A $15.3 million payday was forked over to 23-year-old Dan Colman (pictured), who won the Big One for One Drop, a $1 million buy-in tournament, at the World Series of Poker on Tuesday. Colman defeated Daniel Negreanu heads-up. According to WSOP.com, Colman is a heads-up sit and go specialist who plays online under the handle mrgr33n13.

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Colman is now sixth on tournament poker’s all-time money list, according to the Hendon Mob, while Negreanu is now in first placeafter scoring an $8.2 million hit. Colman has been on a rampage over the last eight months, finishing third in the PartyPoker Premier League VII for $194,000, winning the EPT Monte Carlo Super High Roller for $2.1 million, and now taking down the Big One for One Drop for a spectacular $15.3 million.

The tournament raised $4.6 million for the One Drop charity, which focuses on water conservation, and its total prize pool swelled to $37.3 million.

The Big One for One Drop drew 42 entrants this time around and on its final hand, Negreanu moved all-in before the flop after Colman had limped and Colman made the call. Negreanu showed A-4 and was in front of Colman’s K-Q, even finding aces-up on an A-4-J flop. However, the turn was a 10, leaving Colman one card away from a win with Broadway, and a blank hit on the river.

Colman held a slight chip lead over Negreanu(pictured with fans) when heads-up play began. “Kid Poker” quickly wrangled that edge away, but a 60-million chip pot proved to be the difference-maker. On a board of 4-8-J-A-4, Negreanu, who had check-called on the flop and turn, checked once more and Colman bet 18 million.

WSOP.com relayed, “‘Kid Poker’ went into the tank. He made his contingent giggle a few times, stretching and swirling in his chair, and then reached for chips. He was shaking his head, talking to a non-responsive Colman, then called.” Colman flipped over A-4 for a boat and his rail went wild when Negreanu mucked.

The One Drop featured a blockbuster field no matter how you slice it. There were 30 professional players and 12 amateurs; 18 were returning players from 2012 when it last ran. Fifteen of the 42 entrants were bracelet winners, while one (Erik Seidel) was a Poker Hall of Fame member. Greg Merson was the One Drop’s lone former Main Event champion.

Here were the eight in the money finishers in the 2014 WSOP Big One for One Drop:

1st Place: Daniel Colman – $15,306,668
2nd Place: Daniel Negreanu – $8,288,001
3rd Place: Christoph Vogelsang – $4,480,000
4th Place: Rick Salomon – $2,800,000
5th Place: Tobias Reinkemeier – $2,053,334
6th Place: Scott Seiver – $1,680,000
7th Place: Paul Newey – $1,418,667
8th Place: Cary Katz – $1,306,667

Also at the Rio, Mike babyshark33Kachan (pictured) won the final $1,000 No Limit Hold’em tournament on the WSOP schedule. It was Kachan’s second career WSOP final table and first WSOP cash since 2011. He told WSOP staff, “It feels great. It was a tough ride, but it was well worth it. I am really thankful for all of the people I have behind me.”

Former #1 ranked PocketFiver Steve gboro780 Gross, the only member of the final table with a bracelet, took seventh place:

1st Place: Mike babyshark33Kachan – $403,483
2nd Place: Jeff Blenkarn – $250,815
3rd Place: Eric Shanks – $177,527
4th Place: Andrew Egan – $128,032
5th Place: Viktor Skoldstedt – $93,490
6th Place: Neo Hoang – $69,084
7th Place: Steve gboro780Gross – $51,676
8th Place: Richard Milne – $39,109
9th Place: Raymond Henson – $29,951

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