Mercier and Friends
Jason Mercier won his sixth WSOP bracelet at the expense of an old frenemy in Mike Watson.

Another record-breaking day of action at the 2023 World Series of Poker saw Jason Mercier return to the annals of poker history as the devout Christian’s tournament resurrection was confirmed. Mercier, who hails from Florida and is a huge basketball fan, slam dunked in Event #60 as he defeated Mike Watson heads-up. Watson has never won a WSOP bracelet on American soil, despite having being heads-up for one an incredible five times.

Mercier Wins Gold at Watson’s Expense… Again

Jason Mercier won his sixth WSOP bracelet at the expense of Mike Watson, with his victory in the $1,500-entry No Limit 2-7 Single Drawn event coming seven years after his 5th WSOP victory… against the same opponent.

Having made his job as father the one of most importance since becoming a Dad, passionate Floridian and devoted Christian Mercier has stepped back from playing a full schedule to spend more time with his young family. Shorn of his recent long hair and beard, a buzz-cut Mercier took down the 60th event of this summer’s WSOP in the spirit of resurrection in more ways than one.

After the surprise exit of Erik Seidel in fifth place, Jon Tuner’s elimination in fourth came before a lengthy three-handed battle for supremacy. The overnight leader Brad Ruben lost that battle, cashing for $63,505 in third before heads-up began with Mercier on 7 million chips to Watson’s 6.7 million.

A near-level playing field saw Watson take a small lead, which he held for some time, but Mercier fought his way back and when he grabbed the lead back himself, he wouldn’t let it go. Celebrating a momentous win, Mercier cheered with his rail and was gracious in victory to Watson.

“Everyone’s a lot better. The game is different,” he said of his return to the game. “There’s just not as many people that are drawing dead at the game. I’m not much of a studier. I just kind of play and get my experience by playing more hands. It’s kind of like riding a bike, you know? I just hopped back on.”

Everyone will be happy to see Jason Mercier back to winning ways in the World Series of Poker… with the possible exception of Mike Watson.

WSOP 2023 Event #60 $1,500 No Limit 2-7 Single Draw Results:
Place Player Country Prize
1st Jason Mercier United States $151,276
2nd Mike Watson Canada $93,495
3rd Brad Ruben United States $63,505
4th Jon Turner United States $44,002
5th Erik Seidel United States $31,114

 

Ladies Championship Sets New Attendance Record as Champions Stay in Hunt  

The 61st event of the Series saw 1,295 Ladies Event hopefuls put up $1,000 to play the record-setting Ladies Championship, eclipsing the number set back in 2007 when poker was a very different game. Now in its ‘second boom’ poker saw a top prize of $192,167 guaranteed after the Day 1 action of this event, with chip leader Bernice Mclennan (276,500) followed by some impressive names on the list of players who made Day 2.

There was a stunning show from Veronica Brill (212,500), a ‘WSOP Thrill’ from Samantha Abernathy (185,500), and another super-consistent performance from Vanessa Kade (146,000) along the way as stars littered the above-average end of the chipcounts.

Others were a little further back with Poker.Org reporter Tiffany Michelle (75,000) followed by both the 2021 champion Lara Eisenberg (72,500), and reigning champion Jessica Teusl (39,000) along with Kristen Foxen (59,500) and Gaelle Baumann (31,000).

While many great players bagged up, others busted out and we’ll see no more of stars such as WPT anchor Lynn Gilmartin, Poker Hall of Famer Kathy Liebert, YouTube star Marle Spragg, or GPI Breakout Player of the Year Kyna England on Day 2, with just 330 players making it to the next day’s play.

WSOP 2023 Event #67 $1,000 Ladies Championship Leaderboard:
Place Player Country Chips
1st Bernice Mclennan Canada 276,500
2nd Katrina Lim United States 245,000
3rd Talia Fligelman United States 234,500
4th Sharon Liss United States 230,500
5th Tia Dulaney United States 229,500
6th Stephani Hagberg United States 226,000
7th Karina Jett United States 222,000
8th Ruth Hall United States 218,000
9th Anna Rudolph United States 215,500
10th Marcia Paulson United States 214,000

 

Malboubi in Charge on Penultimate Day of Super Seniors

Only 13 players are left chasing the $371,603 top prize in Event #61, otherwise known as the Super Seniors Event, which costs $1,000 to play just like the Ladies Championship. Over 60 years old to a man and woman, the Super Seniors leader with 13 left is Rassoul Malboubi (10.1 million) with the Day 2 leader Farhad Davoudzadeh (9m) not far behind.

