The 4th Annual World Series of Poker Main Event was the first-ever broadcast of poker's greatest spectacle headlined by Amarillo Slim, Doyle Brunson, Puggy Pearson, Johnny Moss, Bob Hooks, Jack Straus, and commentary provided by Jimmy the Greek.
The 9th Annual World Series of Poker Main Event attracted 42 entrants and reserved $210,000 for the eventual winner. Ken Smith, Buck Buchanan, Bobby Baldwin, Jesse Alto, Louis Hunsuker, and Crandell Addington all reached the final table as only five players would take home a piece of the prize pool.
The 10th Annual World Series of Poker would see 54 players enter the Main Event as the top five players would finish in-the-money. David "Chip" Reese and Johnny Moss headlined the final table alongside Hal Fowler, George Huber, Sam Moon, and Bobby Hoff as each player had eyes on the $270,000 first-place prize.
The 12th Annual World Series of Poker Main Event would see Stu Ungar eyeing back-to-back titles as he sat at the final table of the 75-entrant field. Jay Heimowitz, Ken Smith, Perry Green, Gene Fisher, and Bill Smith were all looking to chase down Ungar and take home the $375,000 first-place prize and title of 1981 World Champion.
The 14th Annual World Series of Poker would see 108 players take a seat in the 1983 Main Event. Doyle Brunson headlined the final table that included George Huuber, Rod Peate, Tom McEvoy, Donnacha O'Dea, and 'Austin Squatty' John Jenkins as players eyed the $540,000 first-place prize.
The 18th Annual World Series of Poker saw 152 players enter the Main Event that had a $625,000 top prize which was contested by Johnny Chan, Howard Lederer, Dan Harrington, Frank Henderson, Bob Ciaffone, and James Spain.
The 19th Annual World Series of Poker had 167 entries in the Main Event as Johnny Chan and Erik Seidel squared off for the $700,000 top prize while Humberto Brenes, T.J. Cloutier, and Jim Bechtel also made the final table.
The 20th Annual World Series of Poker was headlined by Johnny Chan's quest to win three straight Main Events with Phil Hellmuth, Don Zewin, Steve Lott, Lyle Berman, and Noel Furlong eying the $755,000 top prize as well.
The 21st Annual World Series of Poker would see an increible 194 players enter the 1990 Main Event. Berry Johnson and John Bonetti headlined the feature table that included Rod Peate, Mansour Matloubi, Al Krux and Hans Lund as the $835,000 first-place prize and title of 1990 World Champion awaited the eventual winner.
The 22nd Annual World Series of Poker would see the Main Event field eclipse the 200-player mark for the first time as 215 players entered to create a $1 million first-place prize. The final six players included Perry Green, Don Holt, Ali Farsai, Brad Daugherty, Bob Veltri, and Don Williams as they each looked to collect the biggest first-place prize in poker history.
The 23rd Annual World Series of Poker attracted a 201-player field in the Main Event as a $1 million first-place prize continued. WSOP bracelet winners and stars of the game all fell short of the final table, as the last six combatants included Hans Lund, Hamid Dastmalchi, Tom Jacobs, Clyde Coleman, Mike Alsaadi, and Dave Crunkleton all looking to be crowned the 1992 World Champion.
1990 World Champion Mansour Matloubi looked to add another World Championship to his resume in the 24th Annual World Series of Poker Main Event. Matloubi headlines the final table alongside John Bonetti, Glen Cozen, Thomas Chung, Mick Cowley, and Jim Bechtel as the final six look to capture the $1 million first-place prize and title of 1993 World Champion.
The silver anniversary of the World Series of Poker would award the winner with their weight in silver along with the $1 million first-place prize. The 1994 WSOP Main Event attracted a record 268 entants as the final table included Robert Turner, Russ Hamilton, Hugh Vincent, Vince Burgio, Al Krux, and John Spadavecchia all eyeing the title of 1994 World Champion, the $1 million first-place prize, and an abundance of silver.
The 26th Annual World Series of Poker attracted 273 players for the 1995 WSOP Main Event as Howard Goldfarb held the chip lead. Dan Harrington, Brent Carter, and Chuck Thompson also were at the final table, along with 1992 World Champion Hamid Dastmalchi, and Barbara Enright who was the first female to reach the WSOP Main Event final table.
Held outdoors at the Fremont Street Experience outside of Binions, the 28th Annual World Series of Poker Main Event would attract 312 players chasing the $1 million first-place prize in 1997. Stu Ungar held the chip lead as he chased his third WSOP Main Event title, but would have to fend off Ron Stanley, Bob Walker, Mel Judah, John Strzemp, and Peter Bao if he was to join Johnny Moss as a three-time WSOP World Champion.
The 29th Annual World Series of Poker would see 350 entrants in the 1998 WSOP Main Event as Scotty Nguyen held the chip lead over the five-handed final table. Kevin McBride, T.J. Cloutier, Dewey Weum, and Lee Salem all stood in Nguyen's way of winning his second WSOP bracelet, the $1 million first-place prize, and the title of 1998 World Champion.
The 30th Annual World Series of Poker attracted 393 players that would see Ireland's Noel Furlong hold the chip lead entering the final table. The biggest stories at the final table included Huck Seed eyeing his second title, and Erik Seidel looking to avenge his runner-up finish in 1988. Other players at the 1999 WSOP Main Event final table included Alan Goehring, Padraig Parkinson, and Chris Bigler as the $1 million first-place prize and title of champion awaited the winner.
The 31st Annual World Series of Poker Main Event would see a huge 512-entrant field set aside $1.5 million for the eventual 2000 World Champion. Chris Ferguson entered the final table with over half the chips in play as James McManus, Roman Abinsay, Steve Kaufman, Hasan Habib, and T.J. Cloutier were all looking to chase down "Jesus" to capture the crown and the biggest first-place prize in poker history.
The 32nd Annual World Series of Poker Main Event would see another increase in attendees as 613 players created a prize pool that exceeded $6.1 million. German Henry Nowakowski entered the final table holding a slender chip lead over Spaniard Carlos Mortensen and crowd favorites Phil Hellmuth and Mike Matusow. Others at the final table include Phil Gordan, Stan Schrier, Dewey Tomko, Steve Riehle, and John Inashima as the $1.5 million first-place prize awaited the eventual 2001 World Champion.
The 33rd Annual World Series of Poker saw another rise as the 631-entrant field would ensure $2 million in prize money for the 2002 World Champion. John Shipley entered the final table with a substantial chip lead ahead of Russell Rosenblum, Ralph Perry, Robert Varkonyi, Minh Ly, Scott Gray, Julian Gardner, Tony Duong, and Harley Hall.
Day 1 is underway for the WSOP Main Event with defending champion Robert Varkonyi on the feature table along with Doyle Brunson and Padraig Parkinson. Previous champions Johnny Chan, Phil Hellmuth, Scotty Nguyen, and Chris Ferguson are also among the action.
The WSOP Main Event has lost half the starting players heading into Day 2 as Phil Hellmuth headlines the feature table alongside Sam Grizzle and T.J. Cloutier. Previous champions Chris Ferguson and Amarillo Slim Preston hit the rail, while Amir Vahedi ends the day as chip leader ahead of Scotty Nguyen, Howard Lederer, and Phil Ivey.
Day 3 of the WSOP Main Event begins with just over 100 players remaining. Two-time Main Event winner Johnny Chan sits at the feature table with Howard Lederer and Paul Darden, but it is Chris Moneymaker making moves under the bright lights as he sends a legend to the rail.
Action in the WSOP Main Event continues with Scotty Nguyen headlining the feature table along with Bruno Fitoussi and Humberto Brenes. Nguyen plays a hand with Brenes that will forever be a highlight on WSOP coverage, before Howard Lederer and Phil Ivey relocate to be seated under the bright lights with Nguyen.
Just 27 players remain heading into Day 4 of the WSOP Main Event. Some of the biggest names in the game are fighting for a spot at the final table, but the likes of Phil Hellmuth, Freddy Deeb, Dutch Boyd, Scotty Nguyen, and Phil Ivey all fall short as the final table is set with Chris Moneymaker the chip leader.
The final table of the 2003 WSOP Main Event sees Chirs Moneymaker hold the chip lead ahead of Amir Vahedi, Sammy Farha, Tomer Benvenisti, David Singer, Jason Lester, Dan Harrington, Yong Pak, and David Grey. All eyes are on the $2.5 million first-place prize, the prestigious WSOP bracelet, and the title of 2003 World Champion.
The 2003 WSOP Main Event is down to the final five players with Sammy Farha holding the chip lead ahead of Chris Moneymaker, Dan Harrington, Jason Lester, and Tomer Benvenisti. One man will stand alone with the coveted WSOP bracelet and $2.5 million first-place prize. Who will be crowned the 2003 World Champion?
The first open event of the 2004 WSOP would see 834 entrants create a prize pool of over $1.5 million. David "Chip" Reese and Erick Lindgren both fell just short of the final table as the United Kingdom's James Vogl enters the final table as chip leader ahead of J.C. Tran, David Chiu, and Shawn Rice as all eyes are on the $400,000 first-place prize.
The star-studded final table of the $1,500 Stud would see WSOP bracelet winners Men Nguyen, Ted Forrest, and Minh Nguyen looking to add more WSOP gold to their trophy case. Chad Brown would be eyeing his first WSOP bracelet as $111,440 in first-place prize money was up for grabs.
Nearly 800 rebuys would take this field size to 1,334 and a prize pool of over $1.26 million. The final table would be stacked with tournament veterans led by Daniel Negreanu, John Juanda, Mike Matusow, Lee Markholt, Paul Phillips, and Ram Vaswani as all eyes were on the $365,900 first-place prize.
Nearly 800 rebuys would take this field size to 1,334 and a prize pool of over $1.26 million. The final table would be stacked with tournament veterans led by Daniel Negreanu, John Juanda, Mike Matusow, Lee Markholt, Paul Phillips, and Ram Vaswani as all eyes were on the $365,900 first-place prize.
The biggest No-Limit Hold'em buy-in of the 2004 WSOP outside of the Main Event would attract 254 entrants and create a prize pool of $1,193,800. Barry Greenstein and Dewey Tomko fell short of reaching the final table, as WSOP veterans James Sousa and Paul "Eskimo" Clark headlined the final table ahead of Lee Watkinson, Thomas Keller, Martin de Knijff, and Young Phan as they chased the $382,020 first-place prize.
Another star-studded final table at the 2004 World Series of Poker would see the $5,000 No-Limit 2-7 Single Draw filled will some of the game's elite mixed game players. Barry Greenstein enters the final table as chip leader and eyeing his first WSOP bracelet, while he will have to contend with the likes of Chris Ferguson, Wil Wilkinson, Howard Lederer, Chau Giang, Steve Zolotow and Lyle Berman as $296,200 awaits the winner.
The $1,000 Ladies Event attracted 201 entrants and would see the final table headlined by Karina Jett and Susie Isaacs as nine lucky ladies look to capture the WSOP bracelet and $58,530 first-place prize.
The $5,000 Seven Card Stud World Championship attracted 144 entrants and created a prize pool of $676,800. The WSOP bracelet and $221,000 first-place prize would look to be claimed by a savvy group of final tablists that included Marcel Luske, Jeff Lisandro, Joe Awada, Cory Zeidman, Dewey Tomko and John Juanda.
Phil Hellmuth headlines the $3,000 Pot-Limit Hold'em final table that includes Ram Vaswani and Phi Nguyen, while Gavin Griffin chases the title of youngest WSOP bracelet of all-time if he can emerge victorious. Who will win the $270,420 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet?
The only straight Razz tournament of the 2004 WSOP would see a field of 195 players. Chris Bjorin, Hoyt Corkins, John Juanda, Howard Lederer, and Dutch Boyd all look to deny T.J. Cloutier his fifth WSOP bracelet as all eyes are on the $90,500 first-place prize.
T.J. Cloutier entered the final table of the $5,000 Limit Hold'em eyeing his second WSOP bracelet of the series in just as many days. However, he would have John Hennigan, An Tran, and David Chiu to content with for the $325,360 first-place prize and WSOP bracelet.
Another star-studded final table at the 2004 WSOP would see Jeff Lisandro, Daniel Negreanu, Howard Lederer, Lee Watkinson, Ted Lawson, and Freddy Deeb all at the final table. It was the penultimate event before the Main Event, and the 312-entrant field would see a $500,000 first-place prize reserved for the eventual winner.
The inaugural WSOP Tournament of Champions was held in September, 2004, and invited ten of the most well-known poker players on the circuit. Doyle Brunson, Daniel Negreanu, Phil Ivey, Johnny Chan, Phil Hellmuth, T.J. Cloutier, Annie Duke, Greg Raymer, Howard Lederer, and David "Chip" Reese are set to battle for the $2 million first-place prize.
Only eight players remain in the $2 million winner-take-all WSOP Tournament of Champions. Greg Raymer holds the chip lead ahead of Howard Lederer, Phil Hellmuth, Johnny Chan, Phil Ivey, Doyle Brunson, and Daniel Negreanu, while Annie Duke is on the short stack.
The WSOP Tournament of Champions is down to the final four. Annie Duke has surged into the chip lead, while Phil Hellmuth, Howard Lederer, and Johnny Chan look to chase her down. Who will win the $2 million first-place prize?
Day 1A of the 2004 WSOP Main Event is underway with Daniel Negreanu, Men "The Master" Nguyen, and John Hennigan on the feature table. Defending champion Chris Moneymaker kicks off his title defense, while several big names find themselves heading home early.
Coverage continues on Day 1B of the WSOP Main Event, and last year's runner-up Sammy Farha headlines the feature table along with John Juanda. Chris Ferguson and "Miami" John Cernuto then join the feature table action, as many poker pros hit the rail on Day 1B.
Day 2 action in the WSOP Main Event sees Doyle Brunson headline the feature table along with Scott Fischman. Siblings Howard Lederer and Annie Duke are eliminated, along with two previous Main Event champions.
Money day has arrived in the WSOP Main Event with just 277 players remaining on Day 3. Gus Hansen takes center stage on the feature table, and is joined by Daniel Alaei and Dan Harrington while two other previous champions also survive the day.
Just 149 players remain in the 2004 WSOP Main Event, and Mike Matusow headlines the feature table alongside Greg "Fossilman" Raymer and John Esposito. However, it would be John Murphy, Josh Arieh, and Marcel Luske climbing to the top of the leaderboard.
World Champions Dan Harrington and Chris Ferguson headline the feature table on Day 5 of the WSOP Main Event. The only other former champion wouldn't survive, as Doyle Brunson was eliminated.
Just 50 players return on Day 6 of the WSOP Main Event as Marcel Luske headlines the feature table along with John Murphy. On the outer tables, Josh Arieh and David Williams begin their run up the leaderboard, while previous champions Chris Ferguson and Dan Harrington remain in contention as just 32 players remain.
There are 32 players remaining on Day 6 of the WSOP Main Event. Chip leader Greg Raymer headlines the feature table along with Josh Arieh and Dan Harrington. The elimination of Chris Ferguson leaves Harrington as the sole Main Event champion remaining, while the field is reduced to just 17 players.
The WSOP Main Event plays down to the final table as former champion Dan Harrington, along with Dutchman Marcel Luske look to make a run at being one of the final nine. Plenty of others will fall short, but who will reach the 2004 WSOP Main Event final table?
The final table of the 2004 WSOP Main Event sees Greg Raymer hold the chip lead ahead of Matt Dean, Josh Arieh, Glenn Hughes, Dan Harrington, David Williams, Al Krux, Mike McLain, and Mattias Andersson. All eyes are on the $5 million first-place pirze and the title of 2004 World Champion.
Following a move to the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino, the opening event of the 2005 WSOP attracted 2,305 entrants and created a prize pool of nearly $3.2 million. Dave "Devilfish" Ulliott, Liz Lieu, and An Tran found themselves at the final table alongside WSOP bracelet winners Allen Cunningham and Scott Fischman as all eyes were on the $725,405 first-place prize.
The first limit hold'em event of the 2005 WSOP saw 1,049 hopefuls take a seat while creating a prize pool just shy of $1.45 million. Tournament veteran Peter Costa was surrounded by youngsters Todd Witteles and Eric Froehlich as everyone was chasing the WSOP bracelet and $303,908 first-place prize.
There would be 2,321 entrants in the first rebuy event of the 2005 WSOP as Phil Gordon, Shane Schleger, and David Pham headlined the final table, along with Maciek Gracz and C.T. Law as the final nine were playing for the $594,460 first-place prize and WSOP bracelet.
Six-time WSOP bracelet winner Erik Seidel headlines the final table along with fellow WSOP bracelet winners Cyndy Violette and Perry Friedman. With 1,403 entrants taking a seat in this $2,000 No-Limit Hold'em event, Seidel was eyeing his seventh WSOP bracelet but would have eight others standing in his way as they chased down the $611,795 first-place prize.
WSOP bracelet winner Freddy Deeb headlines this final table along with Marco Traniello, Edward Moncada, and Steven Hudak. Originally attracting 540 entrants which created a $993,600 prize pool that reserved $298,070 in first-place prize money and the WSOP bracelet for the eventual winner.
