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2024 World Series of Poker

Event #81: $10,000 WSOP Main Event World Championship
Event Info

2024 World Series of Poker

Risultati finali
Vincitore
Mano Vincente
83
Premio
$10,000,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Montepremi
$94,041,600
Entries
10,112
Informazioni livello
Livello
44
Bui
2,500,000 / 5,000,000
Ante
5,000,000
Informazioni Giocatori - Giorno 5
Entries
464
Giocatori Rimasti
160

Moran Shoves Into Top Set on the First Hand

Livello 21 : Blinds 10,000/25,000, 25,000 ante
Andrew Hanna
Andrew Hanna

James Moran raised to 60,000 under the gun before Andrew Hanna three-bet to 175,000 in the hijack. Moran called and they saw a flop of 85J.

Moran led out for 200,000 and Hanna called. The turn was the K and Moran moved all in for 900,000. Hanna snap-called and turned over KK for top set.

"I'm drawing dead," Moran said, showing AJ. The inconsequential river was the Q and Moran stopped to snap a photo of the board.

"First hand," he added as he waited for his payout slip.

Giocatore Chip Avanzamento
Profile photo of Andrew Hanna us
Andrew Hanna
3,800,000
1,305,000
1,305,000
Profile photo of James Moran us
James Moran
Eliminato

Tags: Andrew HannaJames Moran

Coelho Wakes Up with Kings; Apicella Departs

Livello 21 : Blinds 10,000/25,000, 25,000 ante

Diogo Coelho opened to 50,000 from middle position before Benjamin Horgan three-bety to 190,000 from the big blind. Coelho then moved all in for 680,000, and Horgan called after some time in the tank.

Diogo Coelho: KKAll in
Benjamin Horgan: 1010

Horgan was left with one out after the A64 flop, with Coelho holding out on the 7 turn and 4 river to collect the double up.

While that hand played out, Austin Apicella was flushed out by Gabriel Moura, whose K5 rivered a flush on the 336J9 after the chips went in on the flop.

Giocatore Chip Avanzamento
Profile photo of Gabriel Moura br
Gabriel Moura
2,600,000
460,000
460,000
Profile photo of Diogo Coelho pt
Diogo Coelho
1,395,000
715,000
715,000
Profile photo of Benjamin Horgan us
Benjamin Horgan
800,000
765,000
765,000
Profile photo of Austin Apicella us
Austin Apicella
Eliminato

Tags: Austin ApicellaBenjamin HorganDiogo CoelhoGabriel Moura

Levy Doubles Up on First Hand

Livello 21 : Blinds 10,000/25,000, 25,000 ante

Timothy Tenpas opened to 50,000 from under the gun and called when David Levy moved all in for 245,000 from the hijack.

David Levy: AQAll in
Timothy Tenpas: A8

Levy's superior ace remained best and he doubled up after the A104410 runout.

Giocatore Chip Avanzamento
Profile photo of David Levy il
David Levy
550,000
305,000
305,000
Profile photo of Timothy Tenpas us
Timothy Tenpas
525,000
240,000
240,000

Tags: David LevyTimothy Tenpas

Hui Gets an Early Double

Livello 21 : Blinds 10,000/25,000, 25,000 ante

Loni Hui was all in at risk for her entire 230,000 stack from middle position and up against Fabian Niederreiter in the cutoff.

Loni Hui: A9All in
Fabian Niederreiter: 88

The 2K9 flop put Hui into the lead.

Another 9 came on the turn and the 3 secured her the double early into Day 5.

Giocatore Chip Avanzamento
Profile photo of Fabian Niederreiter de
Fabian Niederreiter
1,315,000
230,000
230,000
Profile photo of Loni Hui us
Loni Hui
520,000
290,000
290,000
WSOP 2X Winner

Tags: Fabian NiederreiterLoni Hui

Livello: 21

Bui: 10,000/25,000

Ante: 25,000

Song Leads Final 464 Players Heading into Day 5 of $10,000 Main Event

Stephen Song
Stephen Song

The stakes are beginning to heat up here at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas as just 464 players of the original 10,112 remain in Event #81: $10,000 WSOP Main Event No-Limit Hold’em World Championship. They will all be competing for the most prestigious bracelet of the year in addition to the $10,000,000 first-place prize, which is the result of a massive $94,041,600 prize pool.