Elsewhere in the top 10, Ronald Lane (6m) trails in third place, with the wonderfully monikered James Martini (4.2m) hoping he’ll be celebrating with a drink such as his surname in 24 hours time.

WSOP 2023 Event #61 $1,000 Super Seniors Leaderboard:
Place Player Country Prize
1st Rassoul Malboubi United States 10,150,000
2nd Farhad Davoudzadeh United States 9,000,000
3rd Ronald Lane United States 6,075,000
4th Arnon Graham United States 6,000,000
5th Jimmie James United States 5,850,000
6th Robert Whalen United States 4,625,000
7th James Martini United States 4,275,000
8th Kevin Parmely United States 4,000,000
9th Ronald Swain United States 3,475,000
10th Richard Wallace United States 3,025,000

 

Five Remain in Mixed Event

Only five players are left battling it out for the gold in Event #62, the $1,500-entry Mixed NLHE/PLO event. There are a trio of American names at the top of the leaderboard, with a huge chip leader, as David Prociak (21,450,000) leads from David Simon (11,900,000), No-one else has half the leader’s stack, with Eric Pfenning (8,100,000) followed in the counts by Tsuf Saltsberg (6,550,000) and Eran Carmi (3,925,000) as the lower end of the leaderboard features not one but two Israeli poker heroes.

WSOP 2023 Event #62 $1,500 Mixed NLHE/PLO Leaderboard:
Place Player Country Chips
1st David Prociak United States 21,450,000
2nd David Simon United States 11,900,000
3rd Eric Pfenning United States 8,100,000
4th Tsuf Saltsberg Israel 6,550,000
5th Eran Carmi Israel 3,925,000

 

Miller Time in Seven Card Stud

The final six players are confirmed in the $10,000 buy-in Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo Championship and Bryn Kenney is second in chips as he fights to win a second WSOP bracelet. The Long Islander, currently second on the all-time money list, has 2,035,000 chips to play with on the final day as he attempts to get the job done, only a few less than the leader, Ryan Miller (2,230,000). Overnight leader Max Schindler (1,910,000) is the other well-stacked player, with Andres Korn (1.3m) considerably clear of Chino Rheem (525,000) and Eddi Blumenthal (455,000).

WSOP 2023 Event #63 $10,000 Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or Better Championship:
Place Player Country Chips
1st Ryan Miller United States 2,230,000
2nd Bryn Kenney United States 2,035,000
3rd Maximilian Schindler United States 1,910,000
4th Andres Korn Argentina 1,300,000
5th David ‘Chino’ Rheem United States 525,000
6th Eddie Blumenthal United States 455,000

 

Drama in Four More Events

The $600-entry Deepstack Championship is down to its final 44 players, and Cade Lautenbacher leads with a stack of 7.2 million chips, with Jonathan Fhima (6,665,000) and Julian Pineda (5.86m) chasing him down.

WSOP 2023 Event #64 $600 NLHE Deepstack Championship:
Place Player Country Chips
1st Cade Lautenbacher United States 7,205,000
2nd Jonathan Fhima France 6,665,000
3rd Julian Pineda Columbia 5,860,000
4th Joe Ebanks United States 5,355,000
5th Will Thysell United States 5,100,000
6th Ahmed Karrim South Africa 5,075,000
7th Romain Kowalczyk France 4,550,000
8th Mauro Gomez Chile 4,425,000
9th Dominic Cabuhat United States 4,425,000
10th Nicholas Lee Canada 4,195,000

 

In Event #65, two Brazilians top the charts overnight, with Vitor Dzivielevski (3,425,000) and Pedro Garagnani (3,220,000) top two of the 48 players to reach Day 3. Stars of the felt such as Ryan Leng (1,425,000), Craig McCorkell (815,000), Kyle Julius (810,000), Scott Seiver (615,000), David ‘Bakes’ Baker (400,000) and Daniel Lazrus (185,000) will all be visualizing that gold bracelet around their wrists.