A star-studded final table for the first Pot-Limit Omaha event of the 2005 WSOP. Erik Seidel is chasing his second win of the series and is surrounded by 2000 World Champion Chris Ferguson, Max Pescatori, Doug Lee, Dave Colclough, and Josh Arieh as all eyes are on the $381,600 first-place prize.
The old guard looks to take a stand as T.J. Cloutier and John Bonetti headline the final table. Gavin Smith, Todd Brunson, Dustin Woolf, and John Hennigan are also in the mix for the $657,100 first-place prize and WSOP bracelet.
Both Allen Cunningham and Cyndy Violette find themselves at another final table for the series alongside Burt Boutin, Joe Sebok, and Tony Cousineau as the final nine chase the $370,685 first-place prize and WSOP bracelet.
2004 World Champion Greg Raymer holds the chip lead ahead of fellow pros Dave "Devilfish" Ulliott, Bill Gazes, Minh Nguyen, and Mark Seif who was looking to win his second WSOP bracelet within a week of his first. The final nine look to capture the WSOP bracelet and $611,145 in first-place prize money.
Joe Awada chases poker immortality of going back-to-back in the Stud Championship, but he'll have to contend with Keith Sexton, John Phan, and Chip Jett for the $293,275 first-place prize and WSOP bracelet.
WSOP rookie and Denmark's Lars Bonding holds a dominating chip lead at the final table but has WSOP veteran Farzad Bonyadi in his path for the $594,960 first-place prize. Throughout the final table, bonus coverage of the $2,500 Pot-Limit Hold'em from an outer table sees Johnny Chan chasing his tenth WSOP bracelet against Phil Laak.
Phil Hellmuth eyes his tenth WSOP bracelet, while Phil Ivey looks to become the youngest player to win five WSOP bracelets. The $5,000 Pot-Limit Omaha final table also features Robert Williamson III, Allen Cunningham, and Surinder Sunar eyeing the $635,603 first-place prize.
Another stacked final table at the 2005 WSOP sees the likes of Annie Duke, Gabe Kaplan, Joe Sebok, Jeff Shulman, Young Phan, and Greg Mueller eyeing WSOP gold and the $404,585 first-place prize.
71-year old Doyle Brunson looks to tie Johnny Chan with 10 WSOP bracelets, but standing in Brunson's way is 1998 World Champion Scotty Nguyen, along with Minh Ly, Layne Flack, Ayaz Mahmood, and Jason Lester as all eyes are on the $367,800 first-place prize.
Day 1a of the 2005 WSOP Main Event is underway from the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino. Jennifer Harman and Cory Zeidman sit on the feature table and play one of the craziest hands in WSOP history. Main Event champions take their shot at winning a second title, including defending champion Greg Raymer.
Day 1b of the WSOP Main Event begins with a monster hand from Sammy Farha against actor Oliver Hudson on the feature table. Daniel Negreanu joins Farha on the feature table, while previous champions Dan Harrington, Robert Varkonyi, and Phil Hellmuth take their seat.
Phil Hellmuth headlines the feature table on Day 1C of the WSOP Main Event. Hellmuth rides a roller coaster of ups and downs and delivers some of the best one-liners that will be remembered forever.
Day 1d of the WSOP Main Event sees Marcel Luske headline the feature table as pros Phil Ivey, Howard Lederer, and Doyle Brunson are also in contention. The story of the day belongs to Mike Matusow on the outer tables who endures several penalties before returning to knuckle down and survive into Day 2.
Just over 1,800 players return for Day 2 action in the 2005 WSOP Main Event. Norway's Haakon Waerstad is the chip leader, but it is five-time WSOP bracelet winner Layne Flack headlining the feature table and providing lots of action. 2003 World Champion Chris Moneymaker leads a list of casualties that also includes Gus Hansen, Marcel Luske, and 1995 World Champion Dan Harrington.
The money is closing in on Day 3 of the WSOP Main Event. Rod Pardey Jr. holds the chip lead, but defending champion Greg Raymer sits ninth overall. The feature table is headlined by Howard Lederer and Barbara Enright, and after Carl Ygborn is eliminated on the money bubble, a rapid-fire of eliminations follow as the day ends with 185 players.
Defending champion Greg Raymer leads the field into Day 4 of the WSOP Main Event. Mike Matusow and Andy Black headline the feature table, as WSOP rookies dominate the action. Howard Lederer hits the rail, but Phil Ivey and Steve Dannemann climb the leaderboard as Matusow finishes second in chips as just 58 players remain.
Day 5 of the WSOP Main Event begins with Tim Phan and Mike Matusow on top as action plays down to the final 27 players. Greg Raymer and Shawn Sheikhan headline the feature table, and are joined by Tiffany Williamson and Joe Hachem as big pocket pairs are everywhere. The field is reduced to the final three tables which will conclude play at Binion's Horseshoe Casino in Downtown Las Vegas.
Day 6 action in the WSOP Main Event begins at Binion's Horseshoe with 27 players remaining. Mike Matusow is the chip leader and lets his chips do the talking before getting into a confrontation with Shawn Sheikhan. Phil Ivey is second overall and is seated on the feature table alongside defending champion Greg Raymer who is fifth on the leaderboard.
Action continues on Day 6 of the WSOP Main Event as just 18 players remain. Aaron Kanter holds the chip lead ahead of Daniel Bergsdorf and Joe Hachem, while Mike Matusow, Steve Dannenmann, and Shawn Sheikhan headline the feature table. Who will make the WSOP Main Event final table?
The final table of the 2005 WSOP Main Event sees Aaron Kanter holding the chip lead ahead of Tex Barch, Andy Black, Mike Matusow, Steve Dannenmann, Joe Hachem, Daniel Bergsdorf, Scott Lazar, and Brad Kondracki as all eyes are on the $7.5 million first-place prize.
Just five players remain in the WSOP Main Event as Andy Black holds the chip lead ahead of Tex Barch, Aaron Kanter, Steve Dannenmann, and Joe Hachem. Everyone is guaranteed $1.75 million in prize money, but all eyes are on the $7.5 million first-place prize, the prestigious WSOP bracelet, and title of 2005 World Champion.
Only three players remain in the 2005 WSOP Tournament of Champions as Phil Hellmuth continues to hold the chip lead. Hoyt Corkins sits second overall, while Mike "The Mouth" Matusow is in third as each player has locked up $250,000 in prize money. Each player won't be satisfied with that, as they are each eyeing the massive payday of $1,000,000 for whoever will emerge victorious.
Final table where 170 players compete for a $1,615,000 prize pool.
Final table where 96 players compete for a $931,200 prize pool.
The first open event of the 2006 WSOP sees the biggest one-day field in poker history as 2,776 players create a prize pool of over $3.7 million. Chip leader Brandon Cantu has to contend with 2001 World Champion Carlos Mortensen, tournament veteran Don Zewin, and 21-year old Brent Roberts as they play for the $757,839 first-place prize.
The first pot-limit hold'em event of the 2006 WSOP sees online pro Eric Lynch holding the chip lead over fellow poker pros Rafe Furst, Can Kim Hua, and Burt Boutin. John Juanda sits in the middle of the pack and is eyeing his fourth bracelet and the $345,984 first-place prize.
Dutch Boyd holds a big chip lead entering the final table, but he will have to content with defending 2005 World Champion Joe Hachem who is looking to become the first champion since Chris Ferguson to win a bracelet the following year after winning the Main Event. The final six players play for the $475,712 first-place prize and the coveted gold bracelet.
Carlos Mortensen is at his second WSOP final table of the week and eyeing his fourth WSOP bracelet and the $803,274 first-place prize. Mortensen has some formidable competition to deal with which includes Mark Vos, Nam Le, and Vanessa Selbst.
2005 WSOP Player of the Year Allen Cunningham headlines the first rebuy event of the 2006 WSOP. Also seated at the final table is "Captain" Tom Franklin, Tim Phan, Chino Rheem, and Andy Bloch as $625,830 awaits the winner.
A 218-player field was created in the first Championship event of the series as defending champion Rafi Amit is looking to go back-to-back. He would have to contend with Omaha specialists Lee Watkinson, Jani Vilmunen, Hasan Habib, and Thomas Wahlroos as the final nine chase the $655,746 first-place prize.
Final table where 2,891 players compete for a $2,891,000 prize pool.
Joe Hachem has his second chance for a second bracelet as he finds himself at another final table for the 2006 WSOP after losing heads-up to Dutch Boyd. 21-year old Alex Jacob is the chip leader and also at his second final table of the series as the final nine eye the $374,849 first-place prize.
The final table of the $50k H.O.R.S.E. sees David "Chip" Reese hold the chip lead ahead of Doyle Brunson, Andy Bloch, Phil Ivey, Jim Bechtel, David Singer, Dewey Tomko, T.J. Cloutier, and Patrik Antonius. Players are guaranteed just over $200k in prize money, but all eyes are on the $1,784,640 first-place prize.
The best of the best will be crowned in the conclusion of the $50k H.O.R.S.E. as David "Chip" Reese continues to hold the chip lead. Still in contention are Andy Bloch, Jim Bechtel, Phil Ivey, and T.J. Cloutier as the battle continues towards the $1,784,640 first-place prize and the coveted WSOP bracelet.
WSOP Main Event action is underway on Day 1A with Phil Hellmuth arriving fashionably late to the feature table, but manages to dodge some bullets. Phil Ivey scores an early double, while lots of previous champions are in the field including Doyle Brunson, Dan Harrington, Scotty Nguyen, Chris Ferguson, and Carlos Mortensen. This was the largest poker event in history at the time: 8,773 players competed for a $82,512,162 prize pool.
Day 1B of the WSOP Main Event sees Mike Matusow begin the action on the feature table with a positive river before comparing himself to a neurosurgeon. Both Jen Harman and Sammy Farha run into quads, while other notables in the field include Daniel Negreanu, Steve Dannenmann, Phil Laak, and 2004 champion Greg Raymer.
The defending champion Joe Hachem begins his pursuit for back-to-back titles on Day 1C of the WSOP Main Event and finds himself on the feature table along with Phil Galfond and Allyn Jaffrey Shulman. Champions Johnny Chan, Robert Varkonyi, and Chris Moneymaker all take their shot, while boxing legend Lennox Lewis looks to score a knockout.
The 8,773-player field has been reduced to 3,372 heading into Day 2 of the WSOP Main Event including previous champions Joe Hachem, Greg Raymer, Robert Varkonyi, Chris Ferguson, Carlos Mortensen, and Scotty Nguyen. Daniel Negreanu headlines the feature table, but things don't go his way until very late in the day as Dmitri Nobles ends the day as chip leader.
Day 3 of the WSOP Main Event begins with 1,159 players as Annie Duke headlines the feature table alongside Mark Vos. Chip leader Dmitri Nobles lets his chips do the talking while Daniel Negreanu continues to accumulate as the shark takes a bite for Humberto Brenes. Chris Ferguson, Carlos Mortensen, and Phil Ivey hit the rail as the money bubble bursts at 874 players.
The action continues on Day 3 of the WSOP Main Event as Dmitri Nobles remains among the chip leaders and is seated on the feature table with George Danzer. Daniel Negreanu, Joe Hachem, and Humberto Brenes highlight the action from the outer tables, while Jamie Gold soars up the leaderboard to sit with over 3 million in chips - good for ten-times the average stack.
The WSOP Main Event is down to the final 135 players, and they are led into Day 4 by chip leader Jamie Gold. Humberto Brenes takes center stage on the feature table alongside Michael Binger and Erik Friberg, while Eric Molina makes some noise on the outer tables. Annie Duke, Dmitri Nobles, and Bryan Micon fall to the rail as Gold concludes the day on top again.
Day 5 of the WSOP Main Event begins with just 45 players remaining and Jamie Gold holding a huge chip lead. Three pros headline the feature table, and although Humberto Brenes is eliminated, Jeff Lisandro and Prahlad Friedman provide all the fireworks as they battle back-and-forth as the tension remained high as tempers continued to flare. The day ends with three tables remaining and Gold sitting with over 13 million in chips.
Just 27 players remain on Day 6 of the WSOP Main Event as Jamie Gold sits with nearly double the chips of his nearest rival. Gold headlines the feature table and sits alongside Prahlad Friedman and Paul Wasicka, while Jeff Lisandro and Allen Cunningham are on the outer feature tables as action plays down to the final two tables.
The push towards the WSOP Main Event final table is on as just 18 players remain. Jamie Gold continues his dominance on the leaderboard, while Allen Cunningham and Richard Lee begin the surge up the counts as just nine players look to lock up a seat at the biggest final table of the year.
The final table of the 2006 WSOP Main Event sees Allen Cunningham, Richard Lee, Erik Friberg, Paul Wasicka, Doug Kim, Rhett Butler, Michael Binger, Dan Nassif, and chip leader Jamie Gold all eyeing the $12 million first-place prize. Who will the biggest WSOP Main Event of all time and be crowned the 2006 World Champion?
Just five players remain at the 2006 WSOP Main Event final table as Jamie Gold continues to hold the chip lead he has grasped since Day 4. Allen Cunningham, Paul Wasicka, Rhett Butler, and Michael Binger all remain in contention for the $12 million first-place prize, but can they dethrone Gold from the top spot he has made all his own? Five are left to fight for the $12 million, but who will it be. The conclusion of the 2006 WSOP Main Event is here!
The invite-only 27-player field of the Tournament of Champions has been reduced to the final table of 10, competing for a $2,000,000 prize pool. Defending champion Mike Matusow is eyeing back-to-back wins, but he'll have to battle chip leader Andrew Black, along with Daniel Negreanu, Daniel Bergsdorf, Kido Ham, Chris Ferguson, Mike Sexton, Darrell Dicken, Gus Hansen, and Chris Reslock.
Only four players remain in the Tournament of Champions as defending champion Mike Matusow is left to contend with chip leader Daniel Negreanu, along with Mike Sexton and the short-stacked Chris Reslock. Each player is assured of a $150,000 in prize money, but the $1 million first-place prize is what they each are striving for.
The first final table of the 2007 World Series of Poker is this Mixed Hold'em Limit/No-Limit Championship.
The final table of the $1,500 No-Limit Hold 'em event with just nine players left out of a field of nearly 3,000. The winner will walk away with a bracelet and $727,012.
The final table is down to 9 players from the original field of 781. Who will come out on top?
Final Table Seat 1: Costa Rican pro Humberto 'The Shark' Brenes — 275,000, Seat 2: Triple WSOP bracelet winner John Juanda — 220,000, Seat 3 Larry Jonsson — 900,000, Seat 4: Minh Ly — 240,000, Seat 5: Burt Boutin — 460,000, Seat 6: Rob Keston — 335,000, Seat 7: Sirous Jamshidi — 865,000,Seat 8: Dave 'Devilfish' Ulliott — 1,300,000 and Seat 9: Erik Cajelais — 1,075,000
Final Table Gary Priegen 25,600, Daniel Negreanu 24,075, Tam Nguyen 23,575, Levon Torosyan 22,600, Vasilis Lazarou 21,025, Nick Frangos 19,325, Jeffrey Lisandro 18,700, Michael Huguenot 18,525, Nesbitt Coburn 18,500 and Jim Pechoc 18,300
Prior to the start of the 2008 World Series of Poker, Bluff Magazine named five 21-year-old’s to watch and Jeff “YellowSub86” Williams was one of them. With a European Poker Tour title already under his belt many poker observers were counting on him having a big WSOP. Today will be the first chance for many poker fans to see Williams play as he is one of the nine players at the final table of Event #5 ($1,000 No Limit Hold’em w/rebuys). He’s joined by Alan Jaffray, Peter Gould and 2006 Main Event third place finisher Michael Binger. But the chip leader when the final table begins will be Michael Banducci. Making his run more impressive is the fact that Banducci had only one rebuy plus the double add-on in an event where multiple rebuys are common. In fact the 766 player field was responsible for 2,258 rebuys and add-ons pushing the prize pool to $2,894,094 with first place paying $636,736.
For the poker purist, the event is the World Championship and most of the 147 players who make up the field in the $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. World Championship consider it to be the player’s championship. The final table features three-time bracelet winner Barry Greenstein, 1996 World Champion Huck Seed, 1998 World Champion Scotty Nguyen, French pro Patrick Bueno, World Poker Tour co-founder and Big Game regular Lyle Berman and 2008 World Series of Poker Player-of-the-Year Erick Lindgren. There’s also two newcomers, Matt Glantz and Michael DeMichele at the table, giving viewers a little bit of everything. The table is star-studded for two reasons. The first is the $50,000 buy-in guarantees that only the best of the best of the best will be in the field. The second is that H.O.R.S.E. requires proficiency at the five fixed limit games played from start to finish; Hold’em, Omaha Eight-or-better, Razz, Seven-card Stud, Seven-card Stud Eight-or-better. The storylines entering final table play are seemingly endless. Lindgren was chasing his second bracelet only days after winning his first after years of chasing it and was in a dog fight for Player-of-the-Year Greenstein at the time. Seed was looking for his first bracelet since 2003 in hopes of regaining the respect of the poker world. And then there was Nguyen, who famously busted out of the 2007 Main Event in 11th spot after blowing up and relinquishing his chips in four hands. The 2008 event is also special for another reason. After Chip Reese, who won the inaugural $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. event in 2006, passed away last December WSOP Commissioner Jeffrey Pollack moved to create the Chip Reese Trophy, which would be awarded to the winner of the event every year and stay with that player until the following year’s event.