Leading the way is no-limit hold'em tournament specialist Stephen Song, who bagged 4,745,000 last night. Hot on his tail, however, is four-time bracelet winner Adrian Mateos, who ended Day 4 with 4,500,000.

Song is no stranger to running deep in large-field events, having over $6,000,000 in live-tournament earnings, including a bracelet win in a $1,000 No-Limit Hold’em event back in 2019. More recently, Song won the WPT Prime Championship for a career-best cash of $712,650 in 2022.

Start of Day 5 Top Ten Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChipsBig Blinds
1Stephen SongUnited States4,745,000190
2Adrian MateosSpain4,500,000180
3Will BerryUnited States4,465,000179
4Aloisio DouradoBrazil4,335,000173
5Biao DingChina4,265,000171
6Malo LatinoisUnited States4,130,000165
7Luis VazquezUnited States4,055,000162
8Nazar BuhaiovUnited Kingdom3,875,000155
9Kevin TheodoreUnited States3,760,000150
10Ryan HoenigUnited States3,665,000147

Lucas Reeves and Christian Stratmeyer were the unfortunate "bubble boys" yesterday after being the only two players eliminated out of the six who were all in during hand-for-hand play on the stone bubble. Due to the double elimination, they were both awarded half of a min-cash ($7,500 each) while the rest of the field celebrated at having locked up a minimum of $15,000 for their efforts.

Remaining Payouts

PlacePrizePlacePrize
1$10,000,00036-44$250,000
2$6,000,00045-53$200,000
3$4,000,00054-62$160,000
4$3,000,00063-71$140,000
5$2,500,00072-80$120,000
6$2,000,00081-125$100,000
7$1,500,000126-134$85,000
8$1,250,000135-162$70,000
9$1,000,000163-224$60,000
10-11$800,000225-287$50,000
12-13$600,000289-350$45,000
14-17$450,400351-413$40,000
18-26$350,000414-464$37,500
27-35$300,000  

With so much on the line, it's no surprise that many of poker's top talents are still in contention. Among them are Jesse Lonis (2,520,000), John Hennigan (2,150,000), Alex Livingston (1,795,000), Nacho Barbero (1,620,000), Kristen Foxen (1,320,000), and the always remarkable Phil Ivey — who will have some work to do with his below-average 650,000.

A new Main Event Champion will be crowned as the last remaining champions fell short on Day 4. Defending champion Daniel Weinman made his exit shortly after the money bubble burst, while Joe McKeehen (who was the last champion standing) fell late in the day after losing a flip against Jeffrey Copeland.

Other notables who fell short on Day 4 include Daniel Negreanu, Koray Aldemir, Cody Daniel, Santhosh Suvarna, Ari Engel, and Tom Dwan — who was busted after getting all in with a set and losing to a rivered flush by Jans Arends.

The action will get back underway at noon local time on Level 21, which features 10,000/25,000 blinds with a 25,000 big blind ante. Levels will continue to last two hours each and players will be sent on 20-minute breaks after every level. An extended 75-minute dinner break will be held after Level 23 and play will end for the day at the conclusion of Level 25.

With just over four percent of the field remaining, every decision will have a compounding effect as players try to navigate their way through pay jumps and to the eventual final table. Be sure to keep it with PokerNews as we will continue to bring you all the action as it unfolds in the 2024 WSOP Main Event!

Tags: Adrian MateosAlex LivingstonAloisio DouradoAri EngelBiao DingJesse LonisKristen FoxenParis Las VegasPhil IveyRyan HoenigSanthosh SuvarnaStephen SongTom DwanWSOP Main Event