On Monday, Phil Galfond (pictured), known in the online poker world as OMGClayAiken, won his second World Series of Poker bracelet. Galfond took down the $10,000 No Limit 2-7 Draw Lowball Championship for $224,000. He recorded his 15th career WSOP cash and passed $2 million in career WSOP winnings.

Tournament Poker Edgeis the only poker training site dedicated exclusively to MTTs and features over 1,000 training videos, blogs, articles, podcasts and a dedicated strategy forum for members. Check Tournament Poker Edge out on Twitter.

Galfond told WSOP officials after winning bracelet #2, “It means a lot, especially in a field this tough and at a table this tough. I have a ton of respect for all my opponents… It’s been seven years since I won [a bracelet]. I’m very happy.” His first bracelet came in 2008 in a $5,000 Pot Limit Omaha Rebuy.

Nick Schulman was the talk of the town for much of the event. WSOP’s coverage explained, “Schulman, who finished second, earning $138,665, is a two-time champion of this event and was poised for his third title holding a chip lead of better than 3-to-1 over Galfond during heads-up play. An early double up for Galfond leveled the playing field and from there he simply chipped away at Schulman until he held all of the 2,310,000 chips in play.”

Schulman (pictured) has $2.1 million in career WSOP winnings and won his first bracelet in 2009. Prior to poker, he concentrated on playing pool and made his living in Manhattan’s bars and pool halls.

Galfond, from Maryland, said of his heads-up strategy, “When I was heads-up with [Schulman], I’m going to take every spot that presents itself. There’s no huge edge later. Just try to play every hand as best you can.”

The 30-year-old closed by joking about the top prize in the event, pointing out, “I’ve played for cash game pots the size of first place. This feels a lot bigger and I think it’s because of this stage and the bracelet. It’s more meaningful than cash games.” Galfond has been a fixture of online and live high-stakes cash games throughout his career.

There was a ton of talent in this event down the stretch. Of the 14 players who finished in the money, eight were bracelet winners. Six of those eight had won more than one bracelet.

Fourth place went to eight-time bracelet winner Erik Seidel, who cashed in a $10,000 WSOP event for the third time this year. Seidel just passed $5 million in career WSOP winnings from 91 in the money finishes.

Here’s how the final table cashed out:

1st Place: Phil Galfond – $224,383
2nd Place: Nick Schulman – $138,665
3rd Place: Dan KingDan Smith – $87,898
4th Place: Erik Seidel – $59,532
5th Place: Jon PearlJammer Turner – $42,298
6th Place: Eli Elezra – $31,463
7th Place: Adam Owen – $24,457
8th Place: Bernard Lee – $19,824

Stay tuned to PocketFives for the latest WSOP coverage, brought to you by Tournament Poker Edge.

Want the latest poker headlines and interviews? Follow PocketFives on Twitterand Like PocketFives on Facebook.