In 2007 Robert Mizrachi turned a few heads in the poker world when he became the first of the Mizrachi brothers to win a World Series of Poker bracelet. Everybody assumed that Michael “the Grinder” Mizrachi would be the first. He’d had some great success on the World Poker Tour and had been the brightest star in the family. But Robert’s win in the $10,000 World Championship Pot Limit Omaha event got him the bracelet and family bragging rights. The 2008 WSOP gave "the Grinder" a chance at redemption and he goes for his first bracelet in the same event his brother won a year earlier, $10,000 Pot Limit Omaha. The table certainly has international flavor to it. Peter Jetten of Toronto, Canada, Billy “the Croc” Argyros from Melbourne, Australia join Tom Hanlon of Dublin, Ireland and Marty Smyth of Belfast, Ireland. But despite the international intrigue, the story remains about Grinder. “Have brothers ever gone back-to-back?,” Mizrachi asked the day the final table started. The answer was no and in fact, only three sets of siblings each have a bracelet; Annie Duke and Howard Lederer, J.C. and Puggy Pearson and Grant and Blair Hinkle who each won a bracelet in 2008. Can Mizrachi pull of the historic win?
The preliminary events are all in the bag. There’s only one title left – and for every player, amateur or professional, it’s the one title they all want in their collection. This year a total of 6,844 players made their way to the Amazon Room at the Rio Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas in pursuit of the championship and the $9 million first place prize. Between now and October 28 ESPN will broadcast a total of 18 hours of Main Event coverage. From Phil Hellmuth’s grand entrance to the return to action of 2007 Main Event champion Jerry Yang, ESPN is turning this year’s Main Event into something more. It will also be the first time that poker fans will be introduced to the November Nine – the final nine players who will return to the Rio in November for a shot at the World Championship.
Day 1a of the Main Event
Welcome to 2011 World Series of Poker at the Rio All-Suites Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada. It's Day 3 of the Main Event. 6,865 players bought in for $10,000 apiece. David Chuckman and Brendan Adams commentate coming into Day 3 in this morning webcast. 1,866 players remain.
There's no event like it. A poker melting pot of pros, amateurs, and everyone in between. Here on Day 3, this marathon of Texas Hold'em is set to kick into high gear. Contenders are starting to assert themselves, ready for a sprint to the gold, bracelet, and glory. It's Day 3 of the Main Event. 1,476 players remain at the start of the afternoon session of Day 3.
The evening session of Day 3 begins with 1,149 remaining players.
It's Day 4 of the Main Event with 852 players remaining, but only 693 spots pay. It's bubble day.
The Main Event is about a once in a lifetime opportunity. The chance to become Champion of the World. Today is Day 4, with fewer than 700 players remaining in this afternoon session.
Here at the World Series of Poker, the bubble has burst. Welcome to the evening session of Day 4, with 562 players remaining. Tonight's all about building your stack.
The webcast of Day 5's morning session starts with 378 hopeful players remaining.
Day 5 of the Main Event continues in this afternoon/evening session. 173 players remain.
The pressure of the Main Event is mounting. This long-distance poker race has crossed the halfway point. Here on Day 6, it's chip up or bust out. The evening session begins with 84 players left to follow the leader, with the average chip stack approaching 2M.
The time has come to separate yourself from the pack. To write yourself into poker history. To become a member of the November Nine. Just 44 players remaining with the chip average approaching 4.5M.
The evening session of Day 7 finds 32 players remaining in the Main Event.
22 players remain at the start of Day 8's morning webcast.
The afternoon session of Day 8 starts with only 14 players remaining. After 7 and a half days, these are the only survivors from a starting field of 6,865.
The gold bracelet lies at the end of the rainbow tonight. The Main Event is down to the final 12. Who will the final 9 be?
After a year of planning and preparation, the biggest buy-in poker tournament ever conceived has confirmed a sellout field of 48 players will take to the felt. Businessmen, card sharps and philanthropists have each paid $1,000,000 to participate in the highest stakes poker game on the planet. The winner will walk away with $18,346,673, the largest single prize in tournament poker history, and the most coveted trophy in gaming -- a World Series of Poker championship bracelet.
Each year, the WSOP Circuit National Championship is a showcase of the top players from the WSOP Circuit and the best professionals in the game. The 2014 World Series of Poker National Championship at Bally’s in Atlantic City attracted 126 players, creating a total prize pool of $1,260,000. The tournament, which featured a guaranteed $1 million freeroll for the top 100 WSOP Circuit players of the season, also managed to get 26 additional entries who put up a $10,000 buy-in each. Two of the automatic qualifiers opted not to play in the tournament. 2014 Final Table: Dominik Nitsche, Andrew Robinson, Matthew Ashton, Athanasios Polychronopoulos, Chris Bibb, Tracy Doss
The 2014 Big One for One Drop in Las Vegas. Part 1 of 6. An elite field of 56 players bought in for $1 million, with 11-percent of the prize pool going to the One Drop Charitable Foundation. Lon McEachern and Norman Chad call the play.
The 2014 Big One for One Drop in Las Vegas. Part 2 of 6. An elite field of 56 players bought in for $1 million, with 11-percent of the prize pool going to the One Drop Charitable Foundation. Lon McEachern and Norman Chad call the play.
The 2014 Big One for One Drop in Las Vegas. Part 3 of 6. An elite field of 56 players bought in for $1 million, with 11-percent of the prize pool going to the One Drop Charitable Foundation. Lon McEachern and Norman Chad call the play.
The 2014 Big One for One Drop in Las Vegas. Part 4 of 6. An elite field of 56 players bought in for $1 million, with 11-percent of the prize pool going to the One Drop Charitable Foundation. Lon McEachern and Norman Chad call the play.
The 2014 Big One for One Drop in Las Vegas. Part 5 of 6. Lon McEachern and Norman Chad call the play.
The 2014 Big One for One Drop conclusion in Las Vegas. The $1 million buy-in event featured a top prize last year of over $18 million, won by ??, while 11-percent of the prize pool goes to the One Drop Charitable Foundation.
The 2014 World Series of Poker main event finally makes it’s way to television tonight (Sunday, Sept. 28th) on ESPN. The broadcasts will once again feature commentators Norman Chad and Lon McEachern, who have been the voices of the WSOP since 2003. Tonight’s show will be the first of seven two-hour blocks of main event coverage that ESPN will be broadcasting, picking up the action as the field is narrowed down to a final table. On Nov. 10th the November Nine will return to Las Vegas to play out the final table live beginning at 8 PM EST. The final two competitors will return the following night at 9 PM EST to play down to a champion.
Part 2 of 16 from the 2014 Main Event in Las Vegas. Day 4 concludes with Phil Ivey and Maria Ho playing at the featured table.
Part 3 of 16. "Online you can call by accident, it's harder to do live." Day 5 starts with 291 players remaining and an average stack of 689K. Featured table: Rystadt, Margolin, Keranen, Rutter, Coats, Lacarrubba, Rotondo, Stewart, Blackman, Greaves.
Part 4 of 16. Day 5 continues. Featured table: Lacarrubba, Rutter, Clyde Keranen, Coats, Rystadt, Paul, Stewart, Margolin, Greaves. Side Action Championship: Event #2 - Dealing W/ JRB, Laak, Matusow, and Hellmuth
Part 5 of 16. Day 5 continues. Featured table: King Dan Smith, Kalas, Matt waxman, Midena, Ruberto, Benger, Chang, Gold, Eveslage, Loiacono Side Action Championship: Event #3 - Chip Riffling W/ JRB, Laak, Matusow, and Hellmuth
Part 6 of 16. Day 5 wraps up. The episode starts with 114 players remaining, with an average stack of 1,176,000.
Part 7 of 16. Day 6 of 7 begins. Ante: 5K. Blinds: 25K - 50K. The episode starts with 78 players remaining, with an average stack of 2,570,000. Featured table: Mark 'newhizzle' Newhouse, Lunkin, Maguire, Finstein, Cole, Odle, Greaves, Haugen. Side Action Championship: Event #4 - Chip Stacking W/ JRB, Laak, Matusow, and Hellmuth.
Part 8 of 16. "Flop, Newhouse, and River." Day 6 of 7 continues. The episode starts with 57 players remaining, with an average stack of 3,5200,000. Side Action Championship: Event #5 - Guess the Pot? W/ JRB, Laak, Matusow, and Hellmuth.
Part 9 of 16. "Float gone wrong" The episode starts with 43 players remaining, with an average stack of 4,665,000. Ante: 10K. Blinds: 40K - 80K. Featured table: Mark 'newhizzle' Newhouse, Dan Smith, C. Johnson, Brian Roberts, A. Kaiser, O Kemps, A. Zaichenko, W. Tonking, I. Lightbourne
Part 10 of 16. Day 6 of 7 concludes. Episode 10 starts with the final 4 tables in play. Players start with an average stack of 5,570,000. Ante: 10K. Blinds: 50K - 1000K. Featured table: B. Devonshire, K. Keranen, T. Sarra, Jr., L. Force, L. Velador, B. Politano, M. Senft, M. Haugen, D. Sindelar
World Series of Poker 2015, main event. This the first episode from the main event starts with 661 players remaining out of the 6,420 that started on day 1. Feature table: Jae Kim, Phil Hellmuth, J. Borenstein, R. Barabino, L. Harris, M. Pahuja, M. Cieri, Michael Cloud, Brian De Leon
World Series of Poker 2015, main event. This the second episode from the main event starts with 468 players remaining out of the 6,420 that started on day 1. Feature table: Jae Kim, Phil Hellmuth, Nick Bjerno, Rick Barabino, L. Harris, M. Pahuja, M. Cieri, Michael Cloud, Brian De Leon. Daniel Negreanu also joins the table.
World Series of Poker 2015, main event. This the third episode from the main event starts with 416 players remaining out of the 6,420 that started on day 1. We are still on day 4. Feature table: Jae Kim, A. Lewis, Nick Bjerno, Rick Barabino, L. Harris, Daniel Negreanu, M. Cieri, Michael Cloud, Brian De Leon
World Series of Poker 2015, main event. This the fourth episode from the main event starts with just over 300 players remaining out of the 6,420 that started on day 1. We are still on day 4. Feature table: Felipe Ramos, Sean Nguyen, Eugen Fritzler, Daniel Negreanu, H. Perez, R. D´Angelo, M. Muehlman, A. Bari, D. Chop
World Series of Poker 2015, main event, day 5. This the fifth episode from the main event starts with 237 players remaining out of the 6,420 that started on day 1. Feature table: Daniel Negreanu, Chad Power, Donald Blum, S. Schwalich, Damien Lhommeau, O. Moga, C. Horter, Salvatore Dicarlo Later Marco Van Opzeeland and Upeshka De Silva joins the table.
World Series of Poker 2015, main event, day 5. This the sixth episode from the main event starts with 162 players remaining out of the 6,420 that started on day 1. Feature table: Upeshka De Silva, Daniel Negreanu, Chad Power, Donald Blum, S. Khalili, Marco Van Opzeeland, O. Moga, C. Horter, Salvatore Dicarlo.
World Series of Poker 2015, main event, day 5. This the seventh episode from the main event starts with 112 players remaining out of the 6,420 that started on day 1.
World Series of Poker 2015, main event, day 5. This the eight episode from the main event starts with 88 players remaining out of the 6,420 that started on day 1, and is the last episode from day 5.
World Series of Poker 2015, main event, day 6. This the ninth episode from the main event starts with 69 players remaining out of the 6,420 that started on day 1.
World Series of Poker 2015, main event, day 6. This the 10th episode from the main event starts with 55 players remaining out of the 6,420 that started on day 1.
World Series of Poker 2015, main event, day 6. This the 11th episode from the main event starts with 45 players remaining out of the 6,420 that started on day 1.
World Series of Poker 2015, main event, day 6. This the 12th episode from the main event starts with 31 players remaining out of the 6,420 that started on day 1.
World Series of Poker 2015, main event, day 7. This the 13th episode from the main event starts with 27 players remaining out of the 6,420 that started on day 1.
World Series of Poker 2015, main event, day 7. This the 14th episode from the main event starts with 19 players remaining out of the 6,420 that started on day 1.
World Series of Poker 2015, main event, day 7. This the 15th episode from the main event starts with 15 players remaining out of the 6,420 that started on day 1.
World Series of Poker 2015, main event, day 7. This the 16th episode from the main event starts with 11 players remaining out of the 6,420 that started on day 1. This is the last episode before the "November 9".
The 2016 Global Casino Championship in Cherokee, N.C. Part 1 of 2. WSOP Circuit event winners from the past year are featured.
The 2016 Global Casino Championship in Cherokee, N.C. Part 2 of 2. WSOP Circuit event winners from the past year are featured.
Part 2 of 18 in the 2016 Main Event in Las Vegas. Lon McEachern and Norman Chad call the play.
Part 3 of 18 in the 2016 Main Event in Las Vegas. Lon McEachern and Norman Chad call the play while more players get knocked out of the tournament.
The 2016 World Series of Poker Main Event in Las Vegas. Lon McEachern and Norman Chad call the shots while 137 players take off towards the end of day 5.
The 2016 World Series of Poker Main Event in Las Vegas. Coverage continues late on day 5 with a field of 97 players remaining.
The 2016 World Series of Poker Main Event in Las Vegas. Coverage continues on play day 6 with only 80 players remaining.
The 2016 World Series of Poker Main Event in Las Vegas. Coverage of day 6 continues with only 62 players remaining.
The Colossus is back for the fourth time and is the featured event of the opening weekend at the 49th Annual World Series of Poker. Colossus is a $565 buy-in No-Limit Hold'em tournament with two starting flights each day. Created in 2015, the inaugural Colossus event saw an incredible 22,374 entries, shattering the record for largest live poker tournament ever held. In the three years offered, the event has drawn over 62,000 entrants with an average prize pool of $10,340,000! The Champion of Colossus will return home with a guaranteed $1,000,000 and a coveted WSOP gold bracelet. Courtesy of Twitch.TV.
Who would not want to become a millionaire in a matter of days only? The chances of this happening might be slim for many people around the world, but the World Series of Poker makes this possibility a reality with the help of its eagerly-anticipated Event #21: $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em MILLIONAIRE MAKER, boasting a truly impressive guaranteed prize pool of $9,937,350. Courtesy of Twitch.TV
Final table coverage of the 'Marathon', courtesy of Twitch.TV
Event 26 has 3 days of $1,000 PLO action. Final table courtesy of PokerGo
Event 30 is the $1,500 PLO competition, courtesy of PokerGo
Watch the final table action in the $1,500 7-card stud event, courtesy of Twitch.TV
Coverage of the $50,000 Poker Players Championship event, courtesy of Twitch.TV
Continuing coverage of the $50,000 Poker Players Championship. Final table. Courtesy of PokerGo.
Day 2 coverage of the $10,000 7-card stud championship, leading down to the final table. Courtesy of Twitch.TV
Final table coverage of the $10,000 7-card stud championship. Courtesy of PokerGo.
Twitch.TV's final table coverage of the $1,500 event 37.
Twitch.TV's coverage of day 2 of the $1,500 No-Limit Holdem Shootout. Part 1 of 2
Twitch.TV's coverage of day 2 of the $1,500 No-Limit Holdem Shootout. Part 2 of 2
Down to the final table of the Event 39, $1,500 No-Limit Holdem Shootout. Courtesy of Twitch.TV
Watch day 3 of PokerGO's coverage of the $25,000 PLO 8-handed high roller event.
Watch the action with Scotty Nguyen battling with defending champion James Calderaro and the rest of the final table for the first prize of $1.4 million
Final table coverage of the $10,000 Limit 2-7 lowball triple draw championship. Courtesy of Twitch.TV
Final table coverage of the $2,500 No-Limit Holdem event 43. Courtesy of Twitch.TV
Watch the final table coverage of the $2,500 mixed Omaha H/L 8 or better, 7-card stud H/L 8 event 46, courtesy of TwitchTV
Final table coverage of the World Series of Poker 2018 Event 49, the $10,000 PLO 8-handed championship. Courtesy of Twitch.TV
Twitch.TV's scheduled coverage of the $1,500 Razz final table.
Watch Twitch.TV's final table coverage of the $10,000 Limit Holdem championship.
Final table coverage of event #51: the $1,500 No-Limit Hold em, with bounties. Courtesy of Twitch.TV
Twitch.TV's coverage of event 54's Big Blind Antes $3,000 No-Limit Hold em final table.
Part 1 of Twitch.TV's final table coverage of event 56, the $10,000 razz championship.
Part 2 of Twitch.TV's final table coverage of event 56, the $10,000 razz championship.
Twitch.TV's scheduled coverage of the Ladies $1,000 No-Limit Holdem Championship.
Twitch.TV's coverage of final table action in event 58's $5,000 No-Limit Holdem 6-handed championship.
ESPN's coverage of the WSOP 2018 Main Event. Day 1A had 800 players register.
PokerGo's continuing coverage for evening play of day 1A, with commentary by Ali Nejad and Nick Schulman.
