Phil Hellmuth
Striking a 'Darth Vader' pose, Phil Hellmuth grabbed bounties in his latest WSOP event... but no gold.

The 17th day of action in this year’s World Series of Poker saw new tournaments kick off, others get close to the gold and Phil Hellmuth, a.k.a. The Poker Brat, cut through the Secret Bounty field like a hot knife through butter. It was all action as the drama took place at Paris and Horseshoe Las Vegas casinos in Sin City.

Hellmuth Shoots Scoops but Misses Final Table

The penultimate day in the $10,000-entry Secret Bounty event was a busy one, and saw Phil Hellmuth shooting for hoops as the Poker Brat brought the live-action of a bounty event to the masses via Twitter. On a day when Chris Klodnicki (6,615,000) led from five-time bracelet winner Jeremy Ausmus (6,475,000) at the close of play, Hellmuth’s enriching video where he opens two bounties is what you’re here for.

Behind Klodnicki and Ausmus, some poker bosses gather hoping for a weakness to show. Angel Guillen (4,150,000) will be a formidable opponent on the final day as he shoots for his second WSOP bracelet and so too will the Israeli Barak Wisbrod (4,135,000) who has been ripping it up in tournaments such as the GGPoker Super MILLION$ for months recently.

WSOP 2023 Event #35 $10,000 Secret Bounty Leaderboard:

Place Player Country Chips
1st Chris Klodnicki United States 6,615,000
2nd Jeremy Ausmus United States 6,475,000
3rd Aram Oganyan United States 5,410,000
4th Angel Guillen Mexico 4,150,000
5th Barak Wisbrod Israel 4,135,000
6th Eric Yanovsky United States 3,125,000
7th Daniel Rezaei Austria 3,085,000
8th Tracy Nguyen United States 1,860,000

 

Jeremy Ausmus Thinking
Jeremy Ausmus is second in chips heading to his second final table of the 2023 World Series… can he grab gold?

Mizrachi in Control of Day 2 of PLO Event

Event #34 was the $1,500-entry Pot Limit Omaha event and on a busy day of action, Day 2 saw 98 players reduced to just 10 inside the Horseshoe Las Vegas. The Day 1 chip leader was Josh Arieh and the five-time bracelet winner kept up his pacesetting for the majority of the day, before falling in two crucial pots to Robert Mizrachi and Matthew Beinner, with Mizrachi himself shooting for bracelet number five from the chip lead with 5.68 million.

Arieh’s exit in 13th place for $16,028 was followed by a scramble for chips as players vied for position at the final table tomorrow. Mizrachi’s closest challenger, Beinner (5,175,000) was joined by Matthew Parry (4,170,000), Sean Troha (3,935,000) and Ryan Coon (1,025,000) in the top ten for what should be a thrilling climax to the event on Friday.

WSOP 2023 Event #34 $1,500 Pot Limit Omaha Leaderboard:

Place Player Country Chips
1st Robert Mizrachi United States 5,680,000
2nd Matthew Beinner United States 5,175,000
3rd Matthew Parry United States 4,170,000
4th Benjamin Voreland Norway 3,980,000
5th Sean Troha United States 3,935,000
6th Naor Solobodsky Israel 3,400,000
7th Ryan Christerson United States 3,200,000
8th Antonin Teisseire France 2,210,000
9th Jason Bulloock United States 1,095,000
10th Ryan Coon United States 1,025,000

 

Long Back for More as Repeat Mission Reaches Climax

Philip Long finished the penultimate day of the $1,500-entry Nine Game Mix in the lead as he bids to go two places further than he did in the corresponding event from last year. In 2022, Long ended this event in third place, but this year, he heads into the final day with the chip lead, holding 1,225,000 chips.

The British player Long is marginally ahead of the man who led for most of the day, Jean Gaspard (1,100,000), with Justin Liberto looking to go one place better than he did in Event #24 of this series where he was runner-up in the Razz Championship for a score of $94,558.

