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As you might expect, Day 39 of the 2025 World Series of Poker (WSOP) at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas was all about the $10,000 Main Event which took up much of the playing space as well as dominating the day's headlines.
However, five other events also added to the clangor of bets being declared, chips being riffled, and pots being raked. Two of these events resulted in new bracelet winners on the day.
The bracelet for PokerNews's own Event #78: $600 PokerNewsDeepstack Championship went to Nick Ahmadi, who collected $302,165, his first gold WSOP bracelet, and the 24-karat gold PokerNewsDeepstack Championship winner’s coin.
The second bracelet of the day went to Giuseppe Zarbo who turned an $800 buy in into $504,180 by winning Event #80: $800 Summer Celebration.
Nothing else on the poker calendar can compare to the WSOP Main Event, which reached the end of Day 1c yesterday.
Day 1c of the event added another 1,678 entries to the event's tally, bringing the total attendance up to 5,980 entries. Eliminations were slow thanks to the deep stacks and long blind levels. As a result, 1,249 players survived to see Day 2. These players join a Day 2 field that now numbers 4,929 players. However, with one more starting flight to go, those numbers can only go up.
Two-time bracelet winner Andriy Lyubovetskiy bagged the biggest Day 1c stack, ending the day with 392,400 in chips. That's 491 big blinds when action starts on Day 2 with 400/800 blind with an 800 big blind ante.
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Click hereFollowing Lyubovetskiy is Bin Weng with a stack of 354,800. Weng has over $9 million in career live cashes and rose to the number two spot late in the day.
Braxton Dunaway, the 2023 Monster Stack Champion also bagged a big stack with 234,800. He was another late addition to the top ten, making big headway in the last two levels of the day.
Among those who survived to see Day 2 were players like "retired" poker legend Vanessa Selbst (155,200) by the end of the night, Dan Shak (162,700), PokerNews' own Chad Holloway (128,200), Alec Torelli (101,900), Erick Lindgren (101,100), Michael Addamo (92,400), Max Pescatori (88,500), 2020 Main Event Online champion Damian Salas (61,400), and 2018 WSOP Europe Main Event champion Jack Sinclair (72,900).
Some other notable bags included Calvin Anderson (230,200), Jon Kyte (206,200), Lucas Greenwood (193,600), Michael Addamo (92,600), Philip Sternheimer (91,900), and Boris Angelov (82,500).
Day 1d starts at 12 p.m. local time on July 5. This is the last starting flight of the event, but usually not the least.
You can follow live updates of the tournament right here on PokerNews.
Check out the full WSOP Main Event Day 1c chip counts here
Rank | Player | Country | Chip Count | Big Blinds |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Andriy Lyubovetskiy | Ukraine | 392,400 | 491 |
2 | Bin Weng | United States | 336,000 | 420 |
3 | Eric Bunch | United States | 309,300 | 387 |
4 | Brendon Kaufman | United States | 256,500 | 321 |
5 | Igor Tristan Picone | Belgium | 256,000 | 320 |
6 | Colin Beveridge | United States | 237,400 | 297 |
7 | Braxton Dunaway | United States | 234,800 | 294 |
8 | Randall Lack | United States | 232,200 | 290 |
9 | Paul Taylor | United States | 232,200 | 290 |
10 | Ray Medlin | United States | 230,400 | 288 |
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June 4 was scheduled to be the final day of Event #82: $10,000 Eight Game Mixed Championship. However, a 13-hour day saw Eric Wasserson and Mike Gorodinsky still battling it out on the felt when the tournament director made the call to add an unscheduled Day 4 to the event.
Thirteen players started Day 3, from a total field of 195. They were competing for a cut of the $1,813,500 prize pool, but everyone was eyeing up the gold bracelet and $422,421 up top.
Unfortunately, not everyone can win, and among those who exited the tourney on Day 3 were Brian Hastings, Jeremy Ausmus, Todd Brunson and Ioannis Konstas.
Jon Turner and Brian Tate were the last two eliminations of the day, leaving Wasserson and Gorodinsky to duke it out.
Wasserson has most of the chips in play with 10,115,000 in his stack. That puts Gorodinsky, with 1,585,000, in a tough spot when play resumes at 1 p.m. on Saturday, June 5.
Blinds will be at 30,000/60,000 for the big bet games and the limits at 120,000-240,000 for the limit games.
Place | Player | Country | Chip Count (Prize) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Eric Wasserson | United States | 10,115,000 |
2 | Mike Gorodinsky | United States | 1,585,000 |
3 | Jon Turner | United States | ($187,724) |
4 | Brian Tate | United States | ($130,211) |
5 | Kahle Burns | Australia | ($92,829) |
6 | Bradley Jansen | United States | ($68,071) |
7 | Thomas Taylor | Canada | ($51,385) |
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Pawel Brzeski tops the leaderboard after Day 2 of Event #83: $2,500 Freezeout No-Limit Hold’em. Brzeski bagged a stack of 5,555,000, putting him well ahead of his closest competition.