1200 people registered for day 1B action in the WSOP Main Event, including Maria Ho, Brian Hastings and Chad Power on the feature table. ESPN day coverage.
PokerGo's continuing coverage into the evening of Day 1B the 2018 main event.
ESPN's coverage of Day 1C of the WSOP 2018 Main Event.
PokerGo's continuing coverage of Day 1C of the Main Event.
2460 players remain for day 2A+B of the 2018 WSOP Main Event. ESPN coverage.
Twitch.TV's coverage of the $888 Crazy Eights No-Limit Hold em 8-Handed tournament, with $888,888 guaranteed for 1st!
PokerGo's continuing evening coverage of Day 2AB of the WSOP main event, with commentary by Ali Nejad and Nick Schulman.
ESPN's coverage of the WSOP 2018 main event, with 3480 players remaining at the start of Day 2C.
PokerGo's continuing coverage of day 2C of the 2018 Main Event, with 3174 players remaining.
Watch ESPN's coverage of start of Day 3 of the WSOP 2018 main event, with 2800 players remaining.
PokerGo's continuing evening coverage of day 3 of the WSOP main event, featuring Johnny Chan, Antonio Esfandiari and Phil Hellmuth on the featured tables and 1500 players remaining.
ESPN's daytime coverage of the fourth day of the WSOP 2018 main event, with 1182 players remaining.
761 players remain for PokerGo's evening coverage of day 4 of the 2018 main event. Antonio Esfandiari and Phil Ivey are among the big names in the action.
The final table of 2018's event 66, the $1,500 No-Limit holdem tournament, courtesy of Twitch.TV
Twitch.TV's coverage of the $1,500 PLO bounty final table.
Watch ESPN's daytime coverage of the 2018 main event day 5, with 171 players remaining.
PokerGo's continuing coverage of day 5 of the main event, with big names including Kelly Minkin, Antonio Esfandiari, Shannon Shorr, and Cliff Josephy battling for position.
PokerGo's morning coverage of main event, day 6, with 97 players remaining, including 2009 champion Joe Cada, 2017 finalist Benjamin Pollak and Kelly Minkin, Frederik Brink, and John Cynn.
Only 66 players remain from the original 7221. ESPN covers the continuing daytime action on day 6 of the WSOP main event.
PokerGo's concluding coverage of the WSOP Main Event Day 6 with 44 players remaining including 2009 champ Joe Cada, 2017 finalist Benjamin Pollak and top players Minkin, Frederik Brink, and John Cynn.
Final table coverage of the $3,00 PLO 6-handed tournament, courtesy of Twitch.TV
PokerGo's start of day coverage of day 7 of the main event, with 26 players remaining.
ESPN's continuing coverage of day 7 of the main event, with only 12 players remaining.
Watch Twitch.TV's broadcast of event 71, the $5,000 No-Limit Holdem tournament with 30 minute levels.
7,221 players started, now only 9 remain. ESPN covers the first day of the WSOP 2018 final table.
Twitch.TV covers the Little One for One Drop $1,000 buy-in tournament.
Watch Twitch.TV's coverage of the $1,500 mixed no-limit holdem/PLO 8-handed final table.
Follow ESPN's continuing coverage of the 2018 WSOP main event final table. Only 6 players remain at the start of day 2 battling for first prize of $8.8 million.
Watch Twitch.TV's coverage of WSOP event 74, $10,000 No-Limit Holdem 6-handed with big blind antes.
We're down to 3 players for ESPN's coverage of the Main Event final table, battling for first prize of $8.8 million and the most coveted bracelet in the game.
Twitch.TV's coverage of the final table of WSOP 2018's $50,000 No-Limit Holdem high roller tournament with big blinds.
The Big One for One Drop is the WSOP $1,000,000 buy-in no-limit hold 'em tournament. Added in the 2012, it became the highest buy-in poker tournament in history as well as the largest single payout offered. The event is known for its charitable contributions as much as $111,111 or €111,111 of each player's buy in is donated to the One Drop Foundation, an international non-profit organization created by Cirque du Soleil founder Guy Laliberté. Start of day 2 coverage from PokerGo.
Continuing coverage of day 2 of the Big One for One Drop $1,000,000 buy-in NLHE tournament. Courtesy of PokerGo.
The final day, final table, and final tournament of the World Series of Poker 2018. PokerGo's coverage of Day 3 of the Big One for One Drop.
Watch the Event #6: $25,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Tyler Cornell is the chip leader ahead of Michael Liang, Jonathan Jaffe, Mustapha Kanit, and Adrian Mateos as the final five play for the $833,289 first-place prize.
Watch the highlights from the Event #6: $25,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Tyler Cornell, Michael Liang, Jonathan Jaffe, Mustapha Kanit, and Adrian Mateos. Who will win the $833,289 first-place prize?
Watch the Event #8: $600 No-Limit Hold'em Deepstack final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Zhi Wu is the chip leader ahead of Chrishan Sivasundaram, Ryan Chan, Nicholas Zautra, and Ari Mezrich as the final five play for the $281,604 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #8: $600 No-Limit Hold'em Deepstack final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Zhi Wu is the chip leader ahead of Chrishan Sivasundaram, Ryan Chan, Nicholas Zautra, and Ari Mezrich as the final five play for the $281,604 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #9: $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo 8-or-Better Championship final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Ari Engel is the chip leader ahead of Zachary Milchman, Eddie Blumenthal, Andrew Yeh, and Phil Hellmuth as the final five play for the $317,076 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #9: $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo 8-or-Better Championship final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Ari Engel is the chip leader ahead of Zachary Milchman, Eddie Blumenthal, Andrew Yeh, and Phil Hellmuth as the final five play for the $317,076 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #11: $25,000 Heads-Up Championship final day from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Just four players remain with Jason Koon playing Henri Puustinen, and Dan Zack playing Gabor Szabo, before the winner of each match will play for the $243,981 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #11: $25,000 Heads-Up Championship final day from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Just four players remain with Jason Koon playing Henri Puustinen, and Dan Zack playing Gabor Szabo, before the winner of each match will play for the $243,981 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #13: $3,000 No-Limit Hold'em Freezeout final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Michael Gathy is the chip leader ahead of Gabriel Andrade, Girish Apte, Brandon Caputo, and Harvey Mathews as the final five play for the $371,914 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #13: $3,000 No-Limit Hold'em Freezeout final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Michael Gathy is the chip leader ahead of Gabriel Andrade, Girish Apte, Brandon Caputo, and Harvey Mathews as the final five play for the $371,914 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #16: $10,000 Limit Hold'em Championship final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Terrence Chan is the chip leader ahead of John Racener, Eric Kurtzman, Jason Somerville, Scott Tuttle, Nate Silver, and John Monnette as the final ten play for the $245,680 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #16: $10,000 Limit Hold'em Championship final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Terrence Chan is the chip leader ahead of John Racener, Eric Kurtzman, Jason Somerville, Scott Tuttle, Nate Silver, and John Monnette as the final ten play for the $245,680 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #17: $1,500 MILLIONAIRE MAKER final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Daniel Lazrus is the chip leader ahead of Ignacio Moron, Michael Gathy, Jeffrey Gencarelli, and Darryl Ronconi as the final five play for the $1,000,000 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #17: $1,500 MILLIONAIRE MAKER final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Daniel Lazrus is the chip leader ahead of Ignacio Moron, Michael Gathy, Jeffrey Gencarelli, and Darryl Ronconi as the final five play for the $1,000,000 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #19: $10,000 Seven Card Stud Championship final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Phil Hellmuth is the chip leader ahead of Anthony Zinno, James Chen, Jose Paz-Gutierrez, Jason Gola, Stephen Chidwick, and Jack McClelland as the final seven play for the $182,872 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #19: $10,000 Seven Card Stud Championship final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Phil Hellmuth is the chip leader ahead of Anthony Zinno, James Chen, Jose Paz-Gutierrez, Jason Gola, Stephen Chidwick, and Jack McClelland as the final seven play for the $182,872 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #22: $1,000 Ladies Championship final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Mikiyo Aoki is the chip leader ahead of Debora Brooke, Diane Cooley, JJ Liu, and Lara Eisenberg as the final five play for the $115,694 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #22: $1,000 Ladies Championship final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Mikiyo Aoki is the chip leader ahead of Debora Brooke, Diane Cooley, JJ Liu, and Lara Eisenberg as the final five play for the $115,694 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #25: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em 6-Handed final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Eric Tsai is the chip leader ahead of Scott Ball, Jonathan Jaffe, Bin Weng, Galen Hall and John Racener as the final six play for the $562,667 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #25: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em 6-Handed final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Eric Tsai is the chip leader ahead of Scott Ball, Jonathan Jaffe, Bin Weng, Galen Hall and John Racener as the final six play for the $562,667 first-place prize.
Event #29 $10K Short DeckWatch the Event #29: $10,000 Short Deck final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Chance Kornuth is the chip leader ahead of Chad Campbell, Moshe Gabay, Dan Shak, Joao Vieira, and Thomas Kysar as the final six play for the $194,670 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #29: $10,000 Short Deck final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Chance Kornuth is the chip leader ahead of Chad Campbell, Moshe Gabay, Dan Shak, Joao Vieira, and Thomas Kysar as the final six play for the $194,670 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #30: $1,500 MONSTER STACK final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Rafael Reis is the chip leader ahead of Mordechai Hazan, Ryan Leng, Christopher Andler, Charlie Dawson, Michael Noori, and Daniel Fortier as the final seven play for the $610,347 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #30: $1,500 MONSTER STACK final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Rafael Reis is the chip leader ahead of Mordechai Hazan, Ryan Leng, Christopher Andler, Charlie Dawson, Michael Noori, and Daniel Fortier as the final seven play for the $610,347 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #32: $3,000 H.O.R.S.E. final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Eli Elezra is the chip leader ahead of Ahmed Mohamed, Michael Trivett, Jim Collopy, Paramjit Gill, Maria Ho, and Qinghai Pan as the final seven play for the $172,823 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #32: $3,000 H.O.R.S.E. final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Eli Elezra is the chip leader ahead of Ahmed Mohamed, Michael Trivett, Jim Collopy, Paramjit Gill, Maria Ho, and Qinghai Pan as the final seven play for the $172,823 first-place prize.
Watch bonus coverage of the Event #36: $10,000 Dealer's Choice Championship from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Just ten players remain including Daniel Negreanu, Phil Hellmuth, Mike Matusow, and Mike Gorodinsky, along with chip leader Jake Schwartz, and two-time defending champion Adam Friedman. Players are guaranteed $20,726 in prize money, but all eyes are on the $248,350 first-place prize and title of champion.
Watch the Event #38: $50,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Michael Addamo is the chip leader ahead of Justin Bonomo, Erik Seidel, Gal Yifrach, and Chris Hunichen as the final five play for the $1,132,968 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #38: $50,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Michael Addamo is the chip leader ahead of Justin Bonomo, Erik Seidel, Gal Yifrach, and Chris Hunichen as the final five play for the $1,132,968 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #39: $1,500 Pot-Limit Omaha final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Josh Arieh is the chip leader ahead of Tommy Le, Ivan Deyra, Robert Blair, and Gabriel Andrade as the final five play for the $204,766 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #39: $1,500 Pot-Limit Omaha final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Josh Arieh is the chip leader ahead of Tommy Le, Ivan Deyra, Robert Blair, and Gabriel Andrade as the final five play for the $204,766 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #40: $10,000 H.O.R.S.E. Championship final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Kevin Gerhart is the chip leader ahead of Eddie Blumenthal, Marco Johnson, Bryce Yockey, and Brandon Shack-Harris as the final five play for the $361,124 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #40: $10,000 H.O.R.S.E. Championship final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Kevin Gerhart is the chip leader ahead of Eddie Blumenthal, Marco Johnson, Bryce Yockey, and Brandon Shack-Harris as the final five play for the $361,124 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #44: $3,000 Limit Hold'em 6-Handed final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Kevin Erickson is the chip leader ahead of Steve Chanthabouasy, Ryan Hansen, Kenny Hsiung, Ken Deng, and Kosei Ichinose as the final six play for the $109,692 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #44: $3,000 Limit Hold'em 6-Handed final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Kevin Erickson is the chip leader ahead of Steve Chanthabouasy, Ryan Hansen, Kenny Hsiung, Ken Deng, and Kosei Ichinose as the final six play for the $109,692 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #45: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Tommy Le is the chip leader ahead of Artem Maksimov, Chris Sandrock, Jordan Spurlin, and Jeremy Ausmus as the final five play for the $746,477 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #45: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Tommy Le is the chip leader ahead of Artem Maksimov, Chris Sandrock, Jordan Spurlin, and Jeremy Ausmus as the final five play for the $746,477 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #47: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em Freezout final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Johannes Becker is the chip leader ahead of Benny Glaser, Dustin Dirksen, Farzad Bonyadi, and Jake Schwartz as the final five play for the $297,051 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #47: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em Freezout final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Johannes Becker is the chip leader ahead of Benny Glaser, Dustin Dirksen, Farzad Bonyadi, and Jake Schwartz as the final five play for the $297,051 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #53: $25,000 Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Ka Kwan Lau is the chip leader ahead of John Beauprez, Maxx Coleman, Shaun Deeb, and Veselin Karakitukov as the final five play for the $1,251,860 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #53: $25,000 Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Ka Kwan Lau is the chip leader ahead of John Beauprez, Maxx Coleman, Shaun Deeb, and Veselin Karakitukov as the final five play for the $1,251,860 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #60: $50,000 Poker Players Championship final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Eli Elezra is the chip leader ahead of Paul Volpe, Chris Brewer, Dan Cates, and Ryan Leng as the final five play for the $954,020 first-place prize.
Watch highlights from Event #60: $50,000 Poker Players Championship final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Eli Elezra is the chip leader ahead of Paul Volpe, Chris Brewer, Dan Cates, and Ryan Leng as the final five play for the $954,020 first-place prize.
The 2021 World Series of Poker Main Event is underway with Day 1A action headlined by Doyle Brunson at the feature table alongside Perry Friedman, JJ Liu, and Damien LeForbes. On the secondary table, recent WSOP bracelet winner Jason Koon leads the way before a new table is led by Kelly Minkin, Seth Davies, and Noah Boeken.
Watch highlights from Day 1A of the 2021 WSOP Main Event that features Doyle Brunson, JJ Liu, Perry Friedman, and Steve Zolotow on the feature table.
Day 1C of the 2021 World Series of Poker Main Event is here with nine-time WSOP bracelet winner Erik Seidel headlining the feature table. On the outer table, 2016 World Champion Qui Nguyen sits alongside David Prociak and Bryce Yockey.
Watch highlights from Day 1C of the 2021 WSOP Main Event that features Erik Seidel on the feature table while the outer table is headlined by 2016 World Champion Qui Nguyen along with Bryce Yockey and David Prociak.
The 2021 World Series of Poker Main Event continues with Day 1D coverage that is headlined by Maria Ho on the feature table. On the outer table, Barstool's Adam Smith is seated alongside George Wolff and Tyler Patterson, before Matt Berkey and Kitty Kuo are rotated into the mix.
Watch highlights from Day 1D of the 2021 WSOP Main Event that features Maria Ho on the feature table while the outer tables are headlined by Barstool's Adam Smith, George Wolff, Tyler Patterson, Kitty Kuo, and Matt Berkey.
Day 1E of the 2021 World Series of Poker Main Event is underway with 2005 World Champion Joe Hachem headlining the feature table. Hachem sits alongside fellow WSOP bracelet winners Dylan Linde and Nathan Gamble, while 2017 World Champion Scott Blumstein sits on the outer table.
Watch highlights from Day 1E of the 2021 WSOP Main Event that features Joe Hachem, Dylan Linde, and Nathan Gamble on the feature table while the outer table is headlined by 2017 World Champion Scott Blumstein.
Nearly 3,000 players return for Day 2A/B/D of the 2021 World Series of Poker Main Event as the feature table is headlined by 10-time WSOP bracelet winner Doyle Brunson along with Jason Koon and Scotter Clark. The outer table features Maria Ho, Albert Ng, John Morgan, and four-time WSOP bracelet winner Mike Matusow.
Watch highlights from Day 2A/B/D of the 2021 WSOP Main Event that features ten-time WSOP bracelet winner Doyle Brunson at the feature table alongside Scotter Clark and Jason Koon. On the outer table, four-time WSOP bracelet winner Mike Matusow sits with Maria Ho, Albert Ng, and John Morgan.
Over 1,800 players return for Day 2C/E/F of the 2021 World Series of Poker Main Event as the feature table is headlined by 16-time WSOP bracelet winner Phil Hellmuth, while 2003 World Champion Chris Moneymaker sits on the outer table. After the dinner break, Erick Lindgren and Barry Greenstein take a seat at the feature table while Moneymaker makes a run at the chip lead.
Watch highlights from Day 2C/E/F of the 2021 WSOP Main Event that features 16-time WSOP bracelet winner Phil Hellmuth at the feature table while 2003 World Champion Chris Moneymaker occupies the outer table. The feature table then sees WSOP bracelet winners Erick Lindgren and Barry Greenstein join the action while Moneymaker looks to end the day as the chip leader.
