Daniel Negreanu
Daniel Negreanu looks to turn around a rough start to the 2023 WSOP after a solid Day 1 in the $10k H.O.R.S.E Championship.

Day 25 of the 2023 World Series of Poker at the Horseshoe Las Vegas and Paris casinos saw a rarity for the series, as no gold bracelets were awarded. Six events were in motion, however, with a huge Day 2 of the Seniors, two $10,000 Championship events, the Tag Team and the Millionaire Maker all in motion, along with the $2,500 Mixed Triple Draw.

Halatenko Accumulates Piles in PLO Championship

Event #50: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship brought back 42 players from a starting field of 731, all with the goal of being one of the final five remaining to come back for the final day of play. A grueling 12 hour day was in the cards for the four-card aficionados, and leading the final five is Stanislov Halatenko, whose 19,750,000 stack accounts for nearly half of the 43,860,000 in play. Travis Pearson (8,550,000) and Peng Shan (6,800,000) have healthy stacks of more than 30 big blinds, while Arthur Morris (4,875,000) and AP Garza (3,775,000) will be looking to spin it up.

The 42 remaining players were all guaranteed a $28,905 payday for their efforts through the first two days, but even with the gambling reputation of Omaha, the action was slow and steady throughout the day. Garza was involved in one of the early eliminations, making a wheel against Kabeelan Rajamurthy (37th – $33,823) to start Garza’s ascent up the counts. Sean Winter (35th – $33,823), Joseph Liberta ($40,278) and Adam Hendrix (17th – $48,800) joined the growing rail, and with two tables left the chip lead was neck and neck between Benoit Galland and Halatenko.

Halatenko would then bust William Kopp (16th – $48,800) in a monster pot, where both players had a jack-high straight on a Tc9h6h8c board, but Halatenko’s Js8s7d6d found a full house on the 8d river, and Kopp called off his stack with just the JsTh9s7c to propel Halatenko to a big chip lead. Dylan Weisman (14th – $60,136), the aforementioned Galland (13th – $60,136), Juha Helppi (12th – $75,352) and Dimitar Danchev (9th – $95,980) all busted before the official final table of eight was reached, but three more players had to bust to reach the day’s end.

The chatty Ren Lin couldn’t make the short stack rally happen, running into Garza’s boat to sink his tens-up in eighth. Garza played the role of executioner again in dispatching Kosei Ichinose next, Garza’s AhKh9d7d besting Ichinose’s AcJhJsTc when all the chips got in on a Qh9s4h flop. The battle of the draws went to Garza, when he binked a flush on the 3s3h runout to eliminate Ichinose in seventh. The final player to miss the final table was arguably the most accomplished remaining in Sam Soverel, who ripped in his stack with a wrap and a flush draw, but he whiffed everything against the top two pair of Shan to fall one spot shy of the final table of five. PokerGo captured the final hand of the day in all its drama:

 

WSOP 2023 Event #50 $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship Leaderboard:

Place Player Country Chips/Prize
1st Stanislav Halatenko Ukraine 19,750,000
2nd Travis Pearson USA 8,550,000
3rd Peng Shan China 6,800,000
4th Arthur Morris USA 4,875,000
5th AP Garza USA 3,775,000
6th Sam Soverel USA $218,297
7th Kosei Ichinose Japan $163,405
8th Ren Lin China $124,243
9th Dimitar Danchev Bulgaria $95,980

 

Pupillo In Front of Talented Pack in Mixed Triple Draw

The 145 returning players in Event #52: $2,500 Mixed Triple Draw were all looking to wheel and “dugi” their way to the final day of play to stay in contention for a WSOP gold bracelet. Just 19 players bagged up chips, and a pure grinder sits atop the counts in Arizona pro Nick Pupillo (1,505,000), who guaranteed his third deep run in variants other than No Limit Hold’em of the summer after finishing 6th in the $10,000 Limit Hold’em Championship and 11th in the $1,500 Dealer’s Choice event. Pupillo will be looking to be the latest to take his name off the “Best Without a Bracelet” list, with a gold WSOP bracelet about the only accolade not in his coffers over a decade-long career with over $4.6 million in career tournament earnings.

Joao Vieira (1,040,000), Hye Park (810,000), Robert Mizrachi (500,000), John Monnette (410,000) and Cary Katz (135,000) will all return for Day 3 action, while Jon Turner, Ken Aldridge, Ben Yu, Scott Seiver, and Shaun Deeb all busted before reaching the money. Robert Campbell, Scott Abrams, Maria Ho and Jake Schwartz all managed to earn a cash before falling short of the final day.

WSOP 2023 Event #52: $2,500 Mixed Triple Draw Leaderboard

Place Player Country Chips
1st Nick Pupillo USA 1,505,000
2nd Tomomitsu Ono Japan 1,235,000
3rd Joao Vieira Portugal 1,040,000
4th Brant Hale USA 1,000,000
5th Oscar Johansson Sweden 910,000
6th Robert Wells United Kingdom 850,000
7th Hye Park USA 810,000
8th Anatolii Zyrin Russia 800,000
9th Ryan Moriarty USA 640,000
10th Divakaran Marella USA 530,000

 

Seiver and Volpe Riding Strong in H.O.R.S.E.

Day 1 of Event #54: $10,000 H.O.R.S.E Championship is traditionally a slower day for the $10k championship series, and a field of 165 entries still managed to bring 91 back after a full day of play for Day 2 action. Steven Loube (353,000) will return Saturday with the chip lead, a healthy amount ahead of Scott Bohlman’s 311,500, while Scott Seiver (297,000), David “Bakes” Baker (268,000) and Paul Volpe (214,500) all managed impressive bags of their own.

