Zerjav Wins Second Bracelet of Summer as Huck Seed Narrowly Misses Out
- 72 Brazil’s Kerber & Patricio Win WSOP Tag Team Bracelet After 14-Year Journey
- 73 Andjelko Andrejevic Wins Maiden Bracelet in $5,000 6-Handed NLH ($855,515)
- 74 Lucky Eight for Lonny Weitzel as He Wins $1,000 Super Seniors Event
- 75 Ian Pelz Wins Gladiator Off One Hungover Bullet ($420,680)