Nearly 2,400 players combine for Day 3 of the 2021 World Series of Poker Main Event with the feature table headlined by 2003 World Champion Chris Moneymaker. The secondary table is led by Nick Petrangelo and previous WSOP Main Event final tablists Russell Thomas and Garry Gates, while Maria Ho sits on the outer table. Play continues through until the money bubble bursts and the final 1,000 players are all in-the-money and ensured of a Day 4 berth.
Watch highlights from Day 3 of the 2021 WSOP Main Event that sees the 2003 World Champion Chris Moneymaker headline the feature table while the secondary table sits Nick Petrangelo and previous WSOP Main Event final tablists Russell Thomas and Garry Gates. Play continues through until the money bubble bursts and just 1,000 players remain heading into Day 4.
Day 4 of the 2021 World Series of Poker Main Event kicks off with every player in the money and 2003 World Champion Chris Moneymaker back on the feature table and joined by Keith Lehr and Conrad Simpson. The secondary table sees Matt Berkey and Chance Kornuth battling it out, while on the outer table, WSOP bracelet winner Bertrand Grospellier sits with WSOP commentator David Tuchman.
Watch highlights from Day 4 of the 2021 WSOP Main Event that sees each player return with a guaranteed payout as 2003 World Champion Chris Moneymaker headlines the feature table with Keith Lehr and Conrad Simpson. On the outer table, two high roller regulars battle as Chance Kornuth and Matt Berkey look to move up the leaderboard.
Less than 300 players return for Day 5 of the 2021 World Series of Poker Main Event as Chance Kornuth and Nick Petrangelo headline the feature table. On the secondary table sit WSOP bracelet winners Stephen Chidwick, Keith Lehr, and Tristan Wade, while Dragana Lim occupies the outer table.
Play resumes after the dinner break on Day 5 of the 2021 World Series of Poker with just 162 players remaining. The feature table is headlined by Nicholas Rigby, Ben "BitBoy Crypto" Armstrong, and Stephen Song before Dragana Lim takes a seat up on the main stage. Stephen Chidwick headlines the secondary table alongside Tristan Wade and Hye Park as play continues until just 96 players remain entering Day 6.
Watch highlights from Day 5 of the 2021 WSOP Main Event that sees Chance Kornuth and Nick Petrangelo headline the feature table before Nicholas Rigby makes a splash under the bright lights. The secondary table is occupied by high rollers Keith Lehr and Stephen Chidwick, while Dragana Lim and Tristan Wade get in the mix.
Day 6 of the 2021 World Series of Poker Main Event begins with 96 players remaining and chip leader Koray Aldemir on the feature table while the secondary table is headlined by Chance Kornuth, Dragana Lim, and Jake Toole.
Play resumes after dinner break with 60 players remaining and Koray Aldemir holding the chip lead ahead of Philipe Pizzari Pinto and Nicolas Vayssieres. Aldemir headlines the feature table along with Mitchell Halverson, Jareth East, and Matthew Jewett. The action continues for two more levels as the field is reduced to the final four tables by the conclusion of Day 6.
Watch highlights from Day 6 of the 2021 WSOP Main Event that sees Koray Aldemir at the feature table before Nicholas Rigby returns to the grand stage. The secondary table sees Chance Kornuth, David Coleman, and Dragana Lim battling it out.
Just 36 players remain in the 2021 World Series of Poker Main Event as Chance Kornuth headlines the feature table with Jonathan Dwek. Chip leader Hye Park sits at the secondary table with Mitchell Halverson and Ramon Colillas, while the outer table sees Demo Kiriopoulos, Jesse Lonis, and Andreas Kniep battling it out.
Just 20 players remain in the 2021 World Series of Poker Main Event as Joshua Remitio holds the slight chip lead over Arkadi Onikoul. Onikoul sits at the feature table alongside overnight chip leader Hye Park, along with Demo Kiriopoulos and Koray Aldemir. Only 11 more eliminations until the final table is set, and the final nine players have locked up $1 million in prize money.
Watch highlights from Day 7 of the 2021 WSOP Main Event that sees just 36 players return to play down to the final table of nine. Play begins with Chance Kornuth at the feature table and chip leader Hye Park at the secondary table before play progresses through to the final table bubble where Germany's Koray Aldemir puts his big chip stack to use.
The final table of the 2021 World Series of Poker Main Event final table is set with Germany's Koray Aldemir holding a commanding chip lead over the final nine. Trailing Aldemir are George Holmes, Alejandro Lococo, Joshua Remitio, Jack Oliver, Ugur Secilmis, Hye Park, Chase Bianchi, and Jareth East. Everyone is guaranteed $1 million in prize money, but all eyes are on the $8 million first-place prize, coveted WSOP bracelet, and title of 2021 World Champion.
Watch highlights from Day 1 of the 2021 WSOP Main Event final table. Germany's Koray Aldemir is the chip leader ahead of George Holmes, Alejandro Lococo, Joshua Remitio, Jack Oliver, Ugur Secilmis, Hye Park, Chase Bianchi, and Jareth East. Everyone is guaranteed $1 million in prize money, but all eyes are on the $8 million first-place prize, coveted WSOP bracelet, and title of 2021 World Champion.
Watch the Event #79: $1,979 Poker Hall of Fame Bounty final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Ole Schemion is the chip leader ahead of Giovani Torre, James Alexander, Jerry Wong, Benjamin Underwood, and Marc Rivera as the final six play for the $172,499 first-place prize.
It is an international affair at the 2021 World Series of Poker Main Event final table as just three players remain with Germany's Koray Aldemir holding a dominating chip lead ahead of the United Kingdom's Jack Oliver and the United States' George Holmes. The final three players have all locked up $3 million in prize money, but all eyes are on the coveted WSOP bracelet and $8 million in first-place prize money. Will it be Aldemir, Oliver, or Holmes being crowned the 2021 World Champion?
Watch highlights from the conclusion of the 2021 WSOP Main Event final table. Germany's Koray Aldemir holds a dominating chip lead ahead of George Holmes and Jack Oliver as each player has locked up $3 million but has eyes on the $8 million first-place prize, coveted WSOP bracelet, and title of 2021 World Champion.
Watch highlights from Event #79: $1,979 Poker Hall of Fame Bounty final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Ole Schemion is the chip leader ahead of Giovani Torre, James Alexander, Jerry Wong, Benjamin Underwood, and Marc Rivera as the final six play for the $172,499 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #82: $250,000 No-Limit Hold'em Super High Roller final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker.
Watch highlights from Event #82: $250,000 No-Limit Hold'em Super High Roller final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker.
Watch the Event #84: $50,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Roller final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker. Daniel Negreanu is the chip leader ahead of Phil Hellmuth, Laszlo Bujtas, Alexander Petersen, Jared Bleznick, and Jeremy Ausmus as the final six play for the $1,188,918 first-place prize.
Watch the highlights from the Event #84: $50,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Roller final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker headlined by Daniel Negreanu, Phil Hellmuth, Laszlo Bujtas, Alexander Petersen, Jared Bleznick, and Jeremy Ausmus. Who will collect the $1,188,918 first-place prize?
Watch the Event #87: $100,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller final table from the 2021 World Series of Poker.
Watch the Event #2: $100,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller Bounty final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker. Chance Kornuth is the chip leader ahead of David Peters, Ali Imsirovic, Dario Sammartino, and Koray Aldemir, as the final five play for the $1,166,810 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the highlights from the Event #2: $100,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller Bounty final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Chance Kornuth, David Peters, Ali Imsirovic, Dario Sammartino, and Koray Aldemir. Who will win the $1,166,810 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet?
Watch the Event #3: $2,500 No-Limit Hold'em Freezeout final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker. Scott Seiver is the chip leader ahead of David Goodman, Steve Zolotow, Alexander Farahi, Sergio Aido, Lewis Spencer, and Nick Schulman, as the final seven players play for the $320,059 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the highlights from the Event #3: $2,500 No-Limit Hold'em Freezeout final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Scott Seiver, David Goodman, Steve Zolotow, Alexander Farahi, Sergio Aido, Lewis Spencer, and Nick Schulman. Who will take home the $320,059 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet?
Watch the Event #6: $25,000 Heads-Up Championship semifinals and finals from the 2022 World Series of Poker that sees Dan Smith facing Dario Sammartino, and Christoph Vogelsang facing Kevin Rabichow as the final four play for the $509,717 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the highlights of the Event #6: $25,000 Heads-Up Championship semifinals and finals from the 2022 World Series of Poker. Dan Smith faces Dario Sammartino, and Christoph Vogelsang faces Kevin Rabichow in the semifinals, before Smith and Vogelsang face off in the finals for the $509,717 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #8: $25,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker. Chris Brewer is the chip leader ahead of Chad Eveslage, Josh Arieh, Koray Aldemir, Brek Schutten, Jake Schindler, Ognyan Dimov, Antonio Lievano, and Dan Colpoys, as the final nine play for the $1,415,610 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the highlights from the Event #8: $25,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Chris Brewer, Chad Eveslage, Josh Arieh, Koray Aldemir, Brek Schutten, Jake Schindler, Ognyan Dimov, Antonio Lievano, and Dan Colpoys. Who will collect the $1,415,610 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet?
Watch the Event #12: $50,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker. Brekstyn Schutten is the chip leader ahead of Punnat Punsri, Jake Schindler, Shannon Shorr, David Peters, and Andrew Lichtenberger, as the final six players play for the $1,328,068 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the highlights from the Event #12: $50,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Brekstyn Schutten, Punnat Punsri, Jake Schindler, Shannon Shorr, David Peters, and Andrew Lichtenberger. Who will win the $1,328,068 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet?
Watch the Event #15: $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo Championship final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker. Yuval Bronshtein is the chip leader ahead of Dustin Dirksen, Dan Zack, Ray Dehkharghani, and Jake Liebeskind, as the final five play for the $440,757 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the highlights from the Event #15: $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo Championship final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Yuval Bronshtein, Dustin Dirksen, Dan Zack, Ray Dehkharghani, and Jake Liebeskind. Who will capture the $440,757 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet?
Watch the Event #19: $25,000 Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker. Fabian Brandes is the chip leader ahead of Josh Arieh, Tong Li, Sam Stein, and Scott Ball, as the final five players play for the $1,467,739 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the highlights from the Event #19: $25,000 Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Fabian Brandes, Josh Arieh, Tong Li, Sam Stein, and Scott Ball. Who will take home the $1,467,739 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet?
Watch the Event #21: $1,500 MONSTER STACK final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker. Mike Jukich is the chip leader ahead of Anthony Spinella, Mateusz Moolhuizen, Francis Anderson, David Zarrin, Joao Simao, Ricardo Caridade, Yoshiya Agata, and Jessica Teusl, as the final nine play for the $966,577 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the highlights from the Event #21: $1,500 MONSTER STACK final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Mike Jukich, Anthony Spinella, Mateusz Moolhuizen, Francis Anderson, David Zarrin, Joao Simao, Ricardo Caridade, Yoshiya Agata, and Jessica Teusl. Who will collect the $966,577 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet?
Watch the Event #28: $50,000 Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker. Veselin Karakitukov is the chip leader ahead of Ben Lamb, Robert Cowen, Dash Dudley, and Jared Bleznick, as the final five play for the $1,393,816 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the highlights from the Event #28: $50,000 Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Veselin Karakitukov, Ben Lamb, Robert Cowen, Dash Dudley, and Jared Bleznick. Who will take home the $1,393,816 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet?
Watch the highlights from the Event #34: $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em Freezeout final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Maxime Parys, Samuel Bifarella, Michel Leibgorin, Justin Pechie, Steve Zolotow, David Dibernardi, and Kenny Robbins. Who will collect the $364,899 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet?
Watch the Event #37: $1,500 MILLIONAIRE MAKER final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker. Tyler Gaston is the chip leader ahead of Yuliyan Kolev, Oren Rosen, Yita Choong, and Dominic Brazier, as the final five players play for the $1,125,141 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the highlights from the Event #37: $1,500 MILLIONAIRE MAKER final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Tyler Gaston, Yuliyan Kolev, Oren Rosen, Yita Choong, and Dominic Brazier. Who will collect the $1,125,141 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet?
Watch the Event #38: $10,000 No-Limit 2-7 Single Draw Championship final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker. Pedro Bromfman is the chip leader ahead of Scott Seiver, Yuri Dzivielevski, Alex Livingston, Farzad Bonyadi, Cary Katz, and Eli Elezra, as the final seven play for the $294,616 first-place prize.
Watch the highlights from the Event #38: $10,000 No-Limit 2-7 Single Draw Championship final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Pedro Bromfman, Scott Seiver, Yuri Dzivielevski, Alex Livingston, Farzad Bonyadi, Cary Katz, and Eli Elezra. Who will win the $294,616 first-place prize?
Watch the Event #39: $3,000 Pot-Limit Omaha 6-Handed final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker. Leonid Yanovski is the chip leader ahead of Fabian Brandes, Sean Winter, Grzegorz Derkowski, Ferenc Deak, and Thomas Morrison, as the final six players play for the $371,358 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the highlights from the Event #39: $3,000 Pot-Limit Omaha 6-Handed final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Leonid Yanovski, Fabian Brandes, Sean Winter, Grzegorz Derkowski, Ferenc Deak, and Thomas Morrison. Who will take home the $371,358 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet?
Watch the Event #42: $100,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker. Aleksejs Ponakovs is the chip leader ahead of Gregory Jensen, Phil Ivey, Michael Moncek, and Ben Heath, as the final five players play for the $1,897,363 first-place prize.
Watch the highlights from the Event #42: $100,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Aleksejs Ponakovs, Gregory Jensen, Phil Ivey, Michael Moncek, and Ben Heath. Who will capture the $1,897,363 first-place prize?
Watch the Event #44: $10,000 H.O.R.S.E. Championship final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker. Andrew Yeh is the chip leader ahead of Philip Long, John Racener, Bryce Yockey, and Craig Chait, as the final five players play for the $487,129 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the highlights from the Event #44: $10,000 H.O.R.S.E. Championship final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Andrew Yeh, Philip Long, John Racener, Bryce Yockey, and Craig Chait. Who will win the $487,129 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet?
Watch the Event #50: $250,000 No-Limit Hold'em Super High Roller final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker. Alex Foxen is the chip leader ahead of Martin Kabrhel, Chris Hunichen, Brandon Steven, Phil Ivey, Adrian Mateos, Dan Zack, and Sam Soverel, as the final eight players play for the $4,563,700 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the highlights from the Event #50: $250,000 No-Limit Hold'em Super High Roller final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Alex Foxen, Martin Kabrhel, Chris Hunichen, Brandon Steven, Phil Ivey, Adrian Mateos, Dan Zack, and Sam Soverel. Who will capture the $4,563,700 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet?
Watch the Event #51: $400 COLOSSUS final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker. Sam Laskowitz is the chip leader ahead of Paul Hizer, Jordan Pelon, Jeff Loiacono, Luong Quach, Anthony Ruttler, and James Scott, as the final seven players play for the $414,490 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the highlights from the Event #51: $400 COLOSSUS final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Sam Laskowitz, Paul Hizer, Jordan Pelon, Jeff Loiacono, Luong Quach, Anthony Ruttler, and James Scott. Who will collect the $414,490 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet?
Watch the Event #55: $1,000 Tag Team final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker. Corey Paggeot and Jamie Kerstetter are the chip leaders ahead of Yutaro Tsugaru / Taichi Ichikawa, Patrick Leonard / Espen Jorstad, Franco Spitale / Martin Pochat, and Mackenzie Kraemer / Jon Schiller. The final five teams are all playing for the $148,067 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelets.
Watch the highlights from the Event #55: $1,000 Tag Team final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker. Corey Paggeot / Jamie Kerstetter, Yutaro Tsugaru / Taichi Ichikawa, Patrick Leonard / Espen Jorstad, Franco Spitale / Martin Pochat, and Mackenzie Kraemer / Jon Schiller play for the $148,067 first-place prize. Which team will win the coveted WSOP bracelets?
Watch the Event #56: $50,000 Poker Players Championship final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker. Dan Cates is the chip leader ahead of Yuri Dzivielevski, Benny Glaser, Johannes Becker, and Naoya Kihara, as the final five players play for the $1,449,103 first-place prize, coveted WSOP bracelet, and David "Chip" Reese Memorial Trophy.
Watch the highlights from the Event #56: $50,000 Poker Players Championship final table at the 2022 World Series of Poker that is headlined by Dan Cates, Yuri Dzivielevski, Benny Glaser, Johannes Becker, and Naoya Kihara. Who will the $1,449,103 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet?
The 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event is underway on Day 1D with Phil Ivey and Barstool's Ben Mintz kicking off feature table action before Shawn Sheikhan and Phil Laak take center stage. On the secondary table, David "Chino" Rheem sits with Melanie Weisner and 2021 3rd-place finisher Jack Oliver, while the outer table includes Brock Parker, Toby Lewis, Chris Tryba, and Andrew Neeme.
Watch Day 1D action from the 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event that is headlined on the WSOP Main Stage by Phil Ivey, Barstool's Ben Mintz, Phil Laak, Shawn Sheikhan, Melanie Weisner, and Chino Rheem.
