Sergio Aido
Sergio Aido won his first-ever WSOP bracelet for $2m when he took down the $50,000-entry High Roller Event #39.

An epic day of action in the 2024 World Series of Poker saw Sergio Aido start his WSOP run with a first gold bracelet and Scott Seiver put his Hall of Fame chances even greater with his second bracelet of the 2024 WSOP. No-one else has won two events and in Event #40, the $1,500 Razz, Seiver went wire-to-wire to claim gold and make poker history. With four other events in action the WSOP drama came thick and fast at the Horseshoe and Paris casinos in Las Vegas.

Aido Strikes Gold in High Roller for $2m Payday

Spanish player Sergio Aido won his first-ever WSOP bracelet after he conquered a final table packed with talent. Winning over $2 million up top, Aido got the better of his fellow top professional Chance Kornuth, denying the American his fourth WSOP title as Aido instead won his first.

When the final table began, Aido’s stack of 83 big blinds dwarfed everyone else’s, apart from Jesse Lonis, who was hanging onto the Spaniard’s coattails with 63 bigs. Leon Sturm was much shorter and the German became the final table’s first victim when he shoved pre-flop with KcJc and ran into Aido’s KsKd. The board of QdTh8d6c4h flirted with giving Sturm a straight but the fifth and final card to complete it didn’t arrive on turn or river and he left with  a score of $165,849.

Out next was Bruce Buffer as the entertainment legend lost in eighth for $212,423 when his AhKh couldn’t catch Jonathan Jaffe’s KdKd with the money going into the middle pre-flop again. Soon, Aido took out another, this time Johannes Straver. The Dutchman cashed for $276,987 in seventh place when his QsJh was dominated to defeat by Aido’s AdJs. Aido now had the outright lead from the overnight leader Viktor Blom and took out Jaffe next for $367,577. As4s was simply slain by Aido’s KsKc as once again the at-risk player flopped a straight draw but missed on the turn and river.

Jesse Lonis fell from grace to leave in fifth for $496,293. All-in with AcJc, he was desperately unlucky to lose to Blom’s JsTs as a board of 8h8s5sTdTc flopped the Swede a flush draw then gave him a runner-runner full house instead. Soon, play was three-handed, as Adrian Mateos missed out on the chance to win his fifth bracelet. It was his fellow Spanish pro Aido who took him out, as Mateos’ Qd8d lost to Aido’s Ks7s after a board of 7h6c4h7d8s came to reduce four to three, Mateos cashing for $681,554.

With Aido (31,7m) and Blom (16.6m) both way ahead of Chance Kornuth on just 4,775,000 chips, the ‘chances’ didn’t look good for the last remaining American player. But he battled back and at several pots that never went to showdown, almost levelled with the Swedish phenom. On a flop of 7d5s4c, Blom got his chips in with two-pair 7s4s but incredibly he was behind. Kornuth had three-bet shoved with 7c5c and held to go into the heads-up battle for the gold with only marginally less than his Spanish opponent, Blom heading to the rail with $951,727.

One ill-time bluff gave Aido a healthier chip lead early in the heads-up match before a flop of 9d6d6c saw Aido check-call with 9s6s. Kornuth had bet with Jc9c and on the 2c turn, Aido bet, and Kornuth called. A 3h on the river saw Aido use two time extension chips before moving all-in, and Kornuth went into the tank, also using several time chips to think before making the call and losing all of his chips.

WSOP Event #39: $50,000 8-Max NLHE High Roller Results:
Place Place Country Prize
1st Sergio Aido Spain $2,026,506
2nd Chance Kornuth United States $1,351,000
3rd Viktor Blom Sweden $951,727
4th Adrian Mateos Spain $681,554
5th Jesse Lonis United States $496,293
6th Jonathan Jaffe United States $367,577
7th Johannes Straver Netherlands $276,987
8th Bruce Buffer United States $212,423
9th Leon Sturm Germany $165,849

Seiver Makes in Two in ‘24 in Razz Romp

Scott Seiver told everyone how determined he was to win multiple bracelets when he landed his first of this series and fifth overall just last week. A week on, Seiver has become the first player in 2024 to win two WSOP bracelets in different events, seeing off Brandon Shack-Harris heads-up to claim a stunning sixth WSOP title.

This time, the win was in Razz, as Seiver got the better of Brandon Shack-Harris heads-up to take the title, his second of the summer as he looks to press his current lead into a Player of the Year crusade, desperate to see his flag adorning the walls of the Horseshoe in Las Vegas.

After Maxx Coleman lost out in fourth, Brandon Shack-Harris couldn’t build a stack to topple Seiver as after the German player Ingo Klasen lost to Seiver, Shack-Haris had only 500,000 chips. Seiver was never going to miss an open goal like that and sealed victory quickly to win the top prize of $141,374.