“KidPoker” himself Daniel Negreanu also managed to accumulate a healthy stack of 168,000, in hopes of turning around what has to be a disappointing summer so far, with just a handful of cashes to his name so far. Five-time WSOP Bracelet winner Josh Arieh (159,500) will be looking to keep his momentum from a ninth-place finish in the $50,000 Poker Players Championship going, as well.

A murderer’s row of heavy hitting bracelet winners did manage to find the rail through the day, including Adam Friedman, Jen Harman, Brian Rast, Erik Seidel, Anthony Zinno, Nick Schulman, and Koray Aldemir. Meanwhile, John Racener (39,000) Kevin Gerhart (17,500), and Shaun Deeb (10,500) all have work to do if they want to add to their bracelet collections.

WSOP 2023 Event #54 $10,000 H.O.R.S.E. Championship Leaderboard:

Place Player Country Chips
1st Steven Loube USA 353,000
2nd Scott Bohlman USA 311,500
3rd Young Ko USA 298,500
4th Scott Seiver USA 297,000
5th David “Bakes” Baker USA 268,000
6th Mori Eskandani USA 238,500
7th Binh Ly USA 238,000
8th Paul Volpe USA 214,500
9th Matt Grapenthienl USA 207,000
10th Daniel Tafur Spain 205,000

 

Pair of Monster Stacks Lead the Millionaire Maker

Poker players seeking a guaranteed seven-figure payday found their wish granted with Day 1a of Event #53: $1,500 Millionaire Maker No-Limit Hold’em, with a guaranteed $1,000,000 payday up top for the eventual winner. Two players managed to spin their 25,000 starting stacks up past the 700,000 marker, with Yong Yi (750,000) and Sihao Zhang (725,500) easily lapping the remaining 1,012 players. Ryan Dodd (414,500), Alex Greenblatt (405,500), Javier Zarco (303,000), Vincent Moscati (244,500) and Dutch Boyd (241,500) also managed to put large stacks to bags for Sunday’s Day 2.

WSOP 2023 Event #53 $1,500 Millionaire Maker Leaderboard:

Place Player Country Chips
1st Yong Yi USA 750,000
2nd Sihao Zhang Luxembourg 725,500
3rd Nicola Basile Canada 480,000
4th Peng Li USA 460,000
5th Paul Gunness USA 430,000
6th Ryan Dodd USA 414,500
7th Alex Greenblatt USA 405,500
8th Osman Ihlamur Turkey 392,000
9th Lawrence Beach USA 361,000
10th Jamie Rosen USA 357,000

 

Banghart and Ramdin Surging in the Seniors

A whopping 1,624 entrants from a starting field of 8,180 returned for Day 2 action in Event #48: $1,000 Seniors Championship. Leonard Clementi leads the clubhouse with 4,200,000, while Chun Li kicked up a healthy 3,165,000 for second place. Other notables with healthy stacks out of the 217 remaining players include Jeff Banghart (1,980,000), Victor Ramdin (1,005,000), Ira Friedman (940,000), and Men Nguyen (700,000), while Mark Seif (355,000), Mike Matusow (250,000), Lee Markholt (243,000) and Dan Heimiller (221,000) will have some work to do to move on to Day 4.

WSOP 2023 Event #48 $1,000 Seniors Championship Leaderboard:

Place Player Country Chips
1st Leonard Clementi USA 4,200,000
2nd Chun Li USA 3,165,000
3rd David Palm USA 2,335,000
4th James Clarke United Kingdom 2,250,000
5th Christopher Stevens USA 2,195,000
6th Rodney Hurlbut USA 2,100,000
7th Bryant Morrison USA 2,055,000
8th Amie Martini USA 2,000,000
9th

10th

Brad Anderson

Mojtaba Khorsandi

USA

USA

2,000,000

2,000,000

Williams/Tran Invoking Legion of Doom in Tag Team

There was plenty of tagging and not so much bagging in Event #51: $1,000 Tag Team, as the 252 teams that returned for Day 2 were quickly whittled down to just 26 before the end of the day, with Japan’s Yuki Sako/Shunsuke Tokoo (2,340,000) holding a slim lead over David Williams/Theo Tran (2,085,000) and Nipun Java/Ronald Phipps (2,065,000). Vincent Moscati managed a rare double bag, putting a stack away in the Millionaire Maker and tagging up with Tanner Bibat to bag 945,000 in the Tag Team. 

WSOP 2023 Event #51 $1,000 Tag Team Leaderboard:

Place Player Country Chips
1st Yuki Sako & Shunsuke Tokoo Japan 2,340,000
2nd David Williams & Theo Tran USA 2,085,000
3rd Nipun Java & Ronald Phipps India 2,065,000
4th John Ventre & Kenneth Gallo USA 1,645,000
5th Jorge Machado & Lucian Camargo Brazil 1,645,000
6th Jonah LaBranche & Dustin WIlls USA 1,475,000
7th Lindsay & Joshua McDougall USA 1,375,000
8th Sean Cosgrove & John Lucas USA 1,275,000
9th Mitchell Collins & Arash Asadabadi USA 1,265,000
10th Vincent Moscati & Tanner Bibat USA 945,000

 

Phil Hellmuth had an eventful night that somehow didn’t involve the WSOP:

Dara O’Kearney went from multi-tabling to out in a snap:

The Mush got a stake! (Spoiler: He didn’t bag):

Matt Berkey’s Tag Team Partner giving thanks for running deep:

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