It’s Day 2ABC of the 2022 Main Event and Jamie Kerstetter and Clayton Fletcher start off the action on the feature table before they are replaced by Brian Rast, Craig Mason, Michael Gagliano, and Adam "adam22" Grandmaison. On the secondary table, Barstool’s Adam Smith looks to make a run before Maria Ho and Cary Katz are moved to the table. On the outer table, Xuan Liu is joined by Wesley Fei, and Jake Schwartz.
Watch Day 2A/B/C action from the 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event that is headlined on the WSOP Main Stage by Jamie Kerstetter, Brian Rast, Adam "adam22" Grandmaison, Maria Ho, and Barstool's Adam Smith.
A huge field returns for Day 2D of the 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event as bracelet winners John Juanda and JC Tran headline the feature table alongside Survivor legend "Boston" Rob Mariano. World Champions dominate the outer tables as 2003 WSOP Main Event winner Chris Moneymaker sits on the secondary table, while defending champion Koray Aldemir headlines the outer table.
Watch Day 2D action from the 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event that is headlined on the WSOP Main Stage by John Juanda, JC Tran, "Boston" Rob Mariano, Chris Moneymaker, Christoph Vogelsang, Chino Rheem, Lexy Gavin, and Koray Aldemir.
The fields have combined for Day 3 of the 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event as 2,993 players return to chase the money-paying top 1,300. David Peters and Dan Smith sit at the feature table before Chris Moneymaker and Kenny Tran take a seat center stage. The secondary table sees a rotation of players that includes Loni Hui, Jimmy D'Ambrosio, Cliff Josephy, Ryan Feldman, and Terakun "Papa Karn" Karnchanakphan. On the outer table, 2021 second-place finisher George Holmes battles alongside Kevin Rabichow, Talal Shakerchi, and Robert Mizrachi before play is extended in the final level as the money bubble bursts and just 1,299 players remain.
Watch Day 3 action from the 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event that is headlined on the WSOP Main Stage by Chris Moneymaker, Cliff Josephy, Loni Hui, David Peters, Dan Smith, George Holmes, Ryan Feldman, Kevin Rabichow, Talal Shakerchi, and Robert Mizrachi.
Every player is now in the money as 1,299 players return for Day 4 of the 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event. Action starts at the second level of the day with the ladies leading the feature table as Farah Galfond and Daniela Rodriguez sit alongside 2021 World Champion Damian Salas before. On the secondary table, four-time WSOP bracelet winner Mike Matusow battles away before defending champion Koray Aldemir arrives late in the day. Day 4 closes with the Zilong Zhang show on the feature table with Ali Imsirovic and Dan Smith as the day ends with 123 players.
Watch Day 4 action from the 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event that is headlined on the WSOP Main Stage by David Peters, Dan Smith, Loni Hui, Dzmitry Urbanovich, George Holmes, Talal Shakerchi, Robert Mizrachi.
Day 5 of the 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event sees 380 players returning as Zilong Zhang, Ramon Colillas, and Gaelle Baumann sit at the feature table. Defending champion Koray Aldemir headlines the feature table, while 2021 World Champion Damian Salas sits on the outer table with chip leader Taylor von Kriegenbergh.
Watch Day 5 action from the 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event that is headlined on the WSOP Main Stage by Koray Aldemir, Damian Salas, Zilong Zhang, Gaelle Baumann, Ramon Colillas, and Alejandro Lococo.
Just 123 players remain heading into Day 6 of the 2022 WSOP Main Event as the improbable title defense of Koray Aldemir continues. His fellow final tablist Alejandro Lococo remains in the mix, as does 2020 World Champion Damian Salas. New chip leaders emerge that include Jeffrey Farnes, Brian Kim, Espen Jorstad, Matija Dobric, Aaron Mermelstein, and Adrian Attenborough as the day concludes with just 35 players remaining.
Watch Day 6 action from the 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event that is headlined on the WSOP Main Stage by Brian Kim, Koray Aldemir, Alejandro Lococo, Aaron Mermelstein, Aaron Zhang, and Damian Salas.
The road to the final table begins with 35 players remaining in the 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event with Jeffrey Farnes holding the chip lead and headlining the feature table ahead of Asher Conniff, Efthymia Litsou, Kenny Tran, and 2020 World Champion Damian Salas. The secondary table includes big stacks Karim Rebei and Brian Kim, along with John Eames, Aaron Mermelstein, David Diaz, and Marco Johnson.
Watch Day 7 action from the 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event as the returning 35 players are reduced to the final ten that include Espen Jorstad, Matthew Su, Matija Dobric, Aaron Duczak, John Eames, Adrian Attenborough, Michael Duek, Jeffrey Farnes, Asher Conniff, and Philippe Souki.
The final table of the 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event final table is set with Espen Jorstad and Matthew Su sharing the chip lead over the final ten players. Representatives from the United States, Norway, Hungary, Canada, England, and Australia are among the final players as Matija Dobric, Aaron Duczak, John Eames, Adrian Attenborough, Michael Duek, Jeffrey Farnes, Asher Conniff, and Philippe Souki all look to reach the pinnacle in the poker world. Players have locked up $675,000 in prize money, but all eyes are on the $10 million first-place prize, prestigious WSOP bracelet, and title of 2022 World Champion.
Watch Day1 of the final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event as Espen Jorstad, Matthew Su, Matija Dobric, Aaron Duczak, John Eames, Adrian Attenborough, Michael Duek, Jeffrey Farnes, Asher Conniff, and Philippe Souki battle for the $10 million first-place prize.
The 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event is down to just three players from the 8,663 entrants that began nearly two weeks ago. Norway's Espen Jorstad holds the chip lead ahead of Australia's Adrian Attenborough and Argentina's Michael Duek. Jorstad entered the final as the co-chip leader and will be looking to go coast-to-coast to become Norway's first World Champion. Attenborough is looking to emulate the feats of fellow countryman Joe Hachem to bring Main Event gold back Down Under. Duek hopes that the run good continues for South America following Damian Salas' victory in 2020. The final three have locked up $4 million in prize money, but everyone is eying the $10 million first-place prize, coveted WSOP bracelet, and title of 2022 World Champion.
Watch the finale of the final table from the 2022 World Series of Poker Main Event as Espen Jorstad leads Adrian Attenborough and Michael Duek as the final three battle for the $10 million first-place prize.
Watch the Event #2: $25,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller 6-Handed final table from the 2023 World Series of Poker. Chance Kornuth is the chip leader ahead of Axel Hallay, Sean Winter, Alexandre Vuilleumier, Joey Weissman, and Ren Lin as the final six play for the $1,215,864 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #3: $1,000 Mystery Millions final table from the Horseshoe table at the 2023 World Series of Poker. Guang Chen is the chip leader ahead of Steven Thompson, Ryan McKnight, Tyler Brown, Rhian Fineis, Dan Shak, Tam Ho, and Tauan De Oliveira as the final eight play for the $1,000,000 first-place prize and WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #4: Tournament of Champions final table from the 2023 World Series of Poker. Wissam Gahshan is the chip leader ahead of Patrick White, Brent Gregory, Justin Hotte-McKinnon, Hunter McClelland, Ronnie Day, and Barry Schultz as the final seven play for the $200,000 first-place prize and elusive WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #6: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em / Pot-Limit Omaha final table from the 2023 World Series of Poker. Michael Banducci is the chip leader ahead of Christian Harder, Michael Moncek, Fernando Habegger, Alex Livingston, Kristen Foxen, and Tyler Brown as the final seven play for the $534,499 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #7: $1,500 Limit Hold'em final table from the Horseshoe table at the 2023 World Series of Poker. Vadim Shlez is the chip leader ahead of Kerry Welsh, John Armbrust, Jason Duong, Rostyslav Sabishchenko, Raul Celaya, Chairud Vangchailued, and David "ODB" Baker as the final eight play for the $146,835 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the final day of the Event #8: $25,000 Heads-Up Championship from the 2023 World Series of Poker. The semifinals will see Doug Polk facing off against Chris Brewer, while Sean Winter will take on Chanracy Khun. The final four have locked up $192,513 in prize money, but all eyes are on the $507,020 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #9: $1,500 Seven Card Stud final table from the Horseshoe table at the 2023 World Series of Poker. John Monnette is the chip leader ahead of Nick Schulman, Hojeong Lee, DJ Buckley, Andrew Hasdal, Shaun Deeb, and Tim Frazin as the final nine play for the $110,800 first-place prize and elusive WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #12: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em Freezeout final table from the 2023 World Series of Poker. Felipe Ramos is the chip leader ahead of Jeremy Eyer, Jinho Hong, Nozomu Shimizu, Ronald Minnis, and Jeffrey Halcomb as the final six play for the $649,550 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch post-dinner break action from Day 2 of Event #16: $25,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller from the 2023 World Series of Poker as just 37 players remain. Yulian Bogdanov is the chip leader at the Horseshoe Table ahead of Tyler Cornell, Kristen Foxen, Lewis Spencer, Aleksejs Ponakovs, Lander Lijo, Stephen Chidwick, and Calvin Lee.
Watch the Event #16: $25,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller final table from the 2023 World Series of Poker. Isaac Haxton is the chip leader ahead of Roman Hrabec, Lewis Spencer, Frank Funaro, Ryan O'Donnell, Darren Elias, and Brian Rast as the final seven play for the $1,698,215 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #18: $300 Gladiators of Poker final table from the Horseshoe table at the 2023 World Series of Poker. Eric Trexler is the chip leader ahead of Kfir Nahum, Wade Wallace, Caio Sobral, Jason Simon, Jonson Chatterly, Bohdan Slyvinski, Thomas Reeves, and Wesley Cannon as the final nine play for the $500,000 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #19: $2,500 No-Limit Hold'em Freezeout final table from the 2023 World Series of Poker. Girish Reknar is the chip leader ahead of Andres Korn, Alexandre Reard, Ankit Ahuja, Valentino Konakchiev, and Ruben Costa as the final six play for the $435,924 first-place prize and WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #22: $10,000 Limit Hold'em Championship final table from the Horseshoe table at the 2023 World Series of Poker. Nozomu Shimizu is the chip leader ahead of Joe McKeehen, Josh Arieh, Daniel Idema, Nick Pupillo, Louis Hillman, and Nick Schulman as the final seven play for the $316,226 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Just three players remain at the Event #22: $10,000 Limit Hold'em Championship final table from the Horseshoe table at the 2023 World Series of Poker. Canadian Daniel Idema is eyeing his fourth WSOP bracelet as the chip leader, while Nozomu Shimizu is looking to bring home gold for Japan. 2021 WSOP Player of the Year Josh Arieh rounds out the three players as he looks to win his fifth WSOP bracelet as all eyes remain locked on the $316,226 first-place prize.
Watch the Event #25: $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo Championship final table from the Horseshoe table at the 2023 World Series of Poker. Ben Lamb is the chip leader ahead of Luis Velador, Erik Seidel, Robert Yass, and James Chen as the final five play for the $492,795 and the elusive WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #29: $100,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller final table from the Horseseho table at the 2023 World Series of Poker. Jans Arends is the chip leader ahead of Cary Katz, Biao Ding, Adrian Mateos, Jeremy Ausmus, and Chance Kornuth as the final six play for the $2,576,729 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #39: $1,500 MONSTER STACK final table from the 2023 World Series of Poker. Nicholas Gerrity is the chip leader ahead of Jesse Rockowitz, Braxton Dunaway, Colin Robinson, Loic Dobrigna, Joshua Adcock, and Joe Cada as the final seven play for the $1,162,681 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #42: $800 No-Limit Hold'em Deepstack final table from the Horseshoe table at the 2023 World Series of Poker. Christian Cheng is the chip leader ahead of Qiang Xu, Charles Johnson, Richard Smith, John Ciccarelli, Jason Johnson, Dorian Melchers, and Oren Rosen as the final eight play for the $339,033 first-place prize and WSOP bracelet.
Just 32 players remain heading into Day 3 of Event #43: $50,000 Poker Players Championship at the 2023 World Series of Poker with the Horseshoe table featuring a rotation of the entire field. It will include previous champions Matthew Ashton, Freddy Deeb, and Brian Rast, previous World Champions Phil Hellmuth, and Koray Aldemir, and some of the best mixed game players in the world led by Phil Ivey, John Monnette, James Obst, Chris Klodnicki, Josh Arieh, Marco Johnson, and Johannes Becker.
Just 12 players remain heading into Day 4 of Event #43: $50,000 Poker Players Championship at the 2023 World Series of Poker with the Horseshoe table featuring a rotation of the entire field. The remaining players are all in the money and eyeing a seat a the final table, where there is $1,324,747 awaiting the winner. 2013 Poker Players Championship winner Matthew Ashton leads the field ahead of Hal Rotholz, Talal Shakerchi, and two-time champion Brian Rast. Also in contention are Phil Ivey, Josh Arieh, Ray Dehkharghani, Daniel Alaei, James Obst, Johannes Becker, Kristopher Tong, and Marco Johnson.
Event 43: $50,000 Poker Players Championship final table from the 2023 World Series of Poker. Talal Shakerchi is the chip leader ahead of Matthew Ashton, Brian Rast, James Obst, and Kristopher Tong as the final five players play for the $1,324,747 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Just 29 players remain from the 8,180-entrant field in Event #48: $1,000 Seniors Championship at the 2023 World Series of Poker. The Horseshoe table will feature a rotation of players including chip leaders Gordon Eng and Lonnie Hallett, along with WSOP veterans Billy Baxter, Jimmy Tran, and Dan Heimiller.
Watch the Event #48: $1,000 Seniors Championship final table from the Horseshoe table at the 2023 World Series of Poker. Dan Heimiller is the chip leader ahead of Lonnie Hallett, Billy Baxter, Shannon Fahey, Gordon Eng, Loren Cloninger, and Rudolf Fourie as the final seven play for the $7765,731 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Just 42 players remain heading into Day 3 of Event #50: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship at the 2023 World Series of Poker with the Horseshoe table featuring a rotation of the entire field. Players have all locked up $28,905 in prize money and eyeing a spot at the final table, with the likes of Dylan Weisman, Sam Soverel, Sean Winter, Adam Hendrix, Keith Lehr, Anthony Hu, Lou Garza, and Dimitar Danchev all still in contention.
Watch the Event #50: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship final table from the 2023 World Series of Poker. Stanislav Halatenko is the chip leader ahead of Travis Pearson, Peng Shan, Arthur Morris, and Lou Garza as the final five players play for the $1,309,232 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet.
Just 41 players remain heading into Day 4 of Event #53: $1,500 Millionaire Maker at the 2023 World Series of Poker, with the Horseshoe table featuring a rotation of the entire field. The remaining players are eyeing a spot at the final table and include chip leader Andreas Kniep as well as Pavel Plesuv, Arnaud Mattern, Javier Zarco, Roberto Romanello, Blair Hinkle, Ian Matakis, Martin Stausholm, and David "ODB" Baker.
Watch the Event #53: $1,500 Millionaire Maker final table from the Horseshoe table at the 2023 World Series of Poker. Pavel Plesuv is the chip leader ahead of Florian Ribouchon, Myles Mullaly, Andreas Kniep, Paul Gunness, Anton Smirnov, and Vitor De Souza Coutinho as the final seven play for the $1,201,564 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #54: $10,000 H.O.R.S.E. Championship final table from the 2023 World Series of Poker. Mike Gorodinsky is the chip leader ahead of Alex Livingston, Bradley Ruben, Brian Yoon, Scott Seiver, Carol Fuchs, and Christopher Claassen as the final seven play for the $422,747 first-place prize and elusive WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #57: $25,000 Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller final table from the 2023 World Series of Poker. Ka Kwan Lau is the chip leader ahead of Sergio Martinez Gonzalez, Mads Amot, Roger Teska, and Andjelko Andrejevic as the final five play for the $2,294,756 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #60: $1,500 No-Limit 2-7 Single Draw final table from the Horseshoe table at the 2023 World Series of Poker. Bradley Ruben is the chip leader ahead of Erik Seidel, Jason Mercier, Mike Watson, and Jon Turner as the final five play for the $151,276 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #62: $1,500 Mixed No-Limit Hold'em / Pot-Limit Omaha final table from the 2023 World Series of Poker. David Prociak is the chip leader ahead of David Simon, Eric Pfenning, Tsuf Saltsberg, and Eran Carmi as the final five play for the $410,659 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #65: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em 6-Handed final table from the 2023 World Series of Poker. Norbert Szecsi is the chip leader ahead of Angelina Rich, Weiran Pu, Tyler Cornell, Vitor Dzivelevski, and Pedro Garagnani as the final six play for the $938,244 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Watch the Event #67: $1,000 Ladies Championship final table from the 2023 World Series of Poker. Shiina Okamoto is the chip leader ahead of Tara Cain, Mary Dvorkin, Tamar Abraham, Suzanne Malavet, Chrysi Phiniotis, and Nam Nguyen as the final seven play for the $192,167 first-place prize and elusive WSOP bracelet.
The 2023 WSOP Main Event is underway from the Horseshoe table on Day 1A with 2006 World Champion Jamie Gold sitting with WSOP bracelet winner Matt Matros. Following the dinner break, the table of Tony Dunst, Martin Finger, Alex Keating, Martin Finger, and Poker Hall of Famer Dewey Tomko will take center stage.