WSOP 2023 Event #65 $5,000 NLHE 6-Max Leaderboard:
Place Player Country Chips
1st Vitor Dzivielevski Brazil 3,425,000
2nd Pedro Garagnani Brazil 3,220,000
3rd Cody Jones United States 2,855,000
4th Chuanshu Chen China 2,520,000
5th Norbert Szecsi Hungary 2,345,000
6th Douglas Ferreira Brazil 2,135,000
7th Tyler Cornell United States 2,125,000
8th Georgios Sotiropoulos Greece 1,960,000
9th Danny Tang Hong Kong 1,940,000
10th Omar Lakhdari France 1,845,000

 

Michael Rodrigues (3.45m) only trails runaway leader William Kopp (7.5m) in Event #66, the $1,500-entry PLO Hi-Lo 8 or Better event. Major threats include double WSOP winner Yuval Bronshtein (2,155,000) and four-time winner Anthony Zinno (825,000).

WSOP 2023 Event #66 $1,500 PLO Hi-Lo 8 or Better Leaderboard:
Place Player Country Chips
1st William Kopp United States 7,500,000
2nd Michael Rodrigues Portugal 3,450,000
3rd John Goyette United States 3,140,000
4th Mike Linster United States 3,100,000
5th Sterling Savill United States 3,035,000
6th Yuval Bronshtein Israel 2,155,000
7th Philipp Krieger Germany 1,500,000
8th Loni Hui United States 1,355,000
9th Joseph McCarthy United States 1,000,000
10th Anthony Zinno United States 825,000

 

Brazilian Gabriel Schroeder (14.5m) leads the last 10 players in the $1,000-entry Super Turbo Bounty Event #68, with Daniel Lowery (6.35m) and Andy Black (2.6m) two big names who also made it to the added final day of the event due to popularity. 

WSOP 2023 Event #68 $1,000 Super Turbo Bounty Leaderboard:
Place Player Country Chips
1st Gabriel Schroeder Brazil 14,500,000
2nd Jordan Jayne United States 10,825,000
3rd Elson Lima United States 9,000,000
4th Daniel Lowery United States 6,350,000
5th Takumi Noisheida United States 4,500,000
6th Joel Wertheimer United States 4,300,000
7th Ryan Goindoo Trinidad & Tobago 3,000,000
8th Jose Brito Portugal 2,750,000
9th Andy Black Ireland 2,600,000
10th Jonathan Akiba United States 2,000,000

 

Michael Moncek (452,000) leads the field in Event #69 after just the first day’s action in the $10,000 No Limit 2-7 Single Draw Championship. Jason Mercier, fresh from claiming gold, jumped right on into this one and ended Day 1 sixth in chips!

WSOP 2023 Event #69 $10,000 NL 2-7 Single Draw Championship:
Place Player Country Chips
1st Michael Moncek United States 452,000
2nd Galen Hall United States 298,000
3rd Jon Turner United States 270,000
4th Yingui Li China 260,000
5th Ryan Riess United States 256,500
6th Jason Mercier United States 255,500
7th Pedro Bromfman Brazil 240,000
8th Paul Volpe United States 233,500
9th Robert Wells United Kingdom 232,000
10th Cary Katz United States 221,000

 

Len Ashby is an advocate for an ‘old school’ tournament to be added to the WSOP schedule in 2024.

Dan Zack may not retain his POY title this year – although nothing is over yet – but either way, he’s betting big on the Main Event.

Meanwhile, the award for Best Outfit of the 2023 WSOP looks to have been wrapped up early this year (via Angela Jordison).

And finally, the king of the laconic Twitter takedown, TV writer and former WPT Player of the Year Matt Salsberg, summed up the feeling of taking on WSOP events with this 15-word masterpiece.

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