WSOP 2023 Event #36 $3,000 Nine Game Mix Leaderboard:

Place Player Country Chips
1st Philip Long United Kingdom 1,225,000
2nd Jean Gaspard United States 1,100,000
3rd Justin Liberto United States 999,000
4th Allan Le United States 880,000
5th Per Hildebrand Sweden 875,000
6th Shawn Buchanan Canada 856,000
7th Tamon Nakamura Japan 848,000
8th Scott Clements United States 814,000
9th Ryutaro Suzuki Japan 737,000
10th Christopher Adams United States 715,000

 

It All Goes Wrong for Sion as Wong is Right in Razz

The $10,000-entry Razz Championship is down to just three players, after a late-night exit for British player Elior Sion saw Jerry Wong (3,025,000) at the top of the counts overnight. Only Michael Moncek (2,760,000) and Carlos Chadha (1,590,000) stand in Wong’s way, but the impressive Moncek has already won a bracelet this summer and Chadha led for much of this penultimate day.

It requires another day to find a winner, however, so expect drama in short order tomorrow when Event #33 resumes to a fast finish to kick off the day’s action.

WSOP 2023 Event #33 $10,000 Razz Championship Leaderboard:

Rank Player Country Chips
1st Jerry Wong United States 3,025,000
2nd Michael Moncek United States 2,760,000
3rd Carlos Chadha United States 1,590,000
4th Elior Sion United Kingdom $97,960
5th Talal Shakerchi United Kingdom $73,495
6th John Hennigan United States $56,265
7th Bryce Yockey United States $43,970
8th Yuval Bronshtein United States $35,092

 

On the Mark, Seif Chases Lee’s Lead

In Event #37, the $2,000-entry No Limit Hold’em event, Lee Piniatoglu (738,000) leads from Mark Seif (711,000) at the top of the leaderboard, with 321 players still in seats after 1,962 took part in the day. Other strong performances from Marc Macdonnell in seventh with 561,000,  Joshua Reichard in third with 666,000 and Kai Zheng in fourth with 567,000 mean some superstars of the felt will return on Day 2 as the remaining players battle into the money places and towards a top prize of $524,777.

WSOP 2023 Event #37 $2,000 No Limit Hold’em Leaderboard:

Place Player Country Chips
1st Lee Piniatoglou United States 738,000
2nd Mark Seif United States 711,000
3rd Joshua Reichard United States 666,000
4th Kai Zheng United States 567,000
5th Chad Brewer United States 565,000
6th Jong Kim United States 564,000
7th Marc Macdonnell Ireland 561,000
8th Miles Crowder United States 510,000
9th Jose Rodriguez Mexico 505,000
10th Xie Haoqi China 481,000

 

Wagner Calling the Tune in Event #38

There were 106 entries in Event #38 of the 2023 WSOP, the $2,000 Limit 2-7 Triple Draw Championship. Top of the shop with just 46 remaining after Day 1 was Michael Wagner (284,000) with Adam Friedman (279,000) and Ryan Leng (273,000) in hot pursuit.

Elsewhere in the top 20, there were appearances by George Wolff (242,000), Rep Porter (188,000), 2023 bracelet winner Michael Rodrigues (180,000) and the six-time WSOP bracelet winner Daniel Negreanu, who ended the day with a very healthy 177,000 chips.

WSOP 2023 Event #38 $2,000 Limit 2-7 Triple Draw Championship:

Place Player Country Chips
1st Michael Wagner United States 284,000
2nd Adam Friedman United States 279,000
3rd Ryan Leng United States 273,000
4th Oscar Johansson Sweden 258,000
5th George Wolff United States 242,000
6th Tony Lin United States 238,000
7th Tommy Hang United States 220,000
8th Taylor Wilson United States 211,000
9th Louis Abronson United States 201,000
10th Rep Porter United States 188,000

 

John Monnette told Twitter fans of his heads-up opponent Chris Chung’s class in a touching moment from yesterday’s see-saw heads-up for gold. Chung missed out on the chance of winning his first bracelet on three separate all-in occasions where Monnette survived.

No-one likes bad beat stories unless they’re entertainingly awful. This one counts.

Heartening news for ‘Doug Polk is Vanessa Selbst’ conspiracy theorists, as the real deal announced that she’s on her way to Las Vegas for the first time in six years.

Landon Tice might not be there to meet her at the gate.

Lastly, Stephanie Ungar posted this touching tribute to Stu Ungar, which not only made us miss The Kid, but the late, great Mike Sexton too. I’m not crying, you’re crying.

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