It's time for Day 1B of the 2023 WSOP Main Event from the Horseshoe table, with Jimmy D'Ambrosio and Jacqueline Burkhart kicking off the action at the start of Level 3. The table will then rotate to feature Ben Mintz looking to parlay his High Noon show into WSOP Main Event success, while the day will end with Ky Nguyen and WSOP bracelet winner Jason Koon bagging chips to close out Day 1B.
A massive turnout for Day 1C sees the field surge to over 5,000 players in the 2023 WSOP Main Event. Action in Level 3 picks up with six-time WSOP bracelet winner Daniel Negreanu at the feature table and seated alongside Arnaud Mattern and Shelby Wells. The final level of play will feature six-time WSOP bracelet winner Jeremy Ausmus and Mike Dentale.
It is a record-breaking 2023 WSOP Main Event with more than 9,000 players entering through Day 1D. Feature table action begins with 17-time WSOP bracelet winner Phil Hellmuth and one-time WSOP bracelet winner Vito Distefano under the bright lights of the Horseshoe table.
Over 3,800 players return for the combined Day 2ABC of the 2023 WSOP Main Event. The day begins with the Horseshoe feature table centered around Doug Polk and his top-ten chip stack of 281,900. At the table are also poker pros Aditya Prasetyo and Vlastimil Pustina.
Day 2ABC of the 2023 World Series of Poker Main Event is underway from Horseshoe / Paris Las Vegas, with the record-breaking field looking to survive into Day 3. The WSOP Main Stage is now in action with WSOP bracelet winner Alex Foxen, Faraz Jaka, and Michael Duek, while the secondary table will include Jean-Robert Bellande. On the outer table will be led by the man that holds the record for winning the largest Main Event in history - 2006 World Champion Jamie Gold. Will his record stand for another year, or will 2023 be the year that smashes it?
The dinner bell has been rung, and two more levels remain on Day 2ABC of the 2023 World Series of Poker Main Event. WSOP bracelet winner Alex Foxen has chipped up on the feature table and sits alongside fellow high-stakes crushers Niall Farrell, Faraz Jaka, Michael Duek, and Brock Wilson. 2006 World Champion Jamie Gold and Anton Wigg sit on the outer table, while a new set of players head to the secondary table, including 2013 World Champion Ryan Riess, Farah Galfond, and two-time WSOP Online bracelet winner Tanner Bibat.
Over 3,200 players return for Day 2D of the 2023 World Series of Poker Main Event, and it will be 17-time WSOP bracelet winner Phil Hellmuth sitting center stage on the Horseshoe feature table. He will be joined by Day 1D chip leader Nicholas Rigby who also bagged the biggest chip stack over the opening four flights.
Records have been smashed, and the clubhouse leader for WSOP gold sits front and center on Day 2D of the 2023 World Series of Poker Main Event. 17-time WSOP bracelet winner is at the feature table alongside overnight chip leader Nicholas Rigby. The secondary table includes another Day 2D chip leader in Chris Hunichen, who is joined by WSOP bracelet winners Fedor Holz and Jesse Lonis, while professional boxer Ryan Garcia leads the outer table.
The action picks back up after the dinner break on Day 2D of the 2023 WSOP Main Event, with Nicholas Rigby headlining the feature table alongside Francis Anderson. A new outer table is in play that includes 2003 World Champion Chris Moneymaker and 2009 WSOP November Niner Jeff Shulman, while the secondary table begins with Chris Hunichen, Jesse Lonis, and Andrew Wisdom, before Day 2D chip leader and 15-time WSOP-Circuit ring winner Maurice Hawkins moves under the bright lights.
Just 3,538 players remain heading into Day 3 of the 2023 World Series of Poker Main Event with the money-paying 1,507 in reach. The Horseshoe feature table to kick off Day 3 will be centered around Tom "durrrr" Dwan, who is also seated with five-time WSOP bracelet winner Adam Friedman and Johann Ibanez Diaz.
The Day 3 field in the 2023 WSOP Main Event is down to roughly 2,800 players as the feature table is headlined by Tom Dwan, Johann Ibanez, and five-time WSOP bracelet winner Adam Friedman. 2021 runner-up George Holmes sits at the secondary table alongside Michael Ruane, Stanislav Halatenko, and Phil Hui, while Jason Koon and Alexander Turyansky.
Following the dinner break, just 2,000 players remain in the 2023 WSOP Main Event, with Doug Polk headlining the feature table alongside Colossus winner Moshe Refaelowitz. The secondary table will feature Poker Hall of Famer Eli Elezra, Dario Sammartino, and Laura Cintra, while Jason Koon holds center court on the outer table.
The money bubble is here on Day 4 of the 2023 WSOP Main Event as 1,517 players remain, with 10 of those players, unfortunately, going home empty-handed. Nicholas Rigby sits at the feature table alongside WSOP-Circuit champion Huy Nguyen, while 2003 World Champion Chris Moneymaker occupies the secondary table with high-stakes crusher Dominik Nitsche. On the outer table are Stephen Chidwick and three-time Super Bowl champion Richard Seymour who both will switch to the feature table before Ryan Garcia and Nate Silver take a seat on the outer table.
Play resumes after dinner break with 702 players remaining on Day 4 of the 2023 WSOP Main Event. Alex Foxen and Jason Somerville headline the feature table alongside Ravi Raghaven, while Nicholas Rigby sits on the secondary table. Tony Dunst, Sergio Aido, and Patrik Antonius lead the outer table as the field plays down to the final 441 players.
Day 5 of the 2023 WSOP Main Event welcomes 441 players back to the Horseshoe Las Vegas as 2003 World Champion Chris Moneymaker sits at the feature alongside Bill Klein. The secondary table is led by Nicholas Rigby and WSOP bracelet winner Shota Nakanishi, while on the outer table is three-time Super Bowl champion Richard Seymour. As the tournament approaches the dinner break, new arrivals to the WSOP Main Stage include Robert Heidorn, Matthew Wantman, Chris Vitch, John Racener, and Tony Dunst.
Following the dinner break, 211 players remain in the 2023 WSOP Main Event, with Bryan Obregon being the first player over 10 million. Nicholas Rigby headlines the feature table, while Nikita Luther and John Racener move to the secondary table. The outer table includes WPT favorites Tony Dunst and Andrew Neeme as Day 5 plays down to the final 149 players, with school teacher Zachary Hall finishing as the chip leader with 16,310,000 in chips.
It's getting serious in the 2023 WSOP Main Event, as just 149 players remain heading into Day 6. Zachary Hall is the overnight chip leader, but the Big Rig show continues on the feature table with Nicholas Rigby sitting with John Racener, Amit Makhija, and Jan-Peter Jachtmann. The secondary table is led by Tony Dunst, Nate Silver, and Nikita Luther, while the outer table includes Masato Yokosawa and Raj Vohra.
The 2023 WSOP Main Event field is down to the final 77 players following the dinner break's conclusion, and Maurice Hawkins and Sam Stein are on the feature table. The secondary table includes Toby Lewis, Mitchell Halverson, Mark Teltscher, Raj Vohra, and Matthew Wantman, while on the outer table is Tony Dunst.
The 2023 WSOP Main Event is down to the final 49 players, with Joshua Payne holding the chip lead with nearly 48 million in chips to headline the feature table alongside Masato Yokosawa. Daniel Weinman, Maurice Hawkins, and Matthew Wantman are on the secondary table, while Ryan Tosoc, Mitchell Halverson, and Raj Vohra are on the outer table.
It is playdown day at the 2023 WSOP Main Event as 15 players return for Day 8. Juan Maceiras is the dominating chip leader with 108 million, and he'll be sharing the table with Jan-Peter Jachtmann, Joshua Payne, Alec Torelli, and Daniel Weinman. Toby Lewis headlines the other table and will be looking up at Adam Walton and Steven Jones, while Cong Pham will be looking to parlay the shortest stack remaining into a final table spot.
The final table of the 2023 World Series of Poker Main Event is set with seven countries represented among the final nine players, including Germany, Spain, Ukraine, Italy, England, Scotland, and the United States. Local Adam Walton holds the chip lead ahead of an all-American top three of Steven Jones and Daniel Weinman. Europe is still in with a fighting chance as Jan-Peter Jachtmann, Juan Maceiras, Ruslan Prydryk, Dean Hutchison, Daniel Holzer, and Toby Lewis all look to take home the holy grail in the poker world. Players have locked up $900,000, but all eyes are on the $12.1 million first-place prize, prestigious WSOP Main Event bracelet, and title of 2023 World Champion.
The 2023 World Series of Poker Main Event is down to just three players from the 10,043 entrants that began two weeks ago. It's an all-American affair among the final three between Steven Jones, Daniel Weinman, and Adam Walton. Walton was the overnight chip leader but will enter as the shortest stack with 165.5 million. Weinman held the chip lead at stages but settled into second overall with 199 million. The day belonged to Jones, who finished with 238 million to be best-positioned to make a run at winning the big one. The final three have locked up $4 million in prize money, but everyone is eying the $12.1 million first-place prize, coveted WSOP Main Event bracelet, and title of 2023 World Champion.
Watch the WSOP.com Online Event #13: $5,300 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller Championship final table from the 2023 World Series of Poker. Beginning on WSOP.com, the final six have traveled to Las Vegas to battle it out for the WSOP bracelet and $393,516 first-place prize. Sam Soverel is the chip leader ahead of Yuval Bronshtein, Aleksejs Ponakovs, Ethan Yau, Lingkun Lu, and Gergely Kulcsar as the final six play for WSOP gold.
The Event #1: $5,000 Champions Reunion final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Jonathan Pastore holding the chip lead. Pastore leads ahead of Terry Fleischer, Nenad Dukic, Asher Coniff, Yuzhou Yin, Halil Tasyurek, and David Coleman as the final seven play for the $408,468 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet.
The Event #3: $500 WSOP Kickoff final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Daniel Willis holding the chip lead. Willis leads ahead of Shawn Smith, Michael Wang, Steven Borella, Yoshinori Funayama, John Marino, and David Niedringhaus as the final eight play for the $175,578 first-place prize and elusive WSOP bracelet.
Watch the final day of the Event #6: $25,000 Heads-Up Championship from the 2024 World Series of Poker. The semifinals will see Faraz Jaka facing off with Nikolai Mamut, while Artur Martirosyan will take on Darius Samual. The final four have locked up $180,000 in prize money, but all eyes are on the $500,000 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet.
The Event #8: $5,000 Pot-Limit Omaha final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Farid Jattin holding the chip lead. Jattin leads ahead of Bryce Yockey, Zachary Schwartz, Aditya Sadhu, and Jason Berilgen as the final five play for the $606,654 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
Just 13 players remain on Day 3 of Event #10: $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo Championship at the 2024 World Series of Poker. Horseshoe feature table action begins with Scott Seiver, Benny Glaser, Jake Schwartz, Paul Zappulla, Igor Zektser, and Sami Saad El-Dein, while the outer table includes Jared Bleznick, John Racener, Calvin Anderson, Patrick Moulder, Jordan Spurlin, Jake Liebeskind, and Jonathan Cohen.
The final day of Event #5: $1,000 Mystery Millions at the 2024 World Series of Poker sees 18 players remaining and Jake Brown holding the chip lead. Others remaining include Carson Richards, Michael Miller, Christopher Battenfield, Eugene Tito, Jefferson James, Pei Li, Kyle Mizell, Christopher Castellan, Oshri Azran, Paul Lee, Malcolm Trayner, Mircea Ionescu, Amir Mirrasouli, Larry Quang, Junho Song, Antonio Payne, and Alex Ziskin. The final 18 have all locked up $36,550, while all eyes are on the $1,000,000 first-place prize and prestigious gold bracelet.
The Event #12: $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em 6-Handed final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with John Gordon holding the chip lead. Gordon leads ahead of Chih Fan, Steve Yea, Simeon Spasov, Mark Dube, Daniel Palau, and Joseph Brumpacheco, as the final seven play for the $439,815 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet.
Just 27 players remain on Day 3 of Event #16: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em at the 2024 World Series of Poker. Horseshoe feature table action begins with Erik Seidel, Brian Rast, Sam Soverel, Shant Marashlian, Brent Hart, Sebastien Grax, and Aaron Thomas. Also in contention on the outer tables are Taylor Black, Nate Silver, Andrew Ostapchenko, Krasimir Yankov, and Sami Bechahed.
The Event #16: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em 8-Handed final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Eddie Ochana holding the chip lead. Ochana leads ahead of Alexander Queen, Brent Hart, Daniyal Gheba, Kartik Ved, Shant Marashlian, and Taylor Black, as the final seven play for the $660,284 first-place prize and elusive WSOP bracelet.
The Event #21: $25,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller 6-Handed final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Tyler Stafman holding the chip lead. Stafman leads ahead of Michael Rocco, Taylor von Kriegenbergh, Masashi Oya, Ognyan Dimov, Brek Schutten, and Brandon Wilson, as the final seven play for the $1,405,641 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet.
The Event #23: $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em Shootout final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Robert Natividad holding the chip lead. Natividad leads ahead of Daniel Strelitz, James Davidson, Daniel Sepiol, Jeremy Ausmus, Sean Ragozzini, and Richard Dixon, as the final seven play for the $305,849 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
The Event #26: $25,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller 8-Handed field is approaching the money bubble at the 2024 World Series of Poker. Feature table action is headlined by 10-time WSOP bracelet winner Phil Ivey, 2018 WSOP Player of the Year Shaun Deeb, tournament chip leaders Chance Kornuth and David Stamm, along with Nikolai Mamut, Alexandre Reard, and Dario Sammartino.
The Event #20: $300 Gladiators of Poker final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Stephen Winters holding the chip lead. Winters leads ahead of Simon Britton, Quang Vu, Steve Foutty, Brendon Herrick, Sung Kim, James Morgan, Caleb Levesque, and Jordan Johnson, as the final nine play for the $401,210 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
The Event #26: $25,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Nick Schulman holding the chip lead. Schulman leads ahead of Shaun Deeb, Yingui Li, David Stamm, Dean Lyall, Ben Heath, Noel Rodriguez, and Robert Perez, as the final eight play for the $1,667,842 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet.
The Event #28: $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em Freezeout final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Andres Gonzalez holding the chip lead. Gonzalez leads ahead of Balakrishna Patur, Mukul Pahuja, Haiyang Yang, Guofeng Weng, Nick Maimone, Nicolas Vayssieres, Evan Benton, and George Tomescu, as the final nine play for the $412,484 first-place prize and elusive WSOP bracelet.
The Event #29: $10,000 Limit 2-7 Triple Draw Championship final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Jason Mercier holding the chip lead. Mercier leads ahead of Phil Ivey, Benny Glaser, and Danny Wong, as the final four play for the $347,440 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet.
The Event #31: $3,000 No-Limit Hold'em 6-Handed final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with David Coleman holding the chip lead. Coleman leads ahead of Nicholas Seward, Konstantyn Holskyi, Nikolaos Angelou, Akinobu Maeda, and Stephen Buell, as the final six play for the $516,135 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet.
The Event #29: $10,000 Limit 2-7 Triple Draw Championship final table is down to three players at the 2024 World Series of Poker. Danny Wong leads ahead of Jason Mercier and Phil Ivey. Ivey is looking to end a 10-year drought and win his 11th WSOP bracelet. Mercier is in line for his seventh. Wong could topple two of poker's biggest heavyweights to capture his second WSOP bracelet. The trio is battling for the $347,440 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
The Event #34: $2,500 No-Limit Hold'em Freezeout final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Antonio Galiana holding the chip lead. Galiana leads ahead of Romain Lewis, Jeremy Ausmus, Juha Helppi, Josh Reichard, Johan Guilbert, and Patrick Leonard, as the final seven play for the $439,395 first-place prize and elusive WSOP bracelet.
The Event #36: $800 No-Limit Hold'em Deepstack final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Timur Margolin holding the chip lead. Margolin leads ahead of Michael Allen, Vaughan Machado, Jeremy Chen, Francisco Rios, Adam Hendrix, Agharazi Babayev, Joey Couden, and Cole Uvila, as the final nine play for the $342,551 first-place prize and elusive WSOP bracelet.
The Event #39: $50,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Sergio Aido holding the chip lead. Aido leads ahead of Viktor 'Isildur1' Blom, Jesse Lonis, Adrian Mateos, Chance Kornuth, and Jonathan Jaffe, as the final six play for the $2,026,506 first-place prize and coveted WSOP gold bracelet.
The Event #41: $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em / Pot-Limit Omaha Double Board Bomb Pot final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with William Kopp holding the chip lead. Kopp leads ahead of Daniel Hachem, Xixiang Luo, David Funkhouser, Gabi Livshitz, Quan Zhou, and Marcos Exterkotter, as the final seven play for the $270,820 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
The Event #42: $10,000 Stud Championship final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with James Obst holding the chip lead. Obst leads ahead of Paul Volpe, Jason Daly, Mike Lang, and Robert Mizrachi, as the final five play for the $260,658 first-place prize and elusive WSOP gold bracelet.