Breno Drumond in second has a stack of 3,955,000 and Vitor Dzivielevski has a stack of 2,820,000.
A total of 247 Day 1 survivors started Day 2 from a field of 1,299. By the close of play, that number had further reduced to 25.
Duncan Horst started the day clad in the American flag while he sang “The Star-Spangled Banner.” He busted in 86th, earning a payout of $6,000. Alex Keating ($9,490), Phillip Hui ($5,580), and Shawn Daniels ($8,490) were also among those who made it to the money.
The event has a prize pool of $2,890,275 with $449,245 up top for first.
The 25 survivors will return on July 5 at 1 p.m. local time to see who wins that top prize. Blinds will start at 30,000/60,000.
Rank | Player | Country | Chip Count | Big Blinds |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Pawel Brzeski | Poland | 5,555,000 | 111 |
2 | Breno Drumond | Brazil | 3,955,000 | 79 |
3 | Vitor Dzivielevski | Brazil | 2,820,000 | 56 |
4 | Cary Katz | United States | 2,495,000 | 50 |
5 | Simon Lindell | Sweden | 2,445,000 | 49 |
6 | Michael Jozoff | United States | 2,420,000 | 48 |
7 | Razvan Belea | Romania | 2,175,000 | 44 |
8 | Preston McEwen | United States | 2,055,000 | 41 |
9 | Jaehoon Baek | Korea, Republic of | 1,975,000 | 40 |
10 | Gary Hasson | Belgium | 1,965,000 | 39 |
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Event #84: $1,000 No-Limit Hold'em kicked off yesterday, attracting 1,873 entries. This far exceeded last year's field of 1,424. The numbers are likely boosted by the switch from a freezeout format to single re-entry.
The high turnout put $1,648,240 in play, with $232,498 of that reserved for the top spot.
Shaun Deeb is currently sitting closest to that top prize. He bagged the biggest stack out of the Day 1 survivors with 923,000 in chips.
He is followed by Liao Yinghsiang (530,000) in second and Jeffery Pugh (510,000) in third.
Some of the other bracelet winners who made it to Day 2 include Harry Lodge (193,000), who won his second bracelet in an online event last week; Jinlong Hu (182,000); Max Kruse (161,000); and Alen Bakovic (140,000).
Guo Liang Wei was eliminated on the bubble, ending Day 1 and ensuring that everyone else would get a little taste of the pot for their trouble.
The event starts up for Day 2 at 2 p.m. local time on July 5. The blinds start at 3,000/6,000 with a 6,000 big blind ante.
Pokernewswill have live updates all day.
Rank | Player | Country | Chip Count | Big Blinds |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Shaun Deeb | United States | 923,000 | 154 |
2 | Liao Yinghsiang | China | 530,000 | 88 |
3 | Jeffery Pugh | United States | 510,000 | 85 |
4 | Andrew Vanhoe | United States | 486,000 | 81 |
5 | Santiago Plante | Canada | 477,000 | 80 |
6 | Konstantin Generalov | Russia | 476,000 | 79 |
7 | Muhammad Rahim | United States | 450,000 | 75 |
8 | Bosco Li | United Kingdom | 422,000 | 70 |
9 | Ramon Munoz | Spain | 417,000 | 70 |
10 | John Lewis | United States | 404,000 | 67 |
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The smell of black powder and grill smoke is fading as July 4 ends, but the fireworks continue at the Paris and Horseshoe Las Vegas.
July 5 will be Day 40 of the series and comes with four events that are already underway.
There are no new starters today; instead, we will see the return of several events, the most important of which is, of course, Event #81: $10,000 WSOP Main Event World Championship.
The Main Event will be back for Day 1d, the final and most likely the largest starting flight of the event. Play begins at midday and will continue for five two-hour blind levels.
Survivors of Day 1a, b, and c will return for Day 2abc on July 6, while survivors of Day 1d will return for Day 2d on July 7.
Shaun Deeb leads the Day 2 field of Event #84: $1,000 No-Limit Holdem. He returns to hunt his eighth bracelet along with the rest of the field at 2 p.m.
Event #82: $10,000 Eight Game Mixed Championship returns for an unscheduled Day 4.
Just two players remain to fight it out for the bracelet — Eric Wasserson and Mike Gorodinsky. They are scheduled for a 1 p.m. start.
There are 25 players left in Event #83: $2,500 Freezeout No-Limit Hold'em. This pair of combatants is scheduled to return at 1 p.m. local, so they can decide a winner.
Check back in with PokerNewsto get live updates and the biggest news stories from all these events and more at the 2025 World Series of Poker.
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