“I really, truly want to win Player of the Year this year,” Seiver told PokerNews afterwards. “I’m going to do as much as I can to make that happen.”

WSOP Event #40: $1,500 Razz Final Table Results:
Place Place Country Prize
1st Scott Seiver United States $141,374
2nd Brandon Shack-Harris United States $94,247
3rd Ingo Klasen Germany $64,588
4th Maxx Coleman United States $45,117
5th Soner Osman United Kingdom $32,136
6th Akihiro Kawaguchi Japan $23,349
7th Brad Lindsey United States $17,313
8th Ben Yu United States $13,105
9th Steven Abitbol France $10,132
Scott Seiver
Great Scott! Seiver makes it two in a week as he win the $1,500 Razz Event #40 for a sixth lifetime bracelet. Did anyone say Hall of Fame induction?

Luo Leads Bomb Pot with Aussie Hachem Chasing

WSOP Main Event 2005 winner Joe Hachem’s son Daniel ended Day 2 of Event #41, the $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em & Pot-Limit Omaha Double Board Bomb Pot event in second place with just 16 players remaining in Las Vegas. Chinese player Xixiang Luo (4,265,000) ended a little ahead of Hachem (4,065,000), with Luo’s fellow countryman Quan Zhou (3,875,000) not too far behind either.

Wit just 167 players out of 1,312 entries starting the second day fo action in this event, other big names have survived too, with David Funkhouser (2,735,000), William Kopp (2,075,000) and Dejuante Alexander (1,550,000) all inside the top ten. Others such as John Riordan, Shaun Deeb, Dario Sammartino, Patrick Leonard, Benny Glaser, and Ari Engel all busted on the penultimate day of the tournament.

WSOP Event #41 $1,500 Mixed NLHE/PLO Double Board Bomb Pot Day 1 Chipcounts:
Place Place Country Chips
1st Mike Lang United States 1,189,000
2nd Paul Volpe United States 923,000
3rd Yuri Dzivielevski Brazil 801,000
4th James Obst Australia 732,000
5th Yuval Bronshtein Isrtael 650,000
6th Jason Daly United States 602,000
7th Juha Helppi Finland 586,000
8th Kane Kalas United States 414,000
9th Andre Akkari Brazil 406,000
10th Robert Mizrachi United States 231,000
11th Alex Livingston Canada 192,000

Lang Leads Seven Card Stud Championship

In the $10,000-entry Seven Card Stud Championship, Event #42 saw just 11 players survive to the final day, with Mike Lang (1,189,000) leading from other big names such as three-time WSOP bracelet winner Paul Volpe (923,000), Brazilian online poker crusher Yuri Dzivielevski (801,000) and potential first-time winner and heads-up specialist Kane Kalas (414,000).

WSOP Event #42: $10,000 Seven Card Stud Championship Chipcounts:
Place Place Country Chips
1st Mike Lang United States 1,189,000
2nd Paul Volpe United States 923,000
3rd Yuri Dzivielevski Brazil 801,000
4th James Obst Australia 732,000
5th Yuval Bronshtein Israel 650,000
6th Jason Daly United States 602,000
7th Juha Helppi Finland 586,000
8th Kane Kalas United States 414,000
9th Andre Akkari Brazil 406,000
10th Robert Mizrachi United States 231,000
11th Alex Livingston Canada 192,000

Two More Bracelet Events See Busy Day 1s

Two other WSOP bracelet events began or continued with a Day 1 on Day 20 of the 2024 WSOP, with Event #43, the $1,500 Mixed Omaha event, welcoming successful players like Phil Hellmuth (121,500), Benny Glaser (121,000), Shaun Deeb (132,500) and Ari Engel (87,500), all of whom managed to make Day 2 behind a top three of Dylan Lambe (317,000), Joshua Adcock (309,500) and Jonathan Cohen (296,500). Stars such as Phil Ivey, Phil Laak, Matt Glantz, David Williams and Calvin Anderson didn’t make the cut.

In the third and final flight of Event #38, the $1,500 Monster Stack, Day 1c saw an incredible 3,468 entries, 1,147 of those making Day 2. survivors. French player Julian Millard-Feral (651,500) was the chip leader, with strong showings from stars such as Brian Yoon (415,500), Jeremy Ausmus (382,000), Chris Hunichen (279,000), Timur Margolin (276,500), Mustapha Kanit (206,500), and Barry Greenstein (146,000) behind him.

With thanks to PokerGO for their official WSOP photography. The 2024 World Series of Poker is available to watch exclusively on PokerGO. Subscribe today and watch all the drama play out in Las Vegas!