Just 22 players remain on the final day of Event #43: $1,500 Mixed Pot-Limit Omaha Hi-Lo / Omaha Hi-Lo / Big O at the 2024 World Series of Poker. Ying Chu is the chip leader ahead of Dylan Lambe, Stephen Hubbard, Joshua Adcock, Michael Rodrigues, Phil Hellmuth, Aleksey Filatov, Magnus Edengren, Nathan Gamble, David Nepom, Ed Spivack, Jim Juvancic, Shaun Deeb, Siarhei Chudapal, Zachary Hirst, Ben Landowski, Chris Roth, Derek Raymond, Filippos Stavrakis, Veerachai Vongxaiburana, Tim Seidensticker, and Kate Hoang. Players are guaranteed $7,543, while all eyes remain on the $196,970 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet.
Just 14 players remain on Day 2 of Event #47: $100,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller from the 2024 World Series of Poker. Viktor Blom is the chip leader ahead of Aleks Ponakovs, Jeremy Ausmus, Daniel Aharoni, Isaac Haxton, Chris Hunichen, Michael Jozoff, Justin Saliba, Giuseppe Iadisernia, Henrik Hecklen, Justin Bonomo, Chance Kornuth, Andrew Lichtenberger, and Nick Petrangelo. Players are guaranteed $209,346, while all eyes are on the $2,838,389 first-place prize.
The Event #38: $1,500 MONSTER STACK final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Pedro Neves holding the chip lead. Neves leads ahead of Aaron Johnson, Brian Roff, Jerry Maher, Tim Reilly, Jose Carlos Brito, and Guang Ming Li, as the final seven play for the $1,098,220 first-place prize and elusive WSOP bracelet.
The Event #47: $100,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Viktor Blom holding the chip lead. Blom leads ahead of Chris Hunichen, Chance Kornuth, Aleks Ponakovs, Jeremy Ausmus, and Justin Saliba, as the final six play for the $2,838,389 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet.
The Event #49: $3,000 No-Limit Hold'em Freezeout final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Nikolay Yosifov holding the chip lead. Yosifov leads ahead of Erlend Melsom, Ben Hoy, Jonathan Schwartz, and David Stamm, as the final five play for the $523,195 first-place prize and coveted WSOP gold bracelet.
The 59-entrant field is down to the final 45 players entering the start of Day 2 of Event #55: $250,000 Super High Roller from the 2024 World Series of Poker. Sean Winter is the overall chip leader ahead of Adrian Mateos, Aram Oganyan, Jonathan Jaffe, and Alex Kulev. The feature table begins after the first break, with Jason Koon, David Peters, and Jared Bleznick sitting with Winter, who still holds the chip lead in the 76-entrant field.
Just 14 players remain entering Day 3 of Event #55: $250,000 Super High Roller at the 2024 World Series of Poker. Among those still in contention chasing the $5,415,152 first-place prize are Adrian Mateos, Santhosh Suvarna, Taylor von Kriegenbergh, Sean Winter, Ben Tollerene, Jonathan Jaffe, Matthias Eibinger, Chalie Hook, Jeremy Ausmus, Chris Hunichen, Phil Ivey, Mikita Badziakouski, Brian Kim, and Mikalai Vaskaboinikau.
The Event #57: $10,000 Super Turbo Bounty Freezeout final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Oliver Weis holding the chip lead. Weis leads ahead of Aliaksei Boika, Antoine Saout, Steve Buell, Aaron Johnson, Shota Nakanishi, Michael Rocco, Frank Funaro, and Ludovic Geilich, as the final nine play for the $612,99 first-place prize and elusive WSOP gold bracelet.
There are 58 players returning for Day 2 of Event #58: $50,000 Poker Players Championship from the 2024 World Series of Poker, and Australian James Obst holds the chip lead. Previous champions Michael Mizrachi, John Hennigan, Phil Hui, and Dan Cates are all still in contention, along with Phil Ivey, Daniel Negreanu, and Gus Hansen. Feature table action will begin at the start of the third level, with players rotating every break until the end of the day.
Watch Day 3 of Event #58: $50,000 Poker Players Championship from the 2024 World Series of Poker.
Watch Day 4 of Event #58: $50,000 Poker Players Championship from the 2024 World Series of Poker. The remaining players are in the money and eyeing the $1,178,703 first-place prize. Chris Brewer leads the pack into Day 4, with David Benyamine, Phil Ivey, Jeremy Ausmus, Daniel Negreanu, and Michael 'The Grinder' Mizrachi also advancing to Day 4.
Watch the final table of Event #58: $50,000 Poker Players Championship from the 2024 World Series of Poker. Chris Brewer leads the way, but all eyes are on Daniel Negreanu as he tries to win his first WSOP gold bracelet since 2013. Bryce Yockey, Dylan Smith, and David Benyamine are also in the mix with $1,178,703 up top to the winner.
Watch the final table of Event #54: $1,500 MILLIONAIRE MAKER from the 2024 World Series of Poker. From the enormous field of 10,939 entries, just six players remain. Franco Spitale leads the way, and he's joined by Stephen Dauphinais, Justin Carey, Harvey Jackson, Paul Saso, and Charles Kersey. Not one but two millionaires will be crowned at this final table, with first place worth $1,250,125 and second place set to take home $1,001,170. The final six players are guaranteed $289,630.
The Event #65: $5,000 Seniors High Roller final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Mark Checkwicz holding the chip lead. Checkwicz leads ahead of Kevin Nathan, Michael Vela, Samuel Wagner, Arie Kilper, and Bruno Lopes, as the final six play for the $573,876 first-place prize and prestigious WSOP bracelet.
The Event #66: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Joshua Adkins holding the chip lead. Adkins leads ahead of Elie Nakache, Jonathan Bowers, Manh Nguyen, and Oshri Lahmani, as the final five play for the $1,320,945 first-place prize and the elusive WSOP bracelet.
Watch the final table of Event #72: $10,000 No-Limit 2-7 Single Draw Championship from the 2024 World Series of Poker. Six players remain and Jonathan Krela begins the streamed final table with the chip lead. He's joined by Mike Watson, Jeremy Ausmus, Scott Seiver, David Lin, and Jen Harman. The final six players come from a 186-entry field and are guaranteed $68,672 in prize money. Up top is the coveted WSOP gold bracelet and $411,041.
The Event #71: $1,000 Ladies Championship final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with Jamie Kerstetter holding the chip lead. Kerstetter leads ahead of Shiina Okamoto, Linda Durden, Mor Kamber, Cecile Ticherfatine, and Ceci Liao, as the final six play for the $171,732 first-place prize and elusive WSOP bracelet.
The Event #73: $25,000 Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller final table is set at the 2024 World Series of Poker, with David Eldridge holding the chip lead. Eldridge leads ahead of Ethan Cahn, Yang Wang, Brian Rast, and Juha Helppi, as the final five play for the $2,246,728 first-place prize and coveted WSOP bracelet.
The 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event is finally here with Day 1A action taking place from Horseshoe Las Vegas. Two feature tables will kick off the PokerGO coverage of the 2024 WSOP Main Event with action starting from the third level of the day. Early coverage features Michael 'The Grinder' Mizrachi and Phil Galfond.
The players have returned from dinner break on Day 1A of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, and the feature table is led by five-time WSOP bracelet winner Michael Mizrachi. Joining Mizrachi under the bright lights are Australian Daniel Hachem and Robert Kuhn, while on the secondary table are poker coach and bracelet winner Faraz Jaka, Joseph Cheong, and Benjamin Miner. For the final level of play, a new feature table is in play and includes previous champions, Greg Merson and Qui Nguyen.
Day 1B of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event is underway from Horseshoe Las Vegas, with players celebrating America's Independence while check-raising opponents and dragging pots. Kicking off the action on the feature table are Jared Bleznick and ten-time WSOP bracelet winner Erik Seidel, while on the secondary table are 2004 World Champion Greg Raymer, Nick Schwarmann, and Starr Valdez. Following the dinner break, WSOP bracelet winner Andre Akkari, 2018 Main Event seventh-place finisher Alex Lynskey, and Jerod Smith sit at the feature table and are joined later by Bleznick, while the secondary table includes 2021 World Champion Koray Aldemir and Harrison Gimbel.
A huge field is in attendance for Day 1C of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, and feature table action kicks off with 17-time WSOP bracelet winner Phil Hellmuth seated alongside Arthur Morris. On the secondary table is two-time World Champion Johnny Chan, along with Nick Maimone and Chris Brand, as players battle towards the dinner break.
Following the dinner break on Day 1C of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, Phil Hellmuth returns to headline the feature table alongside Arthur Morris. On the secondary table, a new set of faces take a seat, including Hollywood actress Arden Cho and WSOP bracelet winners Ben Lamb and Matthew Waxman.
It is a full house for Day 1D of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, with tables as far as the eye can see across both the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas. Coverage begins with 2009 World Champion and four-time WSOP bracelet winner Joe Cada sitting alongside WSOP bracelet winner Chris Tryba. On the secondary table is the four-time WSOP bracelet winner Kristen Foxen.
The Day 1D field has surpassed 4,700 entrants in the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, with players returning from dinner break with two levels of play remaining. The new feature table features last year's sixth-place finisher, Dean Hutchison, and WSOP bracelet winner, Alex Foxen. The secondary table continues to be the Kristen Foxen show as she looks to make a run at her third WSOP Main Event cash overall, and first since 2018.
The Day 1D field has surpassed 4,700 entrants in the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, with players returning from dinner break with two levels of play remaining. The new feature table features last year's sixth-place finisher, Dean Hutchison, and WSOP bracelet winner, Alex Foxen. The secondary table continues to be the Kristen Foxen show as she looks to make a run at her third WSOP Main Event cash overall, and first since 2018.
Watch Day 2ABC of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event from the Horseshoe Table.
More than 3,800 players return for Day 2D of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, and feature table action kicks off after the first level with 11-time WSOP bracelet winner Phil Ivey headlining the feature table action. On the secondary table is 2009 World Champion and four-time WSOP bracelet winner Joe Cada, along with four-time WSOP bracelet winner Kristen Foxen.
The dinner break has concluded on Day 2D of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, and actor Kevin Pollak is at the feature table with Barry Hutter. The secondary table will be headlined by Kitty Kuo and WSOP bracelet winner Phil Laak.
More than 3,600 players return for Day 3 of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, and Daniel Negreanu kicks off feature table action. On the secondary table is 2021 World Champion Koray Aldemir, UFC fighter Colby Covington, five-time WSOP bracelet winner Allen Cunningham, and Fabian Quoss.
Following the dinner break on Day 3 of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, roughly 2,100 players remain and a new feature table is headlined by Maria Ho. On the secondary table are Seth Davies, Bin Weng, Taylor Black, and Martin Finger.
Only 1,524 players return for Day 4 of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, and unfortunately for seven of them, they will go home empty-handed with the money bubble set to burst as the final 1,517 players will take home a guaranteed $15,000 in prize money. Kicking off feature table action is Eric 'Barstool Nate' Nathan and Hollywood actor Kevin Pollak, while on the secondary table is Tom Dwan, Eric Mizrachi, and Matthew Sabia.
Less than 800 players return from dinner break on Day 4 of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, and there are two new feature tables in action. The main table is headlined by six-time WSOP bracelet winner Brian Hastings, three-time WSOP bracelet winner Tony Dunst, John Andress, and Tony Hachem. The secondary table includes Bin Weng and WSOP bracelet winners Aleks Ponakovs and Danny Tang.
Only 464 players return for Day 5 of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, and the feature table is headlined by 11-time WSOP bracelet winner Phil Ivey. The secondary table includes four-time WSOP bracelet winner Adrian Mateos, who is also second in chips overall, while Loni Hui, Ren Lin, and Taylor von Kriegenbergh sit on the outer table. Chip leader Stephen Song moves to the feature table following the break alongside Arthur Morris, while Alejandro Lococo finds his way to the secondary table. For the final level of play before the dinner break, a new feature table includes four-time WSOP bracelet winner Kristen Foxen, David 'Bakes' Baker, and Daniel Hachem.
The dinner break has concluded on Day 5 of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, and only 234 players remain as Manuel Machado holds the chip lead and sits at the secondary table with Aleks Ponakovs and six-time WSOP bracelet winner Brian Rast. The feature table includes Jesse Lonis, while the outer table includes four-time WSOP bracelet winner Kristen Foxen, Daniel Hachem, and David 'Bakes' Baker.
Day 6 of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event begins with 160 players remaining and $70,000 in prize money locked up. The feature table is headlined by four-time WSOP bracelet winner Kristen Foxen, three-time WSOP bracelet winner Tony Dunst, and two-time WSOP bracelet winner Brandon Cantu. The secondary table includes Ren Lin, Jonathan Tamayo, and Danny Tang, while the outer table sits six-time WSOP bracelet winner Brian Rast.
Only 84 players return from the dinner break on Day 6 of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, and four-time WSOP bracelet winner Kristen Foxen is holding center court at the feature table alongside Niklas 'Lena900' Astedt and Brandon Cantu. The secondary table includes Alex Keating, while the outer table is headlined by Danny Tang, Jonathan Tamayo, and Jesse Capps.
Kevin Davis leads the remaining 59 players into Day 7 of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, and he kicks off the action on the outer table alongside Nick Jivkov and Joe Serock. The feature table is headlined by six-time WSOP bracelet winner Brian Rast, four-time WSOP bracelet winner Kristen Foxen, and online crusher Niklas 'Lena900' Astedt. On the secondary table is Brian Kim, Stephen Song, and Jonathan Tamayo.
Dinner break has concluded on Day 7 of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, and just 30 players remain. Malo Latinois is the chip leader, while WSOP bracelet winner Jason James sits second overall. Rounding out the top five are Yake Wu, Yegor Moroz, and Diogo Coelho. Brian Kim is looking to improve on his 23rd-place finish in 2022, while Niklas 'Lena900' Astedt is looking to prove his online chops translate to the live realm. Rounding out the field are Shundan Xiao and four-time WSOP bracelet winner Kristen Foxen, who are the lone females remaining.
Day 8 sees just 18 players return in the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, and it is Malo Latinois holding the chip lead. Latinois headlines the secondary feature table that includes Jason Sagle, who is third in chips, Malcolm Franchi, who is seventh in chips, and long-time tournament pro Jonathan Tamayo. Four-time WSOP bracelet winner Kristen Foxen headlines the feature table, alongside WSOP bracelet winners Brian Kim, Joe Serock, and Jason James. Also at the table is online phenom Niklas 'Lena900' Astedt and Diogo Coelho, who bagged the second-largest chip stack.
Only 12 players remain on Day 8 of the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event, and Joe Serock and Brian Kim are running away with the chip lead. Niklas "Lena900" Astedt sits third overall and is closely followed by Jason Sagle, Boris Angelov, Jordan Griff, Malcolm Franchi, and Jonathan Tamayo. On the bottom of the leaderboard, Malo Latinois, Diogo Coelho, Andres Gonzalez, and Gabriel Moura are all trying to ladder up and be part of the final nine.
The record-setting 10,112-entrant field in the 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event is now down to the final table of nine with five countries represented among the final nine players, including Sweden, Canada, Spain, Bulgaria, and the United States. Jordan Griff holds the chip lead ahead of two high-stakes crushers in Brian Kim and Niklas 'Lena900' Astedt. Joe Serock, Jason Sagle, and Boris Angelov sit in the middle of the pack, while Jonathan Tamayo, Malo Latinois, and Andres Gonzalez round out the final table. Players have locked up $1,000,000 in prize money, but all eyes are on the $10,000,000 first-place prize, prestigious WSOP Main Event bracelet, and the title of the 2024 World Champion.
The 2024 World Series of Poker Main Event is down to just three players from the 10,112 entrants that began two weeks ago. The final three are led by Sweden's Niklas Astedt, while Americans Jonathan Tamayo and Jordan Griff trail. Griff was the overnight chip leader but will enter as the shortest stack with 187 million, while Tamayo has risen to second overall with 197 million. Astedt is leading the charge with 223 million and is best positioned to make a run at winning the big one. The final three have locked up $4 million in prize money, but everyone is eying the $10 million first-place prize, coveted WSOP Main Event bracelet, and title of 2024 World Champion.
Chris Moneymaker topped the 839-player field in the 2003 WSOP Main Event to capture the $2.5 million first-place prize, but now takes his turn in the commentary booth. Moneymaker watches the 2003 WSOP Main Event final table and takes over commentary duties with just five people remaining and poker history on the verge of being created.
Greg Raymer defeated the 2,576-entrant field in the 2004 WSOP Main Event to take home the $5 million first-place prize after topping David Williams heads-up. Raymer returns for special commentary as he watches the 2004 WSOP final table and breaks down some of the key moments and vital hands on his way to being crowned the 2004 World Champion.
Joe Hachem defeated Steve Dannenmann heads-up to win the 2005 WSOP Main Event and capture $7.5 million in prize money. Both Hachem and Dannenmann return to review the final table with just five players remaining, as they discuss some of the key hands and strategy on the way to crowning Hachem as the 2005 World Champion.
There's $226,218 up top for the winner with Joe McKeehen, Joe Cada, Jeff Trudeau, Sam Philips, Ihar Soika, Harry Lodge, Anthony Reategui, Joshua Turner, Taylor Wilson, and Jack Maskill battling it out. Commentary provided by Ali Nejad and